Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 66, No. 163, Ed. 2 Tuesday, August 16, 1955 Page: 4 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Oklahoma City Times and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
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I
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V
TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1955--TWENTY-ONE
No Bull!
Estimated Salabe Receipts
xd
“3
> *
45
2
While most major divsions were
2
%
3 $mt
3Sm(
60 stocks lost $1 at 1170 60 with
C
‘rint
33
73 Ai
Business Briefs
highs and 18 new lows for the
}
iSecond in A Series)
payments on cars is now the best
Tuesday from conversations with
}
local officials
No date has been set for transfer
I
23
16 PhlMor
60 PhUon
!
UI
I <1
11
3 unl
28 Sunt
334
26%
;M
i Cell O
ichByf
p ll
nlandt
nipirCop
38%
166
1
It
9
J
1%
13:
3
4
%
11
in
$03
I
I
'Air
281
32
York
8%
3m
5
18Fw
»il 5
#,ar,‘on‘ 800
MIS Ar % ion
• r&r Oil "9 4 Ml
WLI
122a 399,212
5238082
321009
A
19
#
tree
vr I
583
1
Temperature end Precipitation
Marriage Licenses
Sardii
close on the board of trade Tues-
Highest temperature yesterday,
I
year-
City
er
Pre
New York Cotton Futures
deau.
Cash Eack
"002
LS
-of-state weather conditions:
is
1
No
att
iium
FAsi
T
Ct
T
WELCH
1
31
.01
3
alla
20
«
va. Kenneth L. Benjamin.
Divorce Decrees
dlzniter.‘borAndecap
un
Ji
-}
AG
2228
WELCH FLOOR CIRCULATOR
Ei
United States Treasury Statement
centrel.
Foreign Exchange
ine MaOre cematalei.
$4995
treugungtenthefiscai year beginning July 1 compared with
111
■
Itim
CIRCULATORS
WINDOW FANS
77
____________________________________i
.U
10
Cattle ..
Calves,
Hogs .
Sheep
Bv 24
i
i
Joyce :
A Cow in Wall Street
Aids Stock Debut
• • •
The Times Congratulates
These proud parents:
perature ever recorded in 84
years that date, 106 in 1952.
Lowest temperature last night.
of Foremost Dairies Inc.
A blonde “milkmaid," Louise
Manning, New York City, led the
bridled animal up the steps of
13 Crown zel
.. 4,600
... 800
... 800
... .400
WK DNSS DAY-A growing
number have learned to live
with debt and like it.
the exchange entrance at 11 Wall
Street, a few dozen feet from
the trading floor
Wall Street was blocked off to
traffic from Broadway to Broad
street for the occasion.
1. Cone
Brooks.
■ Pm.
",
moou 11
21%
#
46
n 8
1 Sit
I 4%
3414
984
1)
3
J
4
18%
ij ■
m
mt
304
16‘t
13
e
to Cedar Rapids and Omaha might
lesult in the city plant and others
at Denver and Kansas City, Kan ,
sharing the increased load
Plans are being made to trans-
fer some employes to other Wil-
son units, Cooney said, as well as
assisting others in arranging em-
ployment elsewhere. Also in the
Wilson program are a new knit-
wear and uniform factory in Kan-
ias City, a new golf bag factory in
Tennessee, sales branches in Port-
land, Ore., Washington, D. C.,
Denver and Detroit, plus a new
San Francisco branch soon ready
to open.
2NY$
1 00 do pi
________________________ Oklahoma City Times_____________________
1 *
Swine Market Closing New York Stock Exchange Prices Stocks Mixed
%
• #
234
M
at:
100 percent stock dividends
Dairy Stack Switches
Foremost dairies moved from
5";
iwloa and
< 1
as top for a load of choice around-
1.175 pound feds On the other end
of the range, the $18 50 price took
two loads of fed-on-grass Santa
Gertrudis. Only odd lots of butch-
er heifers were included in the run
and most of these sold from 112
to 115. grading utility and commer-
cial. Sales on steers and heifers
were fully steady.
Plane Maker s
Income Spurts
tomorrow at 5:51 a. m.; sets 7:17
p. m
Civil Twilight — Begins 5:24
a. m.; ends 7:44 p. m.
Moon Data— Phase: New moon;
NEW 1
echanse
year touched. Volume amounted 10 ^MoTeXlT maj reS in' panies say the record of instalment
J
22
19
9
s:
the industrial component off $1.60,
| railroads down 70 cents, and utili-
terially alter existing’’ ineffi-
ciency.
Cost of the entire building pro-
gram at the three midwestern
plants was termed substantially
less than the estimated $8 millions
required to rehabilitate the Chi-
cago plant
Hopes for expansion here were
noted in references to capacit of
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
41%
M
ns
491,
4% erately. Losses went to between 1
" . and 3 points while gains of 1 to 2
72% points were found,
2
isA."22uduz:"sa."a
E"e-"ruxemPra
quiet, registering small price ad-
vances to recoup Monday’s slight
losses at the close. Dealers said
"ouawwee
MCM 4
Ie '
wigdamre ’ “
Nel
os asdua. a sew
1$39.95
i in history. In June, when a record
$1,766,000,000 of credit was ex-
>
seasonal lows. All rye futures, plus
scattered corn, oats and soybean
contracts, also were at new sea-
sonal bottoms.
Wheat closed 1 cent lower to %
higher, September $1.92%; corn %
1
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
।
I
34
4 MelMe 203
EE 3: 282,
and much of the activity profes- nounced Tuesday by Norman
sional in character. I Rydge, chairman of Walton's.
Australian and Danish dollar Rydge said the name w uld be
B’amN
iry
df
Browna: Miru I4»-M IM.) so-32.
New York Spot Coffee
„NFWnYONK. Au.ci6cAP-Sottee
tiss-Wright Corp reported Tuesday
Its new profit for the first half
of 1955 rose to $15,065,859 equal to
12.02 a share from 17.560,443 or 95
cents a share in the first half of
1954.
Roy T. Hurley, president, said
sales totaled 1250.072.134 against
1234.510.689 for the year ago half.
The backlog of unfilled orders and
scheduled production under ad-
vanced contracts amounted to 1818
billions on June 30 vs $860 bil-
lions on March 31 of this year.
Other earnings reports, first-half
unless otherwise noted, include:
ties off 10 cents.
Only 323 Climb
There were 1,147 individual Is-
I
■I Manmng.
lanatee.
38
i
3
2
2"
NEW YORK. Aug 16 I—A
I % cow wandered through Wali
Street Tuesday for the first time
in more than 150 years.
$5 01
8
as the substantial expansion and
x.
5 aclas 14
3 LaneBry 16*a
[ 2062 31
E •UMbMr'eiras
i
M Jacobs
4 aeger M
/ ' 3
vn; W
44S
$
3
W I
*
"a8a,,,
14
X "63
21,622,620
ss1,3c212
Doras“Mrd"beG, PaulX"Nw- and
uagsuguagaqa,,
track U.S. Ne. i. as
28
122
404
bMM —
F*
55E r
*sS£^'E gs
*8H*
14 soony 604 ,
IjsolarKir 1961
? SoAGP 105
11 SoCELG i8K 1
May vs. Ollyer Hai
- Am vs. Am Edi
I M. VS. Shermn
■’‘Sirrnut »
^SnoM-_
। “An excessively high level of
plant expenses’’ was given as the |
major reason behind plans to j
move the meat and food divisions
from Chicago by James D. Cooney,
Wilson president He also pointed
For real “COOL COMFORT'
...all Summer Long!
88 a
Chicago Cash Grain
E2“3#
Aug. 111954
1 5,650,813,72).75
5,051,26039825
9,493,294 963.86
274666863,786.72
2! 8M.326 380.71
168
me
6,134,155
to statutory limit.
--
—■■■-- ■——
TElegt 1
andF 11
shares each at 24, then spent
most of its time trading between
23*. and 24.
A block of 9,000 shares of Royal
Dutch Petroleum traded at 83%,
off
Curtiss-Wright had flurries at
But Averages
Hit Stiff Blow
I NEW YORK, Aug 16 IP—The
stock market declined Tuesday in
an irregular manner with late
selling pushing prices down mod-
es
11%
p 1065
E
52
out that some of the buildings
there are more than 50 years old
and “nothing less than a complete
rehabilitation program could ma-
»
North American Aviation was
l«N.k» CSL 111
4 Nat Acme 59
Na A**
I Am i oIam IFw 1 da nf
22 IM
28: 2
Top 32 1 higher prices following its earnings
'1 YnehaT 6331 report showing profits equal to
5201R ij*'* 52 02 a share for the first six
___________ months of this year against 95
[cents a year ago
r-
„chafen Eitmtet ana nobert na,
"5
P em 49*
3
I
ar*
l oodajsan 21
#8
Divorce Petitions These prices reflect only
Qwen n Mary Ellzabetn Tavlor, what the quoted dealers
iDaro Fran .. ... Donald Gene paying or asking.
Produce
368 1
NEW YORK, Aug 16 isu-Cotton Chicago Produce
mh. futures trading trends were irregu-
it. lar Tuesday. Nearby months were
i« steady on mill buying and short-
} g covering. There was also a fair
i« amount of buying of near months
152 against sales of later deliveries.
133 Possibility of price supports on
I the 1956 cotton crop continued to
। up have a depressing effect on the
later trading positions.
Futures closed 35 cents a bale
: higher to 25 cents lower than the
previous dose.
#z"a
2#*
— ylverc 176
l“ur 194
• OutbMAM 394
wenag MH
1 QMMd P Ml
100 100
Unto.
I da wl
"^ToTfam avenuT*'
FOREST 5-5353
OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLA.
625
a
# I
nin Su H2C
S5 66
J i
# 2
need " (Until recently you didn’t
need even that )
Your radio blares: “Install a
window cooler now, payments start
next April"
An ad in the paper says “Wall-
to-wall carpeting for the entire
house at 14 a week."
There's Danger, Tee
, Next to striking oil, it's the
j easiest way man ever has devised
I for raising his standard of living-
and fast.
It's also one of the easiest ways
i of getting beyond your depth if
you don't watch your step.
The vast majority of Americans
are meeting their weekly nr
! monthly payments. Finance com-
they’ve bought on time.
An agency that specializes in
helping families after they get in'a
financial mess estimates that 10
million families are pinched by
the debts they've piled up with
overenthusiasm.
The quality of some instalment
loans in recent months worries
Administration officials. Terms
have been getting easier-down
payments lower, maturity times
extended.
This has been due largely to
sales competition Almost all kinds
of consumer goods are in abundant
i Taleot as
4 Telautoer 30
4 TemeoA 12%
10 Tenn p 52
30 Texan 1021a
32
14 fexf
Ido p< MS
13 TP CAO »i,
4 T.xPL Tr »S
Hiss' r
EGGS
9"
Ess. Jr MM M.Mx. halance ensy: I
84
tudack
8 unCham
90n8
and
BBeneaa AamaHasmenPisWisbitetand
Corp., Flying Tiger and Spencer
ivie: Shoe Lower were Arkansas Fuel
- Oil. North Canadian Oils, Pepper-
- g- the over-the-counter market Tues-
iwsrcI, 3uday 10 the New York Stock Ex-
swhit.M M change; it made its "big-board’’
sn " " debut on three blocks of 1,000
30 PennDix J2
an
7 Pa PA Lt 4834
1 40do pf 11014
2-
28 Coal 2436
2,
is«
. 7
3 W Mary 4344 ;
A WestPac 5834
ssm #3
196 West El
13 WheelSI
14 Whirlr
15 New 17%
10 pf M
3--
wrlwM *»«*»*., * * me
"5 day. All other cereals turned down- 90: highest temperature a year „Jamae,E.„Bruus, 2, NE »
+ ward in active dealings, with Sep- ago yesterday. 101; highest tem M E 5 “’ ““ NE 11
_ ; tember soybeans dropping sharply.----— • • •
. ! Wheat was bought earlier in
) I sympathy with substantial gains at ।
"fhmse
gfta"aNhu"rahemar"sam"a
Szdem=ma
“".,57
2.
H»i
.... WJI nom.
ehMte oM "ylad.l M. Fan #
I. Dwipmed -in Ivaltew "M tM" Im
m MW MVM der ieu-
esbowca)
rises 5:39 a. m., August 17; sets
7:01 p. m., August 17.
---- - Pref “
-----* 3m
the local plant and possibilities that
shifting of the Chicago operations supply.
steSay:cAelptAUK1,15; APRoleniPvttr
"e‘2 da
anaPco 47
"“it®
laitinughtsrpereturtemperrtufe Mt
c 21‘a
MiQuiN 16’4 ..
1 MeadCp 601a Wdo pf
l do .39 pl 69 1 71 PaR
5 Mlvhoe .36'. J " ‘
I MercantS 2614 4
*Nere* 167* 102
4s 5* !
iffi lower at the final bell, coppers
93 maintained a strong price front to
3% j the close
m 1 The Associated Press average of
Competition
Has Big Part
In Credit Jump
By SAM DAWSON
<AP Bustneas New, AMxlM)
Traffic stopped and hundreds i NEW YORK. U—Y ou walk along
stared as “bossy" was led the street and see a sign on a
through the canyons of the fin- good used car: "Only 15 down."
ancial district to mark the open- You look at ■ new house and
ing of trading in common stock the builder tells you: "If ycu’re •
* veteran, $200 down is all you
E. #
sikSS* 98
on 23
212 | sues traded of which 323 advanced
isl2 and 556 declined with 23 new
• dauthte “ Hubbard LMmanKuanimnnend Wiiam Evereu Me
Arkansas Broilers A Fryers Odd Lot Stock Deala
4 W cox
W S’*
39 14,
3Worthntn ;1
1^ %
Es SSSB . o a 1
2=2 Errauessen
2321 220#
e-
Contatner Cer».
angom 758258
A chemleg
• "ueee SJ4S.MI
=,2a=c-az3
1 SutherP 46
11®. S:
15 44
5 SymGid l'a ।
I oPl
ido (
19
..
".iWIk
S mtors #94
14ft”' ।
NEW YORK, Aug. 16 I_Cur- 35
,1m0
ByTbe Al
Aai&im*i 7S
which reached 117 75. Other better 1 1
butcher hogs mostly earned 117 to 1
117 50 in a 25-cent lower market 112
Lambs were generally unchanged id. pi'
with 119 50 stopping best available 1 smStsMt
The cattle market kept up a fair- 2 AmBrscbe
ly lively pace as a whole but buy- 1 20 pi
ers were still fighting to evade 20 AmBfN
: ttha is
9 heratA 154
12 simnds id 52,
45 5ncl S4H
i 55Ke[0 SI
3 mth0 47%
2 w r
In
---- CHICAGO, Aug .17 _A buying j C 7ether Dctd.iL
New Orleans Cotton Futures; flurry in wheat faded near the
(By The Associated Frere)
AheteMalden.2.XSw°nd Hazel
Frank D. Barksdae, a. 404 NE t.
and Earlene Ure. IS. spencer.
10 FajrbMor 254a
.E !i
! amen xa59 * mteteem r
iii: । iBb,sm 1
■.Jn. 83 8*5^
Sg: is
32825" £ ’ mX
2
* pr
•* " ‘ Sr "Itt
* #
iE ‛zr
#92 "5 st
5 R
T
s
New York Produce
a"E“.-0n5sez5m"wAEli.VSRa:
gas"ggpasexan
Ejtn. flare. (WWonol* selainu prlees
Ne
sehsagutsr"a za
i,fm*ama#an
3=- ■
I
-
45 aierAl 341,
3ancpal. 4244
884 ®
IMKan&AE 2
ehzdt 122%
are Chicago Grains a Provisions
.(By The Asnoetatea Preaa)
WHEAT- Nes
WM df
10 ranga
« EmarFI _ .
17 merad 14
2 27%
1 EndJohn
50
do pf _.
32"
10 do p< MS 18
U PAR CAI 15*. 7
a Phileo 35 1 32
tended to new car buyers, others
were paying in >1.190,000,000 on
previous loans
The percentage of delinquencies
and repossessions remains at a
remarkably low level—and stable
over the years. But as the total
of consumer debt rises, the total
amount of delinquencies tends to
rise also, even if at the same low
percentage.
Competition Blamed
The American Collectors Assn
says that six million American
families are delinquent on pay-
ments for one or more things
. xiuksas 90b
I iriMMy 505
#,i, EE,
#h E F 3
.W E i
11 Alcoa 64 2 27%
1 AmalLeath 3 1 28 utteCop 12
6 Amerada 923 2 Byer .27
"IW 2
Ami. 16- (i
market was uesuay. ।
■mp rayon Ubrire ware IlmHM.
. HavesMr 4 IMn
l0dopf M
14 cine 50
5 eime 24H
3 HercuiMot ||
4 Hertz Jji,
35 redenCk its
#
hfye #
4® S'
7UnPKM is I
t
3 US nd 344
Lin xd 22%
3 UI Pi&F 994
2 PlyC 72
7 Plywd 38%
3225 128*
FEED GAAINS
Oil. Barte
9 14
nni # 1
s
322
IlS:2S5 8
1# Lowse MS
&'• 2
1. RoraWam 439
122222 1
p< 4944
1 1 raAjrw 159a
9 BrideBr 32
sS
2..... "
. 72.0 172 :
Hog trading lost some of Mon-
day’s price gain on the Oklahoma; ua
City yards Tuesday but there were! ’ A
still a few outstanding butchers i 15 ‘
#=e= E --EEEI
10
1
_ M s
.Ite 8"
I Penick* F 50 70 do pl
.3 PeninT. 414 15
2
44
32
< o Pf 1024 ।
pF 321
ubsvid 42’.
Publicki jv
.. do pf 76
? XT 251
27 Pureo 364
7ou>%,ii ns: d"p its
SQuekStO 3IS 2 165
R 7 Thrmold H
2MaA JOS
SMm 4
20 Macy pf 92
»8
4 Maznyx 5
I Manati 1 6%,
' 22 Marathn 32
n. 9 Mrine Md 164
# akl
17 5 MartPar 16%
g gjasonit 29
)MayDStr 414
1 Maytag 94
1 de pf 55%4
2 Mcall 219
5 McCord 284
7 V crytr 15
12 49’e
1 MerawH 6344
’ 644
43
reduced income because of loss
Sears Buys Aussie (ha in of overtime or from layoffs.
SYDNEY, Australia U_s e a r s u Finance companies and bankers
________Roebuck and Co., Chicago. has have, assured the administration
changes were 1-32 and 2-32 in both agreed to buy a substantial inter- that from now on they’ll be looking
intermediate and long-range obli- est in Walton's Ltd., a 22-store Aus- more closely to see if loan appli-
gations but the volume was thin tralian retailing chain, it was an- r are credit-worthy.
- Mb
el 52
JHfX. 192
N do pl ns
14 Krsgess 294
11 Kroser 4IS
13 PabcoP 964
iEcm" 4,
JU
I Pac&El 51%
6 Pacag 41
1 PacMi 45
3-00 PacTa 1454
1526
10 PacwQil 40
49 PanAWA 164
“.te1 ,2
, higher on reports in Wall Street
This list of prices paid to ; of possibilities of a higher divi-
•2-----4---,2-2 *, t dend or an extra payment
state department of agri- Amex Slanted Higher
culture market news service.' i Trading on the American Stock
Kona dollar IT.M -
Prerei N. to 2 cents lower, September
*0 $1.24%; oats ’4 to 134 lower, Sep-
2 # + i tember 56%; rye 1 to 1% lower.
4354 “ * September 95*4: soybeans % to
5 50 ; 314% lower, September $2.22%, and!
a zw + i lard unchanged to 7 cents a hun-1
" • dred pounds lower, September
New York Wool i $10 »
„SFWoYOBK.AuE.. 16-(AP-Bogh The weather again was back in
fidp"or"huygutqnkd"eomnd2 the picture •* far as corn and!
"Wor"turhoticovrrisa .. r.n„ । soybeans were concerned. Com-
B S S i nleatsorgninuwere. heard about the
• Firmness at Minneapolis got
m wheat off to a steady start at Chi-
— cago, but the steadiness did not
New York Sugar last long. Prices fell back on liqu-
„NEMuxANK,Au MAA-Demesue 3-1 dation. Some selling in distant
TfJwZ; So. Ss:pMaycnshsaed months was based on reports that
Russia did not want any surplus
“ "Mt " “* grain from the United States
eg=Ee—
Minneapolls Four ti o fu
5=2=8
8
Oi
as Prop Cotton List
a Mills and Shorts
bonds moved up fractionally in a changed to Walton'.-Sears Ltd.
dul foreign list. Last year, Walton’s had net in- Chicag. i iv—i^v
come of 334,000 Australian pounds - vestock
on its capital of 1,847,326 pounds. fBCANQa SutAPa-‛s2A -
The ordinary dividend was 15 per- .I2","r"2,"adntaneezuhak
cent. Sales last year totaled it mil- 188*..2s has" ,24
Etezu
03
i
2.
nfAir
IAme #%
8628432
8
{ g5; Ren’
•# k
3 l *8 5
1E .E
IE E &
pret. " 1
ap hw
140 45 p< 1ih । 12
122 2 s 3
DWGig 15M
z.»A1"M w that ?iir^ .Mm”
Sunrise and Sunset Data—Rises 2 I
Saunr #
Bis
EeE B
3 #8 Bfmce
3E35* State Markets
J Eft*? ft' 32 Tflil list of prices paid to
liRldSw oi 284 producers is compiled by the
2988 8a ’k ttatt dennvtme"* n* —'
2 Run AM* 132
,25#
’ IE# ""J-
1 3
4814
#-
» 144 -
zyollgsdgi ,3
20 omstk 394
1
49 owns nd 23
3 udAMpf 714
12 udBayM 6914
1 Huntds 29
lwag 79
E E 1
82%.
1. hancevgt JI
385
ic fiefs’ y
iSic,west sS yanapa 2
# ws
38ke 3
price improvement in sll depart j AmEain iCanpry 6 «
ments. Onlv about a half a dozen SAmChicit #* 14 pfir K #
4280 ,5 »
ket was over fairly early on these i» mEseon it*. ’ Carol f • i
at $18.50 to $22. the latter going, 12 Amgr 25 lUdiw He 2
1 j2mmF1 men 22 8
4m 3- )
MinAOnl 65'5
MinPI. 2
1 S MImdCp 37 1
„ #3 2
* *8#, 19
। ti & 162 11
zoP
«« S'
2 MooreM 29
4 Morrell 194 24
IEIA5/3, 39
s. 313 it
1363 lk |?
r>f 8520
ItsR0. 2 .....N— -
ntSilver 64
£ S ag suug.
£ 52.
31 PhiPet
2 PilsbyM
11 Pitney R 4642
PtC&C id 214
1 PitConC M4
4 PitForg 174
1 PitPIG 124
5 74
1 PitSteel 24
Odo M 8214
1 Pit&Wv MH 1
11 ittstonC 291 |
4 MymO 3234
$ ondCrk 50
2 PopraCB 21%
12 234
10 ProctG 1044
14 EUBSEaG 32.
C
34 Saiplesk ')0»'
1 ftfa' 3*
re0 $
— — 9 nmT 1#4
wumP 14 I 1 enak 10
Pl 1[y l» do Pl 145
ainer 448 ' 1(“.bk 32
pl* 197% 1 gen Ctwr f*
£!i km"
73
e* 13
2 Crmof Wh 31Ma1 4 Ura r -
t jksE
19 J 11
msg; 30
MCMibi Pk e 3
irESPub “u 48
218rq.Wr 2,
1 do A 546
• . EGQs
hWhir- demand active, bids 2
LawValley +3$ E Reno
fheli §
Enfd" Al 3 it°EC
Wn- City s »■
Active Again 252
4 do pi
l do pf cld 764
5 met 30
»AdamtEx 463
H Admiral 04
6 Aeroquip 15
37 AirRedur 33 4
1 USmit
129 Ssti
3 do pf
6 USTob 194
AnStkyd 134
1 30 do Pf 99
l dn 2 of 104
72 UnWalp 244
1 6 do of 2514
I UniyeS 424
4 130npfet 199,,
!rnd 29% 1 UiNPaL 40
ielP v
E. e {Yandap 3 N
i 12 2 yecge *: ?
11 pt *82 1§ee8kw 4
1184.. 1b iVaCarh 5933
dga2 &I I2" # ! 1.520.000 shares, a light day but •------- - , .
511818 5* * (considerably heavier than Mon -expansion, here ” was indicated
1 tevuP kJ* I IWads |4 day s 1,230,000 shares, slowest day "" " " " ....."
j jwfc $59 since January ’ year ago. ,
MWoiwrth 1544 toppers were itrong and air- ,
2482/1 o Warpt su 1662: crafts were in demand. Steels and ring of Wilsons Chicago operations
1643 I2Wardi„Se itb ! railroads were lower. to expanded plants in Cedar Rap-
74 is Warn Lm 3441 International Nickel shot ahead ds., Iowa, Albert Lea. Minn, and
'*• .wL™ Fa K*. 21, at 80 on a block of 2,700 shares Omaha, but O W Gaffney, general
250 ! 17 Wah ku 40% i and held to its gain. Rhodesian manager of the Wilson plant here,
Mb i Wane Pp fa Selection Trust, an African copper saidthe move will be made as soon
“ 119We5Sr 4 398 mining company, had a block of*
“ 10 000 shares at % up modernization of the three plants
Adams Express and its affiliate.1 is completed. Only some of the
American International, made non-food divisions are to be retain-
(quiet progress after each declared ed in Chicago
tL
eviii wu m piitri"
evite, IIS sRrSra
in#"k
3 &
t >
The Dosv-Jones Ticker Wilson’s Move
-alE 52^
- „liho 20
l iounG 3244 1
6 ouG 34%
13 ouPac 0
ioukod »I
wesPS 27%
2*
' Pnkej Sh
-—it 2544
IMH
1 15
954
...»
„EpE ’ZT" 2" a
A jmyth Meli 2222 Steady, demand.tair '* sood .
4 uberold it Muskoge. “ 12 Lawton
2 Rupert uv* Fobaf II jtaKMw 14 UIL, Nortn Canadian Oils, Pepper-
12 ,4, X.e « Alahoma City I. eil, Preston East Dome Mines and
38 20,0 4301293 yulgfoma Ct i8 y,., < Sterling Precision Instrument
1 nxar 322 w’.ti'n«',‘"" 12 Watme ” Aircraft and industrial conver-
12 Er" - ..12 tibles advanced While oils and
re p» 322, Lvtone ; Kg"- .....J utility issues declined in a mod
Wkodwrerd ......! 3 I erately higher bond market Tues.
lVa 3Rbar* 1 day Trading was sluggish
U S treasury bonds remained
"e3ne‛F0tc..,
.............. SU
EhE
— "V*‛Fornykk*
l'
Eases; Cattle
do pl 1
5owa 3g 'j
73 *
Homep 77b 1 2 -
e F gis '
; ,AAmNrsrz 6 3
ms (£
5
‛%
Easy to Get in Th Deep
How do people get in over their
depth? Silver Shield, an .organiza-
tion that makes a business of try-
ing to help people who find they
can't meet their payments—and
charges 10 per cent for doing it-
says that most of them just didn’t
realize they were taking on so
much debt
Modern merchandising puts such
emphasis on time payment sales
and makes credit look so easy
that a family lacking sound money,
judgment just eases into debt be-
fore it knows it.
Otners are victims of illness or
EII
.spo otton zcentabej. Minneapolis, where mills bought
wheat futures following sales of
cetot W atok wji. " spring wheat flour to bakers Gains
New York Drygoods at Chicago never matched those
NEW YORK, Au2.5-Ap-m. eot. at .Minneapolis.
tem.txtiic.MrkMt"ws eule fsda. Prior to this rally all wheat fu-
Pee mere n™ Tere we some fur tures except September made new
5 Pasait
4 Blesdr
- ( 2
— | I PetMIk
Sb | 2 pflUBr
31b I 22 Hirer
5b | 12$0n54048102,, 3TxinC8 2
3 MV Arms 11H 1 I’
■ $6 U»ar’U'
79 40 do nt 44 109
32 11 n Cal 52
§Yn Pa 1571-
z2§nsj r
Ml
ta81
do NJ
do Oh
NEW YORK Aug 16 (INS Here
are the Dow Jones hourly stock aver __ _ _
age changes I B • 11
... re *. * A * Kaises Hopes
.94 - M - at - .n
at - fl + ti - h
M M” ( Planned shutdown of Wilson &
wwu.asnuz
MOM I M
Moh.
-algM, reln-ily
* eny MM
eire4, ...........
Me*
S we reMire
-i s w: OMI.
•Mw. . .
WM
^1103
reU. JHA. To*.
"Nerebenen........
"‘or mixed, Mr "220.121111.22222
I dahopw 114 1
Jl ISe 5^
44PrPmRR Ub
fnaxdt
aui”r Mb
Oi
23 2
1aaStopN Hh
k
r 28892
#3 c #*
"381224
Sgs;
Jg E g
]g u g
14 & 5“
1 Nehi CW 164
19 Nirar 105
1J
’I
3222
Gou-
-See Eoe. 30 wJ*'1, Cora i _,ec
a-lefyiin“dBourpeon." ICSbitel Hu Truek market Ast M ewt
LOcal Markets
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 66, No. 163, Ed. 2 Tuesday, August 16, 1955, newspaper, August 16, 1955; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1999502/m1/4/: accessed June 13, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.