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The Missoulian from Missoula, Montana • 13
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The Missoulian du lieu suivant : Missoula, Montana • 13

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The Missouliani
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Missoula, Montana
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13
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a a 117 LBJ Reprimanded Bobby In 1960 for Moonlighting ting WASHINGTON (AP) Bobby Baker testified Monday he was "reprimanded and cautioned" by then Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson in 1960 not to practice law while in his government position. "I was in essence moonlighting or sundowning, whatever you call it," Baker told a U.S. District Court jury.

He added "I was doing it contrary to instructions" from Johnson. Baker then was secretary to the Senate Democratic majority and Johnson, now President, was a Democratic senator from Texas and majority leader of the Senate. Baker did not use Johnson's name, saying only "the majority leader in 1960." On the stand for the third day in his trial on charges of income tax evasion, fraud and conspiracy, Baker told of arrangements to associate himself with another man, a member of the District of Columbia bar, "in my transactions." The government's charges involve the alleged payment of fees by various firms to Baker through checks made to Wayne L. Bromley, a former close friend and associate to Baker. The government charges also that Baker kept about $80,000 of some $100,000 raised by nia savings and loan executives for political campaigns in 1962.

Baker testified last week that he transferred the money, in cash in brown manila envelopes, to the late Sen. Robert S. Kerr, on three separate occasions. Government prosecutor William 0. Bittman asked Baker Monday if no one else was present on those occasions, Baker said that was correct.

"And the only one alive today to tell that story is you, yourself?" Bittman said. "That is correct," Baker replied. Kerr died Jan. 1, 1963, after suffering a heart attack. Split Decision Invalidates New York's Anti -Red Laws WASHINGTON (AP) The Supreme Court ruled Monday New York State may not fire public school teachers or any other civil servants solely because they are members of the Communist party.

The 5-4 decision described the state's scheme for barring subversives from the school system as, "a highly efficient terror mechanism" and a menace to academic freedom. The ruling dealt a fatal blow to New York's entire teacherloyalty program and the state's 1939 civil service law provision which made membership in the Communist party sufficient ground to fire or not hire a public employe. They were declared unconstitutional largely as in violation of, freedom freedom of belief of association guaranteed by or the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Parts of the teacher-loyalty program, known as the Feinberg Law, were struck down also as unconstitutionally vague.

"Our nation," said Justice William J. Brennan Jr. for the majority, "is deeply committed to safeguarding academic freedom, which i is of transcendent value to all of us and not merely to the teachers concerned. "That freedom is theefore a special concern to the teachers concerned. "That freedom is therefore a special concern of the First it Amendment, which does not tolerate laws that cast a pall of orthodoxy over the classroom." The four dissenters expressed dismay.

Clark's Comment "No court," said Justice Tom C. Clark in their dissenting opinion, "has ever reached out SO far to destroy so much with so little." In their final public session before Feb. 13, the justices also: Uanimously set aside the murder convictions of two Georgia Negroes who claimed racial discrimination in the selection of juries in their county. Convicted of slaying a white man in argument over an automobile accident, the two, Phil Whitus and Leon Davis, face retrial. French Photographer er Is Captive in Hills BAC TIEN, South Vietnam (AP) Michele Ray, 28, a French free-lance photographer who was captured by Viet Cong guerrillas six days ago, apparently is being held in a mountainous area north of here, intelligence reports indicated Monday.

On the basis of information from villagers, Vietnamese intelligence agents and U.S. units operating in the area, it is believed Miss Ray is a prisoner of local guerrillas who should be aware of her identity and are not likely to harm her. Michele, a former model, started Dec. 8 to drive the 680- mile length of South Vietnam, mostly along Route 1. She left an advance base near Bac Tien on Jan.

17 to drive north with hopes of filming U.S. troops in action. BE MODERN WITH MOEN NEW BEAUTY! NEW CONVENIENCE! New lavatory faucet! F. W. KETCHUM PLUMBING HEATING SOLID BRASS 421 Burlington Phone 549-8560 NEW RESEARCH REPORTS If you are interested in the Securities of these industries, you may wish copies of publications recently prepared by our Research Department.

They could be of significant value in making investment decisions. American Commercial Lane Bryant Lines Monthly Oil American Electric Comments Power Monthly Railroad Carlisle Corporation Highlights Caterpillar Tractor McDonnell Company Quarterly Airline Dover Corporation Review General Tire Standard Oil of Jonathan Logan New Jersey King Seeley Thermos The Nike-X Program The Favored Fourteen For For free copy of any report check off and mail this ad. Name. L-27 Address, Tel (Please Print Complete Address) GOODBODY CO. ESTABLISHED 1891 Members of leading Stock and Commodity Exchanges -MISSOULA, HAMMOND ARCADE, 549-4135 nearby offices in Butte and Spokane OVER 80 OFFICES THROUGHOUT THE NATION 117 Securities Work To Higher Ground NEW YORK (AP)-The market bucked ahead to another gain Monday -a thin one on average as it got help from a "peace talk" story which excited the investment community.

Trading was heavy. Volume was 10.8 million shares compared with 9.53 million on 1 Friday. The Dow Jones industrial average ended with a minor gain: of .56 at 847.72 after having been up as much as 3.51 in late morning. Prices were up from the opening, but they did not really make strong progress until reports began to filter through Wall Street from various news media that President Ho Chi Minh of North Vietnam had invited President Johnson to Hanoi for peace talks. On the theory that "peace is bullish" eliminating, in some investors' minds, the need for tax increases and possible wartime controls a wave of buying pushed the market ahead.

Traders began to take profits and the list started backing away as the complete story became established reliably. This was that news of the peace talk offer had come from Rabbi Abraham Feinberg, an American citizen, quoted in London; that Feinberg said it seemed clear that an end of American bombing in North Vietnam and an American troop withdrawal were preconditions of the peace talk offer; and that the White House said it had no communication on the matter from Ho. Excitement simmered down considerably. Nevertheless, the market made its 14th clear-cut rise of 1967 of the 15 sessions this year. Glamor stocks among the science-technology computerelectronics section of the list were in the front.

The New York Stock Exchange index advanced 16 cents to $47.08. Of 1,468 issues traded, 737 rose and 503 fell. There was one new low for 1966-67 and 75 new highs. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks rose .3 to 324.7 with industrials up .1, rails up .5 and utilities up .2. Nine of the 15 most active stocks rose, four fell and two were unchanged.

Ampex was the most active issue, erasing an early fractional gain and ending with a loss of Grain Futures Remain Weak CHICAGO (AP) Grain futures and soybeans failed to shake off a weakness that developed late last week and traded on a lower note most of the day on the Chicago Board of Trade Monday. Only the two nearby soybeans deliveries showed some strength. All the futures opened lower and remained depressed most of the session. There was only a little support from the various trading interests. There was some belief that trade was light in anticipation of Tuesday's government report of stocks of grains in all positions.

This takes in the amount of grain on farms, country elevators and terminal elevators and awaiting processing. At the close, wheat was to 1 cent a bushel lower, March corn was lower higher, March oats were to lower, March cents; rye was to lower, March and soybeans were lower to higher, March Prev. High Low Close Close Wheat Mar 1.68⅝ 1.67 1.68 1.68⅞ May 1.71⅛ 1.70 1.71 1.71¾ Jul 1.67⅝ 1.66⅜ 1.67½ 1.68½ Sep 1.70⅛ 1.68⅝ 1.69⅞ 1.70⅞ Dec 1.75½ 1.73⅞ 1.75¼ 1.76⅛ Corn Mar 1.39¾ 1.38¾ 1.39⅜ 1.39⅞ May 1.42¼ 1.41½ 1.42⅛ 1.42½ Jul 1.39¼ 1.43⅝ 1.43 1.38¼ 1.39⅛ 1.43⅝ 1.39⅛ 1.43⅞ Dec 1.33 1.32¼ 1.33 1.331 Oats Mar May .74 Sep Dec .76 Rye Mar 1.22⅞ 1.22¼ 1.22⅞ 1.23½ 1.27 1.26¼ 1.26¾ 1.27½ Jul 1.29 1.28½ 1.28¾ 1.29⅞ Sep 1.31 1.30¾ 1.30⅞ 1.31¾ Dec 1.34½ 1.34½ 1.34½ 1.35% Soybeans Mar 2.91 2.88% 2.91 2.89% May 2.89 2.87% 2.89 2.88¼ Jul 2.84½ 2.87⅞ 2.83½ 2.86⅛ 2.84¼ 2.87½ 2.87% 2.84¼ Sep 2.81½ 2.80½ 2.81¼ 2.81¼ Nov 2.78¾ 2.77% 2.78¼ 2.78½ No Holidays TRINIDAD, Colo. (AP) -Art Pfalmer has spent more than 43 years as a merchant policeman and says he never has had a day off, even Sundays. He estimates he has walked more than 500,000 miles in his career of looking after private business firms.

The Missoulian, Tuesday, January 24, 1967-11 Un Carbide 2 271 Un Oil Cal 1.208 136 Un Pac 1.808 Un Tank 2.30 Unit Air Lin 1 182 Unit Aire 1.60 140 Unit Fruit 270 US Gypsum 38 94 US Smelt 1b 405 US Steel 2.40 228 US Tob 1.60 Utah 1.60 Vulcan Mat 1 19 Walgreen 1.40 15 WashWat 1.18 20 Wn Air Lin 159 Wn Bancorp 1.10 93 Wn Un Tel 1.40 115 Westg A Bk 1,80 19 Westg El 1.40 247 Weyrhausr 1.40 25 White Mot 1.80 42 Woolwth 120 Xerox Cp 1 326 Zenith 1 293 61 61 90 87 31 39 32 23 New York Stock Market Quotations Stocks in Spotlight Tri Twent Cont Cen1.20b .920 100 108 The arrangement with Bromely involved some $24,500 in fees paid by five firms in 1963-64. The checks were sent to Bromley, a member of the District of Columbia bar. Baker said he was, not licensed to practice in the district and "I always associated myself with a member of the district bar in my transactions." said at another point he was not supposed to practice law while he was in government service, adding that, "My boss, the majority leader, had severely admonished me," not to do so. Baker said he reported the 1963-1964 fees on his income tax returns, and so did Bromley. Baker said he did not willfully attempt to evade any taxes in those years.

Pope Opposes Legalization Of Divorces VATICAN CITY (AP) Lashing out at pending legislation to legalize divorce in Italy, Pope Paul VI Monday denounced divorce as an "index of pernicious moral decadence." The pontiff praised countries where divorce is not permitted, and said the absence of divorce was "a sign of superior civilization." Pope Paul, who is recovering from a mild case of influenza, spoke at a meeting with members of the Sacred Rota, the Roman Catholic Church's highest tribunal for matrimonial cases. The Pope's speech was prompted by the vote last week of the Italian constitutional affairs commission that the bill to make divorce legal in certain cases was not unconstitutional. The bill would permit divorce in cases where a spouse is insane, serving a long prison term or guilty of a serious crime against the other spouse or their children. The Vatican has been stepping up a campaign opposing the bill. Obituaries Heinle Services To Be Thursday Refused again to review baseball's immunity from antitrust law.

Ordered the U.S. Circuit Court in St. Louis, to hear an Arkansas Negro's claim that the death penalty is administered disproportionately to Negroes convicted of raping white women. The claim was made by civil rights lawyers in behalf of William L. Maxwell, under death sentence in the nonfatal rape of a white woman.

Ruled 8 to 1 that Isaac Sims a Georgia Negro sentenced to death in the rape of a white woman, is entitled to a hearing before a state court judge on whether his alleged confession was coerced. He claimed he was beaten in a doctor's office. Decided by various votes in three Texas cases that criminal defendants are not denied a fair trial when the jury, before deciding guilt or innocence, is told the defendants are habitual offenders. Left standing a Taft-Hartley injunction that forced 2,100 striking workers to return to their jobs at an Indiana defense plant, The Union Carbide Co. at Kokomo.

Funeral services for Sgt. Dale Heinle, 23, who died Jan. 16 Germany of acute kidney failure, will be conducted Thursday at 1 p.m. in the First Methodist Church with the Rev. Grant Moore officiating.

Burial will be in the family plot at Sunset Memorial Gardens. The body will arrive here by air Tuesday and will lie in state until noon Thursday in the Squire Simmons Carr Rose Chapel. Sgt. Heinle, who had served in Germany for the past two and a half years with the 26th Army Signal Battalion, was the son of Mr. and Mrs.

Albert Heinle, 2618 Laurie Dr. Jerry M. Engler Rosary for Jerry Miles Engler, 19, 113 Monroe will be recited at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday and requiem high mass will be celebrated at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday, both in St.

Francis Xavier Church. The Rev. Gerald 0. McDonald, S.J., will be celebrant. Burial will be in the family plot in Corvallis Cemetery under the direction of the Geraghty Mortuary.

Mr. Engler died Saturday night in a local hospital following a long illness. Grace P. Woolard Funeral services for Grace P. Woolard, 86, a resident of Missoula for 44 years, will be conducted at 11 a.m.

Tuesday in the Geraghty Mortuary with the Rev. Palmer Gedde officiating. Burial will be in Missoula Cemetery. She died Saturday morning in a local rest home. IN TABLETS OR GETS RID OF GAS Gas bubbles cause Di-Gel untraps gas, stomach pain blots up excess acid at on 132,400 shares as profits were taken.

Profits were taken on airlines. Eastern lost American United 11, Pan American and TWA Prices rose on the American Stock Exchange. Mutual Funds Bid Asked Affiliated Fd 8.44 9.13 Mutual Fd 9.95 10.87 Axe Houghton 9.83 10.68 Boston Street Fund Inv 9.40 10.27 14.67 15.86 Canada Gen Fd 9.47 10,37 Canadian Fund 18.04 19.52 Channing Funds: Balance 13.64 14.91 Com Stock 1.98 2.16 Growth 16.02 17.51 Income 8.52 9.31 Special 2.60 2.84 Chemical Fd 16.40 17.93 Colonial Fd 12.36 13.51 Commonwealth Funds: Invest 10.00 10.93 Stock 10.17 11.11 Composite 9.32 10.13 Fd 9.72 10.57 Divers Grth Stk 12.28 13.46 Divers Invest Fd 9.18 10.06 Dividend Shrs 3.54 3.89 Dow Th Inv Fd 7.01 7.58 Dreyfus Funds 13.35 14.57 Eaton Bal 11.84 12.86 Eaton Stk 15.70 17.06 Fidelity Cap 13.39 14.55 Fidelity Fund 17.33 18.74 Fid Trend Fd 27.92 30.35 FIF 5.32 5.83 Fst Inv Stk 10.76 11.84 Founders 7.94 8.68 Fundament Inv 10.83 11.87 Hamil Fd Bank Hda Stk Fd 5.12 5.74 6.28 Invest Co Am 13.13 14.55 Investors Group Funds: Mutual 11.10 12.06 Stock 20.12 21.86 Pay 8.10 8.81 Keystone Custodian Funds: Growth Cus K2 6.29 6.87 Inco Cus S2 10.23 11.17 LoPr Cm Cus S4 6.09 6.65 Lazard Fd 15.50 15.75 Loom Say Mut 15.31 115.31 Invest Grth 11.20 12.24 Mass Invest Tr 16.05 17.54 Natl Investors 6.81 7.36 National Securities Series: Stock 8.84 9.66 Growth 10.48 11.45 One Wm St 19.42 14.92 Puritan Funds 10.47 11.32 Putnam Funds: George 15.81 17.39 Growth 11.63 12.71 Income 9.28 10.14 Invest 7.66 8.37 Select Am Shrs 11.12 12.03 State Street Inv 47.18 47.50 Tel Elect Fd 9.45 10.30 United Funds: Accum Fd 16.99 18.57 Income 13.45 14.70 Science Fd Fd 8.94 9.77 Wellington 13.61 14.79 Foreign Exchange Canada in Missoura: 10 per cent discount on cons: 9 per cent on currency Canada in NY (free) .9275 Monday, .9273 Friday. Great Britain (pound) 2.7909 Monday, 2.7910 Friday. American Stock List Canadian Southern Petroleum 3-16 Canadian Marconi Co Consolidated Royalty Oil Esquire 74 Essex Chem Fed Resources Ford Motor Canada A Frontier Airl General Alloys Co Great Lakes Oil Chem Husky Oil Irving Air Chute Co Kaiser Industries 12 Kingston Products Corp Midwestern Financial Corp 3 Bellas Hess Pancoastal Petroleum Peruvian Oils Minerals Shattuck Denn Syntex Cp Technicolor Incorp Todd Shipyards Corp Utah Idaho Sugar Co Wentworth Manufacturing Co Wn Nuclear Wright-Hatgr Mines Ltd 1-16 SPOKANE PRODUCE SPOKANE (AP) Spokane wholesale produce prices to retailers Monday: Butter (uncartonized), 67-74c Eggs, large AA, 47c; large 46c; medium AA, 44c; small, 32-35c.

Poultry, whole bodied fryers, 34-39c; cut-up fryers, 40-45c; whole stewers, 25- 30c; cut-up stewers, 38-44c. CHICAGO POTATOES Arrivals 119; on track 203; total U.S. shipments for Friday 417; Saturday 184; Sunday supplies moderate; demand moderate; market for russets steady, for round reds slightly weaker; carlot track sales: Idaho russets 5.70; Minnesota North Dakota Red River Valley round reds 3.65-3.75. CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS Butter steady; 93 score AA 92 A 90 89 cars 90 64: 89 Eggs mixed: wholesale buying prices lower to higher; 60 per cent or grade A whites mixed mediums 30: standards 30; checks 26. METALS LONDON (AP) Closing metals (in pounds sterling per long ton): Copper spot bid 443 asked 444; forward bid 433 asked 434; tin spot bid asked 11981.

forward bid 1200 asked lead spot bid asked 80, forward bid 80 asked zinc spot bid asked forward bid asked CHICAGO (AP) Wheat No. 2 hard 1.67⅛-68⅛n. Corn No. 2 yellow 1.39¼n. Oats No.

2 heavy white Soybeans No. 1 soybeans No. 1 yellow 2.94⅛-⅝n At the close wheat was to 1 cent 8 bushel lower, March corn W8S lower to higher, March oats were to lower, March cents; rye was to lower, March and soybeans were lower to higher, March MINNEAPOLIS CASH GRAIN Wheat receipts Monday 283; year ago 322; trading basis unchanged: prices 1 cent lower; cash spring wheat No 1 dark northern, 11,17 protein, 1.87⅞-1.90⅞; spring wheat one cent premium each lb over 58-61 lbs; spring wheat one cent discount each lb under 58 lbs; protein premium 11 per cent 1.87⅞-1.89⅞. 1 hard Montana winter 1.76⅞-1.82⅞. No 1 hard amber durum, choice 2.05- 2.12.

Corn No 2 yellow 1.31½-1.32. Oats No 2 white Barley, good to choice 1.19-1.44. Rye No 2 1.15⅞-1.21⅞. Flax No 1 3.12 nom. MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN TABLE High Low Close Wheat March 1.82 1.80½ 1.80⅞ June 1.83½ 1.82¼ 1.82¼ September 1.80¾ 1.79½ 1.79% NEW FORK METALS NEW YORK (AP) Spot nonferrous metal prices Monday: Copper 38 cents pound, Connecticut Valley.

Lead 14 cents a pound. New York. Zine cents pound. East St. Louis.

Tin 1.54½ pound. New York. Foreign silver 1.293 per troy ounce, New York. NEW YORK (AP) Spot commodity prices: Aluminum, lb. N.Y.

.25 Antimony, American, lb. N.Y. .4575 38 Copper. Electrolytic, lb. Lead.

1b. East St. Louis .1380 Platinum, per troy oz. N.Y. 100.00 Tin, Ib.

N.Y. 1.54½ Zine, lb. East St. Louis Kansas City Feeder Cattle Futures Close 27.15 February 27.25 June 27.80 August 28.00 October 87.50 Ampex Cp Sperry Rd Am Tel Tel Hoff Elect Gulf Win Ind KLM Airl Studebaker Ashland Oil PF WI Roan Sel Tr Magnavox SCM McDon Co Monsanto Fair Cam Sales Close Chge. 132.400 118.600 102.700 97.200 90.700 unch 89,400 88.400 84.400 83.400 27 unch 81,500 1 70.300 66.900 66.100 65,300 47 64,100 150 Jacob Hereim Is Dead at 74 Jacob Jacobson Hereim, 74, 3433 S.

3rd St. died Monday morning in a local hospital. He was born Nov. 19, 1892, in Sauda, Norway, and came to Montana in 1911. He was employed for 50 years at the Lucas Ranch at Ringling, retiring several 1 months ago when he came to Missoula.

Surviving are a brother, Austin Jacobson of Missoula; a sister, Johanna of Norway, and several nieces and nephews. Funeral arrangements are pending at the Squire-SimmonsCarr Mortuary. Frank Rosich Sr. Requiem high mass for Frank Rosich 83, of 225 Strand who died Friday in a Missoula hospital, were celebrated at 9:30 a.m. Monday in St.

Anthony Church by the Rev. Edward Stupca. Burial will be in Red Lodge. Geraghty Funeral Home was in charge of arrangements. Pallbearers were Jack McKenna, John LaCasse, Clyde Norman, John Huffman, Almer 01- son and Clarence York.

Joseph H. Murphy Funeral services for Joseph H. Murphy, 77, of 505 Toole will be conducted at 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Marsh, Powell Livingston Chapel. The Rev.

Hugh Herbert will officiate. Burial will be in Missoula Cemetery with Barracks 835, Veterans of World War providing an honor guard. 1 Mr. Murphy died Saturday morning. Kevin A.

Beedle Funeral services for Kevin A. Beedle, nine-month-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Beedle of Grant Creek, will be conducted Tuesday at 11 a.m. in the Marsh, Powell Livingston Chapel with the Rev.

Roderiok Johnson officiating. Burial will be in Sunset Memorial Gardens. The child died Friday afternoon. Sales Net (hds.) High Low Close Chge. Admiral ,50 286 Alcan Alum 1 215 Allied Ch 1.90b 199 38 Allied Mills 28 8 Allied Stra 1.32 35 25 25 Allis Chai 1 174 25 Alcoa 1.60 64 87 86 Amerada 3 140 Am Airlin 1.50 219 Am Can 2.20 526 Am Cry 81 Am Cyan 1.25 387 Am El Pw 1.44b 212 Am FP 1.16 38 20 Am MFdy .90 142 16 Am MetC1 1.90 38 49 48 Am Mot 218 Am NG8s 1.80 39 Am Smelt 3 86 65 64 Am Sug 1.40 24 Am 2.20 1027 Am Tob 1.80 135 34 Am Zine 1.408 Ampex Cp 1324 Anaconda 5e 128 Stl 3 58 Armour 1.60 93 37 Armst Ck 1.208 52 Atchison 1.60 211 32 Atl Richfid 2.80 33 90 Avco Corp 1.20 203 26 Beat Fds 1.50 28 Beech LSAv 1.40 31 45 Bell How .50 271 Bendix 1.40 183 Beth St1.

1.508 249 Boeing 1.20 442 73 73 BoiseCascade .25 132 28 Bran Airw 146 83 81 Brist My .808 72 Brunswk 202 Bucy Erie 1.608 109 Budd Co .80 83 15 15 Bunk Hill 1.20 60 32 Burroughs 1 361 91 92 Calum 1.20 365 Camp Soup 1 44 Can Dry 1 28 Can Pac 1.508 34 Carrier2 28 Case JI 57 24 24 Cater Trac 1.20 148 36 Cerro Cp 1.60b 180 43 Cert-teed .80 43 St1 119 Ches Oh 4 26 68 Ch MSPPac 1 149 49 Chrysler 2 536 Cities Sv 1.80 594 Coca Cola 1.90 81 93 Colg Pal 1 82 Colum Gas 1.44 80 Comw Ed 2 207 51 Com Sat Corp 200 51 -1 Con Edis 1.80 200 Container 1.30 68 29 Con Can 1.90 104 Cont Oil 2.60 36 Control Data 623 44 Corn Pd 1.70 69 Cowles Com .50 11 Curtiss Wr 1 117 20 Deere 1.808 238 Det Edis 1.40 57 34 Disney 189 Doug Aire 395 Dow Chem 134 Dress Ind 1.25 95 duPont 5.75e 150 158 East Kod 1.608 114 133 134 Eaton Yale 1.25 62 El Paso NG 80 Firestone 1.40 46 48 Ford Mot 2.40 384 Frueh Cp 1.70 200 30 Gamble Sk 1.30 Gen Bak 31 18 18 Gen Dynam 1 277 Gen Elec 2.60 262 90 Gen Fds 2.20 52 75 Gen Mills 1.50 51 62 62 Gen Mot 4.55e 570 Gen PCem .80 41 1.28 289 Gen Tire .80 119 35 Ga Pac Cp 1b 34 Gillette 1.20 339 45 Goodrich 2.40 51 64 Goodyear 1.35 173 Gt NoRy 3 27 60 Gt Sug 1.608 138 46 Greyhound ..90 130 19 Gulf Oil 2.20 141 59 Hecla 1.15e 69 Holly Sug 1 Homestk 1.60 Honeywell 1.10 209 72 Hud Bay 3.408 6 64 Ideal Cem 1 21 Inspir Cop 2.50e 20 35 35 Int BusMch 4.40 120 Int Harv 1.80 205 Int Nick 2.80 61 87 Int Pap 1.35 274 28 Int 1.50 365 81 Jewel Cos 1.20 51 32 Johns Man 2.20 Jones 2.70 51 Kaiser Al 162 47 46 Kennecott 2 121 Kerr McG 1.40 42 Lehman 1.72g 53 33 33 Lib 17 Ligg My 5 51 Litton Ind 1.54t 98 Lock Aire 2.20 126 65 64 Lone Cem 1 50 17 Lone Gas1.12 128 Lorillard 2.50 368 Mack Trk 1.59t 113 37 Macy 1.60 40 42 Magma Cop 3.60 37 58 Marath Oil 2.40 89 Martin 1 255 21 21 May Str 1.60 103 McDon Air .40 661 35 1.80 Merck 1.408 127 MGM 1b 384 37 35 Minn 1.20 140 Mobil Oil 1.80 228 48 Monsanto 1.60b 653 47 47 Mont Ut 1.52 24 Mont Pw 1.56 21 Mont Ward 1 257 24 Morrell 90 Mt St TAT 1.12 12 Nat Bisc 1.90 47 50 Cash Rg 1.20 100 Nat Dairy 1.40 94 36 Nat Distill 1.60 86 41 Gyps 2 33 35 Nat Lead 3.25€ 128 Nat Steel 2.50 28 46 Newmont 2.20b 69 NY Cent 3.12a 183 Nia Pw 1.10 130 No Am Av 2.80 123 Nor Pac 2.60 67 56 Nw Nwst Bane Airlin 1.908 .60 233 2 51 51 Olin Math 1.80 162 Otis Elev 2 54 Owens Ill 1.35 96 59 58 Pac El 1.30 72 Pac 1.20 34 Pan Am .60 374 62 62 Parke Da 18 407 1.608 80 56 Pa RR 2.408 154 Pepsi Co 1.60 52 Phelps 3.40a 138 73 Philip Mor 1.40 29 Phill Pet 2.20a 189 Pillsbury 1.15 38 38 Polaroid .40 273 Proct 2.20 49 77 78 Pullman 2.80 91 RCA 299 47 Repub Stl 2.50 218 72 Rexall Reyn Met .90 134 Rey Tob 2 197 Royal Dut1.790 229 35 Safeway St 1.10 117 StJos Lead 2.80 35 43 StReg Pap 1.40b 155 Schenley 1.40 76 SCM 669 Scott Pap 1 138 Sears Roeb 18 283 Sellon Shell Oil 1.90 64 Sinclair 2.40 69 Sola Basic .606 37 Sou Cal Ed 1.25 Southn Co 1.02 81 Sou Pee 1.50 160 32 Sperry Rd 1186 Std Brand 1.30 46 35 Std Oil Cal2.506 183 Std Oil Ind 1.90 Std NJ 3.30e 606 64 Std Oil Oh 2.40 35 Sterl Drug .90 78 Stew War 1.506 Studebakr25e 884 Sunry DX 1.408 157 29 Sunsh Mn Swift 2 Texaco 2.60a Tex Sul .40 360 Tex Ins .60 333 Tran Air Transamer 1 Livestock SPOKANE (AP) (USDA) Salable cattle and calves Monday 850. Prices not established by mid-morning. Salable hogs 650. Barrows and gilts 50 cents to mostly $1 lower. Barrows and gilts: No 1-2, 200-230 1hs.

21.30-21.70; mixed No. 1-3, 200-240 lbs. 20.40-21.20; few No. 2-3, 285-300 lbs. 17.10- 17.60; U.S.

medium 1, 165-195 lbs. 19.10-21.20. Sews: U.S. 1-3, 300-475 lbs. 14.00-15.80; U.S.

2-3, 420-575 lbs. 12.00-13.80. CHICAGO (AP) (USDA) Hogs butchers steady to 25 lower: most 1-2 200-220 lbs 21.00-21.50; 70 head at 21.75: mixed 1-3 190-230 lbs 20.25-21.00; 2-3 240-260 lbs 18.75-19.50; mixed 1-3 350- 400 lbs sows 16.00-16.50. Cattle calves none; slaughter steers steady to 50 lower; prime 1,325 lbs slaughter steers 25.50-25.75: 60 head at 26.00; few loads prime 1,425 lbs 25.00-25.50; high choice and prime lbs 25.00-25.50; choice 24.25- 25.25; high choice and prime 900-1050 lbs 25.75-26.25; high choice and prime 900- 1.100 lb slaughter heifers 24.50-25.00; choice lbs 23.50-24.75. Sheep slaughter lambs steady to 25 lower; wooled slaughter ewes fairly active, steady; choice and prime 90-105 lb wooled slaughter lambs 23.25-23.75: shipments 254 head choice and prime 102 lb shorn slaughter lambs with fall shorn pelts 23.00.

Billings Billings Livestock Commission Co: Cattie 1,900. Slaughter cows strong to 50 higher; other classes not fully established: limited early sales slaughter bulls and feeder cattle fully steady; slaughter cows mostly utility 15.00-17.50; cutter cows 14.00-17.00; slaughter bulls utility and commercial 19.50-22.00; cutter and low yielding utility bulls 16.00-19.00; feeder steers choice 500-800 lbs 24.75-26.50; mostly choice 450-575 lb calves 26.50-28.50. Portland Cattle 750, calves 150; slaughter steers steady to 50 lower; slaughter heifers 25-50 lower; slaughter cows not fully established; early sales mostly steady; other classes not established: slaughter steers choice 1065-1170 lbs 25.40-26.00; good to mostly choice relatively low yielding 1046- 1245 lbs 24.60-25.20; good 1000-1200 lbs 22.25-24.50; standard and low good 21.00- 21.50; slaughter heifers choice 825-907 lbs 23.50-24.00; good and choice 740-955 lbs 22.90-23.30; good 21.00-22.50; standard and low good 20.00-20.50: slaughter cows standard 18.75; utility cows 14.50-17.75; cutter cows 13.50-16.50; canner cows 11.25-13.00. Hogs barrows and gilts 190-230 lbs mostly steady: heavier weights steady, some 25 higher; sows steady to 25 higher; No 1 and 2 190-230 lbs 20.75 20.85; No 1-3 190-240 lbs 20.25-20.75; 240 260 lbs 19.25-20.50: 350-600 lb sows 15.75 17.00. Cattle calves 300; steers and heifers steady to 25 lower; cows strong to 50 higher; choice with end prime 1,157 lb steers 25.35; choice 24.25-25.00; choice and prime 1.025 lb heifers 24.85; choice 23.50-24.50; utility and commercial cows 15.25-16.50.

Sheep slaughter lambs steady to 25 higher; ewes steady; choice some with end prime wooled lambs 22.00-23.00; choice some with few prime shorn 23.00; cull and utility shorn ewes 5.00-6.00. Sioux City Hogs barrows and gilts not fully established, weights under 240 lbs steady to 25 higher, not established on weights over 240 lbs; sows steady to 25 higher; barrows and gilts U.S. 1-3 200 59 240 lbs 20.00-20.50; U.S. 1-2 200 to 220 lbs 20.75; U.S. 1-3 240 to 260 lbs 19.75- 20.25; sows U.S.

1-3 400 to 450 lbs 16.00- 16.50, U.S. 2-3 450 to 500 Ibs 15.75-16.25, 500 to 550 Ibs 15.50-16.00, 550 to 600 Ibe 15.00-15.50. Cattle good, calves good; not established on slaughter steers and heifers; cows steady; bulls steady to weak; limited early sales feeder cattle steady with last weeks decline: slaughter steers erage to high choice 1100-1200 lbs 24.50- 24.75; choice near 1375 lbs 23.15. St. Paul Omaha Cattle 7,000, calves slaughter steers mostly 50 lower; heifers 25-50 lower; cows and bulls steady; vealers mostly 1.00 lower; slaughter calves weak to 1.00 lower: not enough feeders sold early to establish market; choice slaughter steers 24.50-25.25; choice 850-1050 Ib slaughter heifers 23.75-24.50; utility and commercial slaughter cows 16.75-17.50; canner and cutter 14.50-16.75; utility, commercial and good slaughter bulls 22.00- 24.00; choice vealers 29.00-33.00; choice slaughter calves 22.00-24.00.

Hogs barrows and gilts under 250 lbs fully steady: weight over 250 lbs about steady: sows steady to strong; feeder pigs steady to weak; mostly around 215 lb barrows and gilts 20.75; 1-3 190-240 lbs 19.75-20.25; 240-260 lbs 19.25- 20.00; 1-3 270-400 lb SOWS 15.75-17.00; 2-3 400-500 lbs 15.00-16.00; 1-2 120-160 13 feeder pigs 17.50-18.00. Sheep 3.000; slaughter lambs about steady; other classes steady; choice and prime 90-105 lb wooled slaughter lambs 22.50-23.00; utility and good wooled salughe ter ewes 7.00-8.00: choice and fancy 65 85 lb wooled feeder lambs 23.00-23.50. LIVESTOCK FUTURES CHICAGO (AP) Futures trading on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange Monday for prime and choice live beef cattle: Sales High Low Close Pr-C1 Feb 355 25.30 24.95 25.20 25.32 Apr 921 26.00 25.60 25.72 26.02 Jun 762 26.85 26.45 26.67 26.90 Aug 356 27.75 27.50 27.60 27.75 Oct 202 28.15 27.97 28.00 28.17 Dec 264 28.35 28.15 28.25 28.30 Feb 43 28.75 28.62 28.67 28.87 Apr 17 29.00 28.82 28.85 28.99 SPOKANE STOCKS Furnished by Goodbody Co. Big Creek Apex 1.65 1.90 Clayton .59 .63 Coeur d'Alene 3.80 4.00 Day Mines ....13.75 14.25 East Coeur d'Alene .09 Golconda .10.30 10.75 Highland Surprise .06 .10 Jack Waite .03 .06 Keystone Silver Lucky Friday Ext. .31 Metropolitan 43 Merger Mines Nabob .06 Nancy Lee Mines Nevada Stewart Pend Oreille 3.50 3.75 Reeves McDonald 1.75 1.85 Sidney Silver Bowl Silver Buckle Silver Chieftain .20 Silver Dollar Silver Syndicate Sunshine Cons 1.50 1.60 Vindicator .09 Comp Bond Fund 9.32 10.13 Comp.

Fund 9.72 10.57x4 POWER AND BANK STOCKS Montana Power Pid bid 105, asked 110, First Bank bid 41, asked.

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À propos de la collection The Missoulian

Pages disponibles:
1 235 400
Années disponibles:
1892-2024