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The Billings Gazette from Billings, Montana • 6

Location:
Billings, Montana
Issue Date:
Page:
6
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THE BILLINGS GAZETTE Saturday, January 20, 1943 Poge Six BONDS I LIVESTOCK STOCKS GRAINS WOOL PRODUCE Ban of 'G. Joe' Expression Urged Doughboys Learn To Hafe Nazis Market Trends at a Glance unit Stocki lower In moderately active trad-, Sliver unchanged In New York, ing. Cotton loer. Bondi lower; United States governments Wheat eft to cent; corn unchanged lower. to off 1H centa.

Wheat Undergoes fractional Loss Washington, Jan. 19. (JP) An old hand at crusading set out on a new crusade Friday aimed at abolishing I. Joe." It's beneath the dignity of the American soldier, insisted Maury Maverick, to be called I. Joe," particularly since soldiers do not Stettinius to Attend Big Three Meeting Washington, Jan.

19. (Secretary of State Stettinius said Friday that he would accompany President Roosevelt to the approaching meeting with Prime Minister Churchill and Marshal Stalin. Stettinius told his news conference he would also attend the meeting of the American republics (with the exception of Argentina) in Mexico City, scheduled for February 15 but which may be delayed to February 21. The secretary declined to go into any further detail on the timing of Battle of Belgian Bulge Brings Change Nazis Deprived Of Gas Resources Red Army's Advance Hits Coal Area Washington, Jan. 19.

UP) The red army's advance in southwest Poland is rapidly depriving Germany of one of its last remaining sources of gasoline. It now appears entirely passible tn pr-onnmic warfare exDerts here By The Associated Press New York Stock Exchange Transactions By TOM WILLIAMS (trains Chicago, Jan. 19. Coarse jUse the expression in referring to were easy' to weak tn the futures markets In low close With tne American First Armv thpmsp vps 'Friday and wneat sunerea iracuonai i ai f-nm a Mf ll1' 11'. 15', 15'.

34 I hlgb 17 273 ll'i 14 15'4 7 31. 32 i 10 3n. 13, 22 6 37 14 49 4 35 eeigjum, Jan. it jjeiayea-w)- a vice chairman of the coumPd the break 8nd was at The American soldier on the west-; war production board, recently re-, to additional German reverses. lAiiia cn Mfi ern front at last has learned to turned from his second trip to the.

wheat affected by the losses in; A'r'ln" hate the Germans-actively, vigor- European battle front. ft? Sffi had 9 3'j 734 22 365. 7J4 31 22 36', 48'. I high i low iclose Sales In hundreds: 10 41', 41 41 1 Brigga 3 163 163 163 Buad Mfg 11 21 1 20'i' 20'. Burr Add 14 41 40U 401.

Butte Cop 3 44'i 44 44 Cal te Hec 15 1, 2i. Can Dry 1 97 97 i 97 Carrier Corp 27 27'i 26', 26V Case 1) 0 11 263. 25s. 26'4 Caterp Tr 19 2. 1-2 Cer Pas 10 63'V S34 Ches ii Ohio 14 58: M'.

136 12si 12' a Col El 41' 18r'i 16'si Cdt OUS1V ana DersonallV. I Tn arid an tn ahnlithinff "ft rat.H rrrp uas too' Am "'CO Am Metal 49 i u. Llr Mauorlr-V nronfe hnnnv" large. However, milling interests were his trips, since the president se- 34, 34s. and their pur-m 1 Wlirl 51'.

51. 30, S2: oilman miu eauy Italian taniJJHlgns ch ases discouraged extensive selling that the enemv's synthetic plant icunty is involved. rofinoru fn this He said that President Roosevelt News Deflates Market Activity 1 By VICTOR EUBANK New York. Jan. 19.

Good but deflationary war news more than offset Inflation psychology in Friday's stock market and leading rails and industrial 'again beat more or less orderly retreat. The Associated Press 60-stock average. was off .5 of a point at 58.8. The market was broad. 976 issues registering.

Of these, 650 were down. 158 up and 168 unchanged. 'Transfers totaled 1.609. 250 shares compared with 1,631.030 Thursday. Exceptions on the downswing at peakg for 1944-45 were Crucible Steel, up 34; i American Ice.

Budd Wheel and White Sewing Machine. Conspicious in the minus ranks were Southern Pacific, Southern Railway. Santa Fe. Chicago Northwestern common and preferred. United States Steel.

Chrysler. Graham-! Paige. Hiram Waiker. Distillers Corpora-: tion. Standard Oil of New Jersey, Ana-iconda, United States Rubber.

Montgomery 'Ward. Western Union Westinghouse, Du Pont, Kennecott and Douglas Aircraft, DOW-JONES AVERAGES New York. Jan. 19. (U.R) Preliminary closing Dow-Jones stock averages: Industrial 153.84, off 0.77; railroad 48.22.

off 0.79; utility 26.62, off 0.19; 65 stocks 56 90. off 0.47. Sales totaled 1 609.250 shares compared 1.631,250 shares Thursday. Curb turnover was 446,885 shares against 495.600 shares Thursday. 2 94 3S: 933.

cannot fail to be Impressed with the 74 the bread cereal. At the finish wheat was cent higher jm St to 2 cent lower than Thursday's close. Am 01' Mm with hnmh riamnpe tnlhad invited him to go along to the I difference between the Yanks' atti- A1l the boys he talked to, Maverick niants in central and western three conference several weeks itude toward the enemy then and now. reported, said "Mother." 15 41'a! Solv May 11.62ft 1.62'.. Corn was cent I many, may soon sharply limit his ago, higher to 13 cents lower.

May 1.12'.' 1.12 Oats were off to cent, May Rve was to 21. cents lower, In previous campaigns captured 1 nazi officers used to say half-chum- Reported Wounded Sees Long War cents, May tl.ll'i. "Well, after all, we're sportsmen military activities. The Silesian area and the adjoining section of Poland centering around Krakow are important to Germany because of the rich coal deposits found there. Coal is the Red Lodge, Jan.

19. Sergeant James Whalen was reported wound-! n.M, ed in action December 16 in Ger- IflfK hrfllll HrifeS 414, 4U 33'. 4034 16'4, 16'4 Ii. J4 4' 251 25s, 33'. 33s.

274; 274 84; 8s, 32 1 32 60', 61s. 5'. 19'4i 19'4 414 414 2H, 2134 69 69 156Jajl57 43, 504 504 38J4 3834 18 404i 19 16H 49. 4 11 4', 30 25S 12 33s. 6 28U 14 8:, 15 323 10; 615j 159 6 13 19', 18 42's 15 10 70 8 158 33; 43, 10 56 'j, 50 '4 Am 8tl Kdra 45 29 2734; 28U Com Sou Am 30 leS'.

Cons Cop Mln Am Zinc 10, 6 I bf, 6 Ed Anaconda 88 3l 30'j: 30', Cons Nat Gas jAna Sc 2 10 42I2I 41'i 41'i Cont Corp Arm Co 210; V.t 73ii T.jiCont Can Arm Corp l1 45 45 I 45 jConi Oil Del At 8 29; Sl'4iCorn Prod Avia Corp 118 5't; 5si 5J4 Curt Wrt Bid Loco Ct 32 26', 25V 25'i Curt Wrt A Bait Ohio 273 125 123. Deere Co Bendlx Avia 22; 50V 49V 50'a Del Ed Beth Stl 84 SSV 68V 69U Doug Air Boeing 46 18s: 18' IS'jDu Pont IBrldg Brass 29! HVai llV 11 '3 Eiec i Kue it New Bedford, Jan. 19. (u.R) errnaas ana Americans, you Admiral Harry E. Yarnell, aren't barbarians like the Russians, former commander of the United Wp can fight each other like gentle- 3 many.

He is the son of Mr. and source of- synthetic gasoline of states Asiatic fleet, predicted Friday! men. which the Germans have come tojthat the war with Japan will last It seemed kind of funny then. The Mrs. James Whalen of Logan, W.

former Red Lodge residents. Station basis at Billings and near-by points In Montana and Wyoming. Minneapolis, Jan. 19. iBy Grain Bulletin) Friday's closing grain quotations: Darlc northern spring 16 per cent pro- four more years and that American Yanks were new to battle and over-casualties will be between eager to be sportsmanlike in victory.

He had previously been reported missing In action. Sergeant Whalen and 2,000,000. has been awarded the infantryman's cent. Dremium; 4 per cent pro- 66 39' Even front-line troops were quick to offer their cigarets and scarce chocolate to German prisoners. Livestock Quotations 10 42 414; 42 badge and the purple heart.

jtein, cents premium; 13 per cent pro- 'tein, 7 cents premium; No. 1 hard. 60- Gen Am Trans Gen Elec Gen Food Gen Mot Goodrich Goodyear 63s. IL .11. 1 CO 1 OC kin 1 i 55 4 55 4 49 643, 10 17i 17 5.

They wanted so hard to say by small and ready for a good fight," the u.25; 'no. '3. si 2s- 4 billings gifts that they didn't believe in War message Said tl.21; No. 5. No.

5. Si 18. Billings Livestock Commission Company Granby and all they wanted was to get the! These are the reckless battlers' ntcr ppr cattle-Receipts, 1.015 head; choice fed for Ry pr rely more and more in recent years to run their trucks and planes. Back before Germany's stolen empire started shrinking and before allied bombers began effective attacks, the Silesian-Polish production areas turned out only about 10 per cent of the German motor fuel. While the exact percentage as estimated here can not be disclosed now -it is a comparatively fairly high figure.

Near the little town of hammer the Germans have been building two hydrogenation plants under ownership of the vast I. G. whole dirtv business over with and '-steers, fair to good. $13 REPORT FLOOD DAMAGE Huaraz, Peru, Jan. 19.

(U.R) An unconfirmed report said Friday that a flood of the Mosna river had swept away 40 per cent of the mountain town of Chavin, famous for its prehistoric Inca ruins, with estimates of dead as high as 1,500. iriui 14.25: plain. 51011.50; 2-year-old feeder vjiejnouna 14 2.1' nlam. SlOii, 11 SO 53s. 54; 5', 48 484 284 284 2234 234 1734 177.

454 453. 1 1534, 16 20 4j 20'. 1 124; 12. il73 Uteers, choice, XWittU: fleshy 2-year-old Sug Mller $111 tH- fair tn wnrtrf 1 1 1 1 -ci- I HOmSta get, oacK to weir Deer, maitea mines, hom the nazis have nicknamed premium; no. i darn and no.

and girls friends in the U. S. A. -the boys wlth the big pockets." 5t1, "j.t. 58'b- But the battle of the Belgian Similar is the view of one Ameri- Amber durum no.

6o-io. test, ji .27 hiilcrp rharanri all that The rlnno h-1 pa tank rnmmanrfpr tuhnsp mon No. 2, Jl.25; No. 3, tl.22. olftin Jfi Jfl: ennti venrlintr mil rper Hud Mot III Cent calves, fair to good, rialrv onH nlain t7ffTQ- fat 53 48, 9 284 31 3 17', 9, 59 16 76, 21'a 21l 2 UZU 8 78 40 240; 36 374 2 38 81 30 i i i u.j.j (k j-i.

Old feed barley-No. 3, 79c bu jReai Estate Transfers A. and Esther Totten Seager to Neil and Dorothy K. Janney Lots and 34, block North Elevation subdivision, third filing, to Billings. Frank Cardwell to Thomas P.

and Nettie Mulvihill Tract of land in NWV of I section 4-1S-25E. i Narceso F. and Vabe Lucero to Fred and Freda Nora Stansberry Lots 1 and 1 2, block 233, original town of Billings. I Clarence M. and Emma La'uson to A.

Anna Goodman Lots 17 and 18, block 202, original town of Billings. i Thomas P. and Nettie M. Mulvihill to Philip and Gladys Ruth Bell Tract of uuyn. imvc uccu clliii piuica- Ajptraiiicctutru unvc iu jj Cft, i 774; 774 28'i steers, 19.5012.50.

ijnt Mach lint Harv Cows Choice, J12.25S 13.25: good, 110.50 int Nick Can 11.50; fair, J8.50I&J10; cutters, wet cows, $8J10; stock cows, Kennecott each; top, J100. 'Lehman Corp Grass heifers Choice, U2.50HJ14; good. Lig Myers 283 22', 367 i 38 I 80 193 224 37 38 I 804 Minneapolis Grain The German troops still leic in the salient have been ordered to fight to the end," he said grimly. "Well, we want to help them along." Some soldiers still think it is im- slvely more antagonistic since they lirst crashed the Siegfried line last September. For they feel they are fighting an enemy who is wilfully prolonging a war without any real hope of victory.

20 -UP, Wheat Minneapolis. Jan. $111512; fair, good feeding and iocicneea Acts AT ONCE to relieve 9 78 4, 51 lor spOKCsmm oacK iiorne tu cars Trading basis unchanged, market yearling stock heifers. J6O'iiJ70 each- Star Cem i 77 77 Va I 504; 51 i 19s. 19s.

,1 504! 504 nmrii i emphasize unconditional surrender firm; quo ta hndj in so: 1 Lorillard tations 1 cent higher. vealers. 111. 5013. 40; fair, land In NW4 of section 4-1S-25E.

i Mack Truck 29 20 4 13, 20'4 heifer calves, IU12.50. Magma 20 I 20 A OA. 1 1 A I 1 1 VJTUUU UUIIO (lU tf il.OU. lIKIlb OUliS, I Ti1 7 llernn in too strict a manner be-1 Cash wheat-No. 1 heavy dark northern, of German atrocities against Amer-! terms in too strici a manner, ti.6flV2s i.6iva; dark northern No.

1, lean prisoners taken during von 1 "evmg that this is the best .5911 No. 2, No. 3, Rundstedfs break-through havejpnda nazi leaders can use to stif- fired this antagonism to white heat. len German resistance i dark 'harl winter, J1.58'.4ti 1.68Ta; hard I 1834j 1S34 56 Va! 567-4 8 8 New York Bonds 19 2 56-1 25: 8' 20: 28' iMdnt Pore Hogs Receipts, 54 head: 180 to 240 'Miami Cop pounds. 114.50.

ton; lights, 11313.50; Mid Con Pet Farben company to manufacture oil from coal. One is virtually complete; the other is in only partial use. West of Blechhammer at Auschwitz, Poland, is a third great synthetic oil factory of I. G. Farben which is now directly in the path of the Russian advance.

A fourth plant, using a hydrocarbon process, is located at Deschowitz in Silesia on the Polish border. Of the four refineries which develop gasoline from ordinary crude petroleum, one, at Trzabinji, Poland, has already been captured by the red army. It is three miles north of conquered Krakow. A second plant of the Vacuum Oil company southwest of Krakow may even now be in Russian hands. 2734l 284 48' 4934 No.

1 red heavies, 113 50-114; feeders, I12fil3.75; Mont Ward t-(i nt But trie Doys aiong me ironr. areiamber durum. ti.6i'i'i.72T8 Typical of the American attitude fi (DUE TO COLDS) 494 494 14 I 144 157, 244 244 34 I 34 53 14', 103 16' 8 today is the message one group of nrw, nri wnl corn-No. 4 yellow, mv.c.071. Barley 92C New York.

Jan. 19. Close: Corporation Bonds American T. T. 34s Armour Delaware '75- 78 iC.

O. Refg. 34s '96E Goodrich 4s '56 Internation T. T. 5s '55 i National Dairy 34s '60 Northern Pacific 4s '97 2 34 8 26 the Eighty-second air-borne divi-l TheB davs of handing out sion gave to the first two German) are prisoners they captured with orders th il 264 264 Rye No.

2. J1.19'.-a1.22T.. Others unchanged. P'rlday's futures ranged as follows: 20! 36', 3641 36 4 108 "4 1123'. 105 105 IOIV4 1073i 1104 106 104 Prescribed by thousands of Doctors! Pertussin a famous herbal remedy Is scientifically prepared not only to quickly help relieve such coughing, but also it loosens and makes phlegm easier to raise.

Safe and mighty effective for both old and young. SXSPERTUSSINC- Low Close Wheat; heavy sows, 12.254itl3. Murray Sheep Receipts, 693 head: choice fed J5el lambs, S13.50fM4.25; good. I13S13.25; feed- i ls ers. 111.5012.25: cull ewes, 13.50 and ff down; fat ewes, 156.50; yearlings, 110.50 fell.50; bucks, t't.

Lead nirrn Natl CHICAGO iNaU gteel Chicago. Jan. 19 (JP' (WPA Hogs 1 Newmont Min Salable 11.000 head, total 17,000 Cent RR active, fully steady; good and choice bar- No Am Avia rows and gilts, 170 pounds and over. 1 No Am Co 114.75: few 140 to 160 pounds, I14114.50; Nor Pac 153' tl.53'i 1.51' 1.50 1.50'a Union Pacific 34s '71 Youngstown 8. T.

3 Vis '60 1-481 1 48'. 1.48',a quarters. 1 of tne dougnboys put it, "and no- jiv "Tell them the American Eighty-, hndy can play rougher than we September second air-borne division is here can." ts .64 .59 .63 "a .584 .63 POWER AND BANK STOCKS By Gus Edson all weights fat sows, $14; early clearance. Ohio Oil Butte. Jan.

19. The J. A. Hogle Co Julv Rye: May July THE GUMPS Mama Gets Into Shape Bid Asked 1 13 1.091 1.11 1.08 1.11' 1.081 quoted Friday: Cattle Salable 2.000 head, total 2.300 head: calves, salable 700 head, total 700 Pac Packard Pan Am Air 1 First Bank stock Northwest Banco 20 20' i 244 24 110 112 Flax: May 3.10 Montana Power, pf. para pic yearlings 25c lower, very slow: common 'j uf and medium grades steady to 25c lower, i plno Miti 254; 254 74 734 69 4 694 334; 334 234 9S 934 1934 193i 187.

183'. 18s. 354! 354 534! 534 324! 32s, 28', i 28', 241 24 1834! 19 108 4 10334 347.1 34', 26 1 264 46s, 46'. 4734l 483. 174! 1734 11, 11s, 9' 4 194 20 4 193.4: 207.

33 33 56 7 25 'a 39 8 3 70 6 34 "4 476 233, 40j 10 39 20 100, 19 22 19 3 35'4 138 6 30 33 Sli 29'4 8 2. 26 19 2 1083; 87j 355. 44 26'4 16 47', 23 487b 38' 18 174i 11 3i 27 61- 20', 851 20a, 18; 335, 56 5 38 iiiuLiy Avcau at. til uuwii, ucucis sichuj I I yES-WE HELP BACK MB? "'lljii tJNOT A FEW FOR THE IN A LONELY HEARTS 7 MUCH' TONISHT'5 THE ER-BVTHE BY- LATECOMERS. WHY? BALL? Z.

I ZZCff JESfCS OUR B6 PALU BUT ARE THERe ANY YOU'RE NOT INTERESTED li'fi 00' Jmm IT WON'T BE MUCH FUN LAST MINUTE irTATONELV HEARTS eALLiDT-lk rfW, ImIiI 'I vC. fT-5 4 POKME-I'LL BE BUSIER TICKETS If Mil lijL ZSTv lit THAN A 6UY SWIMMING AVAILABLE? fl 3 1 fTf llvl tf5Qu-l. I'M'l Grain Futures Parisians Suffer Penney Penn RR Phelps Dodge to weak; cows and bulls weak to 25c lower; vealers steady; cutter cows, 18 Chicago. Jan. 10.

Friday's futures uuwii. most, icea cows, jo.ou'g!; lew pjj pe weiKuiy uuiis, euner or oeei, pttllman rained as follows Wheal: High Low Close above 112.50; vealers, 115.50, mostly 115 pure oil 51.61 May SI. 62'' 1.53 1.51'. 1.52 1.11'a Paris, Jan. 19.

(U.R) Already short of food supplies, Parisians suffered increasing hardships Friday as a severe cold wave gripped the Paris area. Snowbound roads land railroads crippled the flow of supplies. Coal was virtually unobtainable and electricity and gai supplies had been cut by the Jftv-i ernment. iaavn. .1 Radio I Sheep Salable 4,000 head, total 4.500 R-K-O jhead; late Thursday bulk good and Reo Mot choice fed wooled western lambs.

118 Rep Stl I pounds down. 115. 50fi 15.60; top. 115.65: Rey Tob laced ewes, 17.75 down: but 58 quotable: Safeway Friday's trade fully steady: odd lots good St Jos Lead land choice native lambs, 15.50: just good Scars Roeb fed lambs, $15.25: load good and choice Servel I yearlings. $13-50.

with ewes out at II dis-, Shell count and 2-vear-old wethers 12 discount: Sil King Coal 1.53'. 1.52:'4 1.53 1.12'i 1.10'. 1.074 1.06":. .61 38 I 38 204 20s, 26 4 264 741 7'. 1.10' 1.07 1.06'i .67 .61 11 103 161 20-14 5 26H 62 3 34 July 1.54 'a September 1.53b December 1.53va Corn: May 1.12n July l.U'4 September l.OBU December 1.07' a Oats: May July .621 Sepi ember .59 Rye: Mav in7, July 1.11 September 1.07ai December 1.06ra Barley: May 1.12'i July 1.06'-4 Simmons Co 337tj 3334 good to choice native ewes.

17.754! $8 deck cull and common kinds, 16. 95j 16, i 16 lb1. 126 15-1. Sinclair Oil Soc Vac So Rico Sug So Cal Ed Sou Pac 154 43 I 434 277, 101 4334 51 27'a 122! PORTLAND Portland, Jan. 19.

(U.B Cattle Re 1.12' 1.0!)' 1.0.V 1.05 I.ll'i 1.081-. 1.04 5 4 1.04 'a 40 I 404 34', COUNTERATTACK Pittsburgh, Jan. 19. (P) Mrs. Evelyn R.

Portas, 23, testified she found an application to marry another woman in her husband's pocket. She's suing for divorce. ceipts. 25 head. Calves Receipts.

10 97; 35 mostly the cleanup market, closing trade sDerrv Corn 20! 28'i 1.10' 1.1 1 mostly steady, with week ago but no ct(j Brands 284 294 2934 394 394 3534l 357, 1.05'j 1.05?t:best steers offered late: early market 25 gtd oil Cal I to 50 cents lower with week's extreme Oil Ind By King GASOLINE ALLEY The Roundup 6: 2934 43. 39', 14 36', 18 58', 26 ll5, 62 1934 58 ii1; 57' 194 vnnat nti FrtikrCCTll. "1 Legals Chicago Cash Grain 19'- THEII? IP IS 010 ENOUCH TO THE KYS HAP IT LAST. I THINK THEY top, 116.25: common steers Friday. Oil $12; canner and cutter cows.

S6ft 7.50. i stone common and medium vealers. HO'a'Ill; studebaker good to choice, salable, i Sunshine Min jl Hogs Receipts. 100 head; active, steady. Swift Co few lots good to choice 135 to 235 pounds.

Texas Co USINC THAT EW6Y CAPRlACE YC(J 52: 11', 114 THE CANNOKS HAVE Cm IT mo cor yes, ma weve 5 33 32-V 334 -Wheat-No. ASEP IF THEY COULD Chicago. Jan. 19. LENT THOSt" B4SV pc inswun a WITH IT.

I'LL COX FROM THE CVES, THE OWE COZS ANO JUDY IVflCE SOUGHT LIP INT I NO, I LET THE SMITHS Trie BAB" CAZX1AGE. PHYLLIS THINGS TME ol 52s 28' 80'. 513i 52s, 284 804 1 BORROW IT. FIND Ctf.Jl. ANP AGAIN, PONT MINP.

23 52 2 525 17; 28'-i 8 803; 3 117 14! 323i, 23: 3034 51 1116 11164 7b mm led. $l-75' ceiling. Corn No. 4 yellow. Sl sample grade yellow, Oris No.

2 white. 80c. Bitriey, nominal Malting, 11.15 1.3T; feed. 85CWI1. Field seed Per hundredweight, nominal, timothy.

red top. 115' 116: red clover. 131.50; sweet clover, 110.63; alsike. 128 50. 515.75; good 440-pound sows.

113.75; good Tim Roll to choice feeder pigs, in broad demand Twenty Fox at $15ftl5 25. i iUn Carb Sheep Receipts, 25 head: offerings; On Pac limited to few cull lambs and ewes, nom- Un Air Lines inally steady, good to choice truck-in Un Air lambs quotabie up to 115: fed carloads Unit Corp eligible to Monday's top of good Unit Drug ewes salable, or above. Un Fruit I Unit, Gas ImD OMAHA 1 Rllb 324! 32s, 304: 304 l'i! I3, 164i 164 9 16U NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of George Dan, Deceased. Notice is hereby given by the undersigned Administrator of the Estate of George Dan, deceased, to the creditors of and all persons having claims against the said deceased, to exhibit them, with the necessary vouchers, within four months after the first publication of thi notice, to the said Security Trust te Sav-; ings Bank, at Billings, in the County of Yellowstone, State of Montana. Dated at Billings, Montana, December 1944.

SECURITY TRUST SAVINGS BANK. By R. M. WATER8. Vice President.

Administrator of the Estate of Oeorga Dan. Deceased. HENRY A. CH APPLE, Billings. Montana.

Attorney for Administrator. 92 1 92 4' 93 10 14'4 19! 54 57 1031 603,4 7 143 14 I 14 I 53 I 534 I 564 5634 i 60 I 604 I141'VI414 smell MINNEAPOLIS FLOl'R S. D. A l- Omaha, Jan. 19.

UP) (V. iU SI eel 1.000 head: In ino-pound Cattle Salable and total Minneaoolls, Jan. 19. Stl pf cotton sacks: Family patents. stand- calves, salable and total 150 head: ards.

$3.34. Shipments, 44,640 100-pound classes active, steady to strong; spots 25c West. Un Tel A coiton sacks higher on cows under good grade: two west 2141 2234 4534 45', 1194 1194 41 417, 71 I 71 3V 223i 25 463, 15 120' 4 15 lj 71 Bran All classes. $37.75 ii 38 .25. mans cnoice arouno aoo-pouno -uei Woolwoi'th few loads good fed steers, S14.60 wrigley cauners and cutters.

few I good beef bulls. vealers and Am Wool Review calves steady: good to choice. $1314. 50; stockers and feeders scarce, jteady. Sheep Salable and total 1,500 head: slaughter lambs active, steady: bulk good Boston, Jan.

iiFi-Th Commercial Bulletin will say of the Boston wool mar and choice fed wooled. $151j 15.35: top. ket Saturday; MOON MULLINS Buggy TH" 6U60Y'5 HEPE if rSsv zr mmmm cUCh crust i FOR YER BU6, A WHEN HE VJAKES UP ffiM VJ AND JUST WHEN DOC. -s i ucc i 'i -y t'a at-r, kin mci to fTLy 1 1 EMJOV THIS 1 ii indolent life i YES-PSYCOPATHICCAsiTwjr-H NO NOT DR. DOUBLEDOME! tvJCJi TH' MULUKS 15 THE mt.

VVlS otv- PATIENTS ilNk ji name-this is MfMi vy DR. DOUBLEDOME fKlW, I mW-'U "THE MAINSTAY OF COMBAT RATIONS" "Increasing demand for spot wools, lor load lua-pouna neorasna ieo mnnv tvpes, has marked the last weeklkmd: small lots good and choke native according to dealers generally. An fx-1 lambs, ewes not established, tremely active market for the period was asking higher or above t7.75. estimated by one large trader. This situs- turn derived from growing volume of gov-iSIOIX CITY eminent orders with mills, especially In! Sinux City.

Jan. 19. (JP (U. S. 0.

A army serges. Cattle Salable and total 1.000 head. -Widened specifications In screes have calves, salable and total 25 head: most given a fillip to demand for wools from classes steady: one half load choice fine down to 56s. The market for domestic yearlings. S16: few loads, wools, under the general preference In ground limited ouota common specifications on army goods, has been anc medium heifers.

$9 5011.50; few active in everything from fine to quarter- choice, $15: common and medium cows, blood, both shorn and pulled. largely J8 50di 11.50; few good around "As in domestic wools, foreign types ji2. 50: canners and cutters, J6.50S 7.50; have been wanted chiefly in 50s andifew good beef bulls around J13. upward. The demand has been keen.

I Hogs Salable and total 2,000 head: "Some dealers early In the week found I active, fully steady; top and bulk good mills still aiting to know just what theyand choice 170 to 360 pounds, J14 45 the could need in wool against contracts ceiling good sows and most stags, 113.70. placed or awaited. A good deal of business COmplete early clearance, was hanging fire, although indications! were that some of It was being confirmed SOUTH ST. PAIL later." I ct i.n Wool Futures D. A.i Cattle Salable 2.700 head, total 2 800 head: calves, salable and total 2.200 head: slaughter steers, heifers and cows steady: largely a cow run: sizable supply common and medium steers here: load good light steers.

U4.25; medium kinds. New York. Jan. 19 Reactions In outside markets brought in commission 11.50ft 13.50: common steers. S9 0S11; me- POPEYE, THE SAILORMAN Not Bad for a Novice! dcnes 'in wocTtop fuu7, N.

'ade 110.5012 50. common LE'S TALK LOHILE I VAA MAVM ME LUNCH months were independently firm. 'IT" T'T Estimated sales of wool tops were 95.000 lt'-' canners and cutters. J6-i Bounds 1 bulls 25c lower: medium and good sausas-WooV futures were easier. i MOffirsO; vealers steady: good and Wool futures closed .5 of a cent lower, choice.

$13 14 50: common and medium. May 93.5 bid. July 92 0 bid. December 89 5 S8 12.50; stockers and feeders scarce, b'd steady. Certificated wool snot 98 0 nominal.

Hogs Salable 9 300 head, total 1O.300 Wool tops futures closed .1 to 11 cents head: active: all classes holding firm lower. July 1:7.0 bid. October 123 0 bid, large share of butchers and sows at cell-December 121 0 bid. 'n: complete early clearance; good and Certificated spot wool tops 134 0 nom- choice 180 to 360-pound butchers. $14 45: mat.

bulk lighter weights. $14 14.35: weights over 360 pounds scarce: good and choice JAEVER PLAY PEETBALL BUB? Jm. A Jet A recent OPA statement, explaining reasons for reducing sugar rations, said: "Sugar is the mainstay of army combat rations because of its high concentration and its value as quick energy food. As more and more men move up to our several battle fronts, more and more sugar is needed to sustain them under combat conditions. For example, the ten-in-one ration provides three pounds of sugar for the men in one day, in addition to jellies, concentrated chocolate, sugared fruit bars, and candy.

Candy issued to the troops alone is provided at the rote of one pound per man per week." It gives a sugar farmer a lot of satisfaction to know that his government calls his own product, sugar, "the mainstay of combat rations." Ht likes to know that some of the energy of his own land and his own effort is fighting from Luzon to the snowy battlefields of France. Those sugar acres can do a big job in 1945! Produce jsows. $13.. 0: feeder pigs in light suppiy: 'market strong; choice lots. $13 75y14: some heavies.

25. I Sheep Salable 3-700 head; no early BUTTER AND tt.tiS action. Chicago. Jan. 19 Butter Firm: receipts, 306.283 pounds: 93-score AA, 41lc; 93-score A.

41c; W-score B. 4034C; 90-score C. 40.c: cooking. 88-score. 39c; centraliied New York Curb carlots.

S8-score, 4Jc. I EBts Receipts .18 cases: firm: market New York. Jan. 19. Close: steady: U.

S. extras. 39 3541.1c: U. S. Aluminum Company standards.

37 35e37c: current receipts, American G. E. (1 601 37.1c; dirties, BeUam'i Aircraft i Bliss iE. W. DARE Asking for Trouble POTATOtS Brewster Aeronautics By Odin Chicago, Jan.

19 (WFA Ar- Bunker Hill cars, on track. Ill cars: total "'ties fenice t'nitfd States shipment. 76 cars: old Istocs: oflerir.ts very tight: demand far Eirc.ln5 Bond r4G FEELOiaS MPT, GOES Or TO OF tiQVCES--' lets PPETEUD tree REAL ifJDlAtl SCOUTS! WE BPEAKA MEltf YE- LETS LITTLE AK STARTED SO JlKT A THIS ff SUPEP, scar, fL lOllAHOI. ALL ALO'JS- rurn Ford Motor Limned Hecia Mining Humble Oil Internationa! Petrclfutn Kingston Products Mountain City Copper Niagara-Hudscn THIS CfJ FAQTH. I exceeas avat.ab.e offerings; local trace market: market very light at reding: loaho Riisset Burbanks.

V. S. No. I. S3 57.

Nebraska Bin Triumphs. C. S. No. 1.

S3 44: Minnesota and North Da-, io'a Bass Triumphs. S. No. 1. $3 13: rorr.tr.ereia'..

$3 5S: Florida Se-pound sacks. Bliss Tnumpfc. TJ. S. No.

BE PAINTED GllLCH ALPEADrf! rT 39'; 33 4-j 45. 11'. 17'. 121 11 225. 6 10 44 19'j r.

4 14'. 28 4 1H J'a 19 UP 7 13 JI mm I k.i r) ji wh i I Niies-Bement-Pocd NoTadel I Pioneer Go I Premier Gold Republican ATiaStcn Money Markets The Groat Western Sugar Company FOKCIGS EXCBtNCE iionot! New Tort. Jan. 19 FPrrian ex- Standard OJ Kentucky chsnie rate? follow -Great Britain la Texrn Oil 1. vzrz 1 dollars, eihem certs': iTcdd Caradiao dollar New York cotn raar- United Gas D'Oae, HIS EXOTEtiEHT.

nKMEHTAOILi FOPCE7S XAGS- iter f1, per cent d.coun! or 0 J7" United V. S. 1. Securities iSraie? cents, cb ef a cent. UTah PAL.

preferred I Europe- Great Britaul ticial btunsc Wertern Air Lice C4. acioa i Wriaat-HargrTi 1.

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Pages Available:
1,788,631
Years Available:
1882-2024