Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 9, 1923)
Love Doctor, Not -r Paid, Kills Nurse ZYoUng Woman Refuses to Pay r $395 for “Love Charm**— Head Crushed. ."Pittsburgh, Pa., Oct. S.—Miss Elsie Barthel, 28-year-old nurse, was killed bl' Lorenzo Savage, voodoo doctor. When she refused to give him $395 fpr "curing her love ills.’’ according to a confessidn which city detectives said the man made enriy today. The confession, according to Captain of Detectives Louis Left, was made after ‘lavage was taken to the scene of the crime shortly after midnight. Under the glare of automobile head lights, Captain Leff said Savage re enacted his movements when he met the nurse bweath the portico of a deserted East End mansion. The man confessed. Captain Left said, that he struck the nurse in the face when she grabbed the money out of hi* hand; felled her with a brick and then dropped a 70-pound block of marble on her head. As she fell Mire Barthel cried. “I'll give It to you.” Savage Is said to have told the detective*, but the man stepped to the outside of the portico and pushed the loose marble block from the wall, crushing lier head. Details of the confession made pub lic by Captain Leff recited how Miss Bart he 1 met Savage while they 'were employed by an East End physician, tiio woman as a nurse and the man as a butler. The nurse learned of Savage's ability as a “fortune teller" and approached hint when she had difficulties with her sweetheart. Sav age gave her six cards, held together by a black pin and told her the "charm" would work if she return ed the cards to him and paid him 8303 on Saturday night. Tey met under the portico late that night Jtpd Miss Barthcl handed Savage the cards nnd an evelope con taining the money." When Savage announced that "the cure” had work ed. the nurse grabbed the money from his hand. Then followed the killing. Savage picked up the money, but in his haste he dropped the blood marked cards. It was these cards that led the police to arrest him. Tn his home, they said they found a dock of cards with six missing. The cars found near the body completed the deck, Captain Eeff declared. New York — Day by Day— By o. o. McIntyre. New York, Oct. 8.—A page from the diary of a rtftxlern Samuel Pepys: Bay late listening to a rainfall and then to breakfast with Walter Cat lett, the comic, and Marshall Nielan, the cinema director, cams and sat a while. Home and cast my accounts and llien with my wife, poor wretch, to do some shopping and lingered an hour in the book stalls and bought more than my poor purse could .-fford. . In the cool of the afternoon we Kgt out to walk around the reservoir id Central park and saw two ladles Hung from horses in the mud, but neither hurt, and laughed as though foxc with drink. Tc dinner to Paul Whiteman, the bajlflpinn, In the evening and saw tSere' Victor Herbert, Rube Goldberg, Bud do Sylva. A1 Jolson. Marc Con nelly. Police Commissioner Enright and many others. So to bed. Tlie other evening across from the Weldorf a man stood tn a doorway s-anning the window boxes and cur tain of the hotel. With pencil and Pad lie was making copious notes. The man was Oscer. "Hotel men rt times forge! the outside of a hotel." be told me. "1 make it a custom to inspect the exterior once a week." It is difficult in roaming about the giant skyscraping canyons of down town New York to imagine that for 30 years Trinity ehurcli was the tallest building In the district. Its tall spire now seems squat in the surrounding heights. There is an old sidewalk beggar who .stands on a corner near Trinity with his pal sled hand holding a tin cup. At a certain hour each day he shuffles into Trinity to pray. One of those pompous, iorgnetted dowagers who is already hreaklng ground for the fourth chin drove up to r. dressmaking establishment in West Fifty-seventh street and stepped from her carriage. The proprietor tuglied to the doorway to deliver Ida lowest how. It was easy to see prices in the shop went up auto matically when she got Inside. T happened to be pasting again as the proprietor was escorting her out to i he carriage. "Remember," she said, “Ip make the three dinner frocks very girlish.” And he solemnly declared he would. A new mnnlctire shop lias opened in East Forty-ninth street and is con ducted by a former lint check girl in a Broadway cafe. She had the bat ihecking concession there for 10 yenrs and was able with her earn ings to spend 120.000 in outfitting the new shop. New York is shortly to have the $2 movie. No particular reason is ad vanced save theater owners believe the public is willing to pay the high er gouge. In the meanwhile the average price for the so-calleil legltl mate play ranges from $3.30 to $5. Music Box revue seats for opening night sold for $150 each—a top tec old for Broadway. There ^ras a round-table rlwus sti>n at one of the newspaper club* the other day a* to who was the most Interesting young man In the world from a new* standpoint. Hi* said the prince of Wales, three Charlie Chaplin and one cast his vote for • Jack Dempsey. Incidentally, one of those who pro tested Charlie Chaplin was much more interesting than the voting prince inquired sarcastically: ‘'What lines the prince do interesting outside of falling off a horse?” (Topyrlght. 132T> Parachute Jumper Hurt. vHt. 1.011 is. Oct. g—Harlan Querney. IS. of Lincoln. Neb., wss seriously injured Hunday afternoon when a parachute he was Jumping with from an airplane at Ft. Louis field, failed fo. open properly and he hurtled to 1TT* ground. He suffered a broken shoulder and possible internal injur 14a. Omaha Grain Omaha. Oct. S. Omaha receipts total 304 <ars against 134 car* Iasi year. Tots! snipmenis were 140 cars as compared with 143 cars h year ago. Cash wheat on the Omaha market was In fair demand with prices around un changed. Corn was in excellent demand at M, to 1 tye higher. Oats were gen erally unchanged. Rye was quoted lower and bnrley unchanged to 2c higher. First transactions in the Chicago fu tures market were at a slightly lower level, but prices were supported on the break with commission houses good buy ers of wheat. When the market turned upward shorts became nervous and cov ered freely numerous atop loss orders being uncovered when the market reach ed new high levels The advance was tno rapid and prices fell back aharply. The news from Washington seems to still be the muin incentive for buying. Corn was inclined to drag and did not fully sympathize with the strength in wheat. Cash buyers were not so anxibUH today and offerings were somewhat larg er. Oata about paralleled corn. „ Market >ews. Ottawa: World's wheat crop this year will amount to 3,318.000.000 bushels, an increase of 214,000.000 over last year, ac cording to estimates received by Dominion bureau of statistics from the Interna tional Institute of Agriculture in Rome. Winnipeg: Fair trade at opening, with hedging noticeable. Some showers in southern Saskatchewan. Cash situation ftcad: »o front?: premium 1*4 over 1 under and 4*4 under. Kxport Demand—Russell's News wires: The feature in the export demand this morning are reports of cancellations. It was said that the other side took ad vantage of the advance and resold small lots totaling perhaps 60 to 70 loads. As fHr as fresh sales to the other side are concerned, not one actual sale was traced up to 10:30 a. m. Omaha i or Ixil Sales. WHEAT. No. 1 hard winter: l car, $1.11. No. 2 hard winter: 2 cars. $1.11: 4 cars, $1.10; 1 ear. $1.09, smutty; 2 cars, $1.09. live weevil; 5 cars. $1.00; 5 cars, $1.08 llvf* weevil; 1 car, $1,09 4 No. 3 hard winter: 2 cars, $1.09; 3 cars, 31.10; 1 car, $1.07; live weevil: 2 cars, $1.08, live weevil; 4 cars, $1.08; 1 car, $1.06. No. 4 hard winter: 1 car, $1.07; 1 car, $1.02; 1 car. $1.06; 4 cars $1 05; 1 car. $1.01. 14.5 per cent moisture; 1 car, $1.02, smut tv. No. 5 hard winter: 1 car. 98r, smutty; 1 car. *1.04; inusty; 1 car. $1.04. Sample hard winter: 1 car, $1.02, 1 car, 85c, 45 lubH. smutty; 1 car, 95c; heating. 1 car 8 9c; l car, 8 5c. No. 3 yellow hard: 1 car, $1.07. No. 3 spring: i car, $1.16. No. 4 spring. 1 car. $1.05; 2 cars, $1.02; 1 cur, $1 03: 1 car, 98c, red, smutty. No. 5 spring: 1 car. 94c, smutty; 1 car, •Sc; 1 car. 95c: 1 car. $1.05. Sample spring: 1 car, 88c. smutty; 1 car, 91c; 1 car, 95c. No. 2 mixed: 1 car, 93c; 3 cars. 95c, durum: 1 car, 96c. No. 3 mixed: 1 car. 96o. durum, special billing: 3 cars, 94c, durum. No. 1 mixed: 1 car, 94c, durum. No. 5 mixed: 1 car. 92c smutty; 2 cars, 99c, smutty; l car. 97c; l ear. 94c, smutty. Sample mixed: 1 car, 89c, smutty; 1 car. 89 4c. smutty. No. 3 durum: 3 cars. 94c; 1 car, 95c, ambe.v No. 5 durum; 1 car. 92c. red, special billing, smutty. CORN. No. 1 white: 1 car. 97c. No. 2 white: l car. 974c (special bill ing): 2 cars. 97c; 1 car. 98 4c; 2 cars, 974c (special billing). No. 1 yellow; 2 curs, 94 4R. No. 2 yellow: 7 cars. 94 4c. No. 6 yellow: 1 car. 924C No. 2 mixed: 1 car. 95 4 c (near white); 1 car. 93c. OATS. No. 2 white: 4 cars. 42 4c No. 3 white. 1 car, 424c (special bill ing); 1 car. 42c (choice); 1 car, 42c (spe cial billing); 3 cars. 42c; 21 cars. 414c. No. 4 white: 1 car, 414c (special bill ing); 1 car. 414c (special billing); 1 car. 414c (special billing); 4 cars, 414c; 4 cars. 41c; 2 cars, 414c. Sample white: 1 car. 404c (9 per rent heat damged); l car. 404c; 2 cars. 404c (heating.) RYE. No. 2: 2 cars. 71 4‘. No. 3: 3 cars, 71c. No. 4: 1 car 70c. BARLEY. No. 3: 1 car. 63c; 1 car. 61c, 1 car. 614c. No. 6: 1 car, S014c (special billing); 2 cars, 60%c; 2 cars. 60c. omaRa rec'eiWs'and dhipmpints. (Uarlota.) Racelgta: Today. W'k Ago T r Ago. bVi, .»« «; n Barley . lo ° 1 Shipments: B4 o»<* . « 6; 6 RarleV . r> 1» > PRIMARY RECEIPTS AND SHIPMENTS. (BUSHELS, l Week Y»ar 2.T7LOOO S.U (■or n 649.000 61)9.000 1.507.000 Outs .. . 1.646.000 1.31 1 000 1.056.000 Wheatm'n,*_ 639,000 1,056,000 932.600 Dor* . . .... 906,000 267,000 1.212,000 Data . 037,000 607.000 639,000 EXPORT CLEARANCES. Wheat-Flour 351,000 118.000 M cmCAOO RECEIPTS Week Year Carlotr—■ Today Af? ACi .: Ho »? ill o«t* too u wrh?.r- .... Tr % A4« Oat. 61 - * 9 ST. LOUIS RECEIPTS Week Year Darlete— T.vlar Ar.. ■W'r: $ in NORTHWESTERN wheat receipts \\ t-d.k Tear I'arlot,— Today A*" *« » Minneapolis .699 {.' 1 j ii! ut h ... 120 1 * 1 * Winnipeg 1792 221" 20»2 'united STATES VISIBLE Bushels- Today Wk Ago .Jr Ago. Wheal . 64.136.000 i3.».!2.900 S2.620.0JO i'„rn I 562.000 2.052.000 10.962.000 o2,S 16 SIS 000 16.514.Olio 3.5.900.000 Jyl i5ani.ono .. 7..,71.000 narlev ' 3 .516.000 3.tt«.oft 967.000 OMAHA STOCKS Bushels— Today Year A so Wheat ...3.446.000 1.475.00" Porn . 84 000 r.03.000 oitJ . 1,227.000 1.893.oou ... 107 000 76.000 Barley ■ ■. ■ ■ «2.oo» *•**» Kansas tit* brain. , ... Kansas *'My. Mo.. Oct * v'||,at—No. " hard Jt.o>7r1.2&: So 2 red. *1 . ember. 4106%; May. 1109% hid; July. *‘<D!rn -No. 3 while. 91 00; NO 5 yellow. 98c; No. 3 yellow. 9»7r; No. - nilx«d. tV 4f.v Iieremb^r. 73 4*'I Mo), 7.,*c b.n. July. 72 4y'. split bid H ay —Ma rket un.hu ns e d ; a 1 fa I f #. r ho I* t. $26 00ff 27.00: prairie. No. 1. $ 1 4 00 d» 16j>0 . timothy. $15,004. 17.00. Hovsf. mixed, llxght. $16,500 1C.50_ Minneapolis ft ruin. Minneapolis. • *- f •• , '' h€0vrtC,lfh (uru 1 nort hern,- fi 1 8 .» 1 *3’*. N°- 1 r,‘. northern spring choice 1 ° /f,nX,2R,* •J* 1294. K‘>"d to choice, $rw2 4« 1-84. ordinary to good. 81.2°# # 1 - - 4 w cembar. $1,19 4 ; May. 22 * Corn No. 3 yellow, 9b<\ Outs No 1 white, 3*4 ® 40 4c Barley 50# Me Rye—No. 2. St. Ix»mI« 4*mln. St. T.oule. Ma. < >■■ 1. 9 -Wheal—Cloae: D'remher. 91.12%; May. 91 MX Dorti — December. 77r, May. 75% . Oat*—December. 4 4c ^ New Futures Commodity Authorized in Chicago ChicaRO, Oct. X —Rules of the Chica go board of trade were chank«<1 today so ns to authority future delivery trndliW? In dry suited hOR bellies, the principal cut of dry salted meats. Heretofore, dealtnRS In short ribs and lard have constituted the bulk of fu ture delivery trading It) the provision market, but at present the stock of hoR bellies exceeds that of ribs by many million pounds. Vixiltle Supply »f Grain. New York, Oct. S.—The visible supply of American grains shows the following changes: Wheat increased 411.000 bushels. Corn decreased 490,000 bushed*. oat* unchanged. Kye Increased 113.000 bushels. Harley increased 264,000 bushel*. Plan Rhineland Republic. Putin, Oct. *.—The separatist* In tend to attempt the establishment of a Rhineland republic at an early date, sayH a Mayence dispatch to I.e Journal. The republic will he proclaimed simultaneously In all the principal cities on the left bank of the Rhine and In the Ruhr, the correspondent say*. New York, Oct. Rev. Patrick .T. McGIvney, pastor of Kt. Charles Bor romeo parish, Bridgeport, Conn , wns re-elected supreme chaplain of the Knights of Columbus by the director* today. Chicago Grain ) By CHARLES J LEYDEN Chicago. Oct. 8.—Timely support waa again encout tered in the wheat pit to day and while top prices were not main tained the close was higher and on a flurry. Routine news was mainly of a bearish nature hut seemed to have little Influence in the trend. The trade was In a waiting mood because of the confer ence here, the purpose of which ia to im prove the farming situation. Wheat closed c to %c higher: corn was Ho to lower; oats were Hr higher to Ho lower and rye ruled higher to He off. Below $1.10 for the December resting orders to buy In a scattered way were re peatedly encountered. The early bulge which carried the May and July deliv eries to a new high level on the crop was checked by offerings from a house that has been active on the buying side recently. Pressure, however, waa not persistent. Bull support in corn was not in evi dence although there waa sufficient ab sorption to give the market a steady tone lr> lower grounds. The reported offer ings from Illinois for October and No vember shipment tended to allay buy ing power. Outs were Irregular and inclined to ward easiness with the yellow cereal. Speculative trade was smaller and com# mission houses were on both aides of the market. . . Rye trade simmered with wheat show ing irregularity and prices were uneven at the bell. Lard advanced under scattered buying bv shorts in October and Investment de mand in the January. Riba were easy. Lard was to 10c lower and ribs were unchaiged to l7Hc higher. Plt Notes. On the whole the wheat market acted nervous. This was due no doubt to tho uncertainty as to what might develop In the conference here. It seemed that co operative marketing methods was the chief topic of interest at the conference Manv had looked for something drastic to happen and realizing led to a choppy trend. . , ,, , The Canadian market was relatively ea/sy compared with Chicago. This was due in a measure to the spreading opera tions with the buying at this end. loun try marketings or wheat in Canada con tinued heavy, but advices had it that only 40 per cent of the grain is being sold and the balance U for storage. Movement of spring wheat was fair, but lino elevator* in the American north west look for the run to fall off within 30 days. In the southwest mills are pay ing good prices for choice wheat and re ports suy there will be an acute shortage by spring. Apparently Europe is not worried over its future supplies'. Liverpool has been showing feebb- response to the recent strength in the domestic markets, while Winnipeg has been ruling relatively easy. Cables had it that Russia was offering wheat freely on ail sides. CHICAGO MARKET. By Updike Grain Company, AT. <312._ Art. I Open. I High. 1 Lo%v. I Close. | Sat. ! uht. i I I i I Dev. I !,*»%' 1.10V 109%' 1.10 1.0»% I V10 I 1 1.10% 1.09% May r.nvl 1 14%! Ml ' 113%! M3’. i 1.13% 1.13% July 1 111 1.10%' 1.09%; MO 109% I MOV * I live | I j l)e,*. i .73% i .73% .72%' .72% .73 Mnv I ,7«%! .77%! .76% .70% .76% I .77 I I I ! July I .74 : .74 I .74 I .74 . I Corn I I 1 I l,ec. ! .76 ’61 .76%. .76% ,7«%l .74% ! .76 % I I .76% .76% May ! .76%! .75 % 1 .74% .74% .76% . 7 5 % [ .75 1 .75% Julv i . 7 5 % t .75% .75 ' .75V .75V | Dec* .44 .44 .43 V .43H1 -43 % 41V l .' ..... I. May .46 .46 -4 45 V 45S 46 .41;«% . .!. JulV 45 45V .44 741 45 .HH Lard Oc*. 112.25 'l2.25 12 20 12.20 12 25 Jan.' 112.20 |12 20 11.07 '11.07 11117 Oct 9.5ft 9 f» 2 1 9 .‘ft 9 62 9.45 Jap,' 9 65 j 9 <5 1 9 65 ! 9 65 1 9 55 New York Sugar. New York. Oct. ts—Buslnes* In the raw sugar mark‘*t whs limited to a few sales 01 outside sugars, although It was rumor ed late :n th« afternoon that Cuba* had sold again at 5T»c. cost and freight, or unchanged from the last previous price. other sales included some new’ crop I^oulhlana at 7.03c, which was equivalent to about 5 84 c. cost and freight for Cubas; also 28.0<0 bag* Czecho slovakia raws to American refiners. Cubas at close were quoted 5 7*0. cost and freight, equal to 7.6* duty paid Haw sugar futures were quiet all dav. First prices showed 1 point decline to 2 advance and the market later became heavy under offerings of outside sugars at easier prins December, after selling e-rly at 4 98c. ea-eil off to 3 85c. but met covering orders which promoted a late rallv Final prices were 3 to 4 points net higher (dosing October. 5.72c; December 4 94c; March, 3.96<| Mav, 4.04-. In refined surar there was a continued good withdrawal demand, but very little new buairess and the list prices of fine granulated remained at 9.25c to 9 60c. Refined sugar futures, nominal At the dose there were sales of 4.0ftft bags of Cuban for prompt shipment at 1 and 14.000 bags .of Pan Domingo, October shipment at 54fcc. cost and freight, equal to 7 59c for centrifugal. Rimix Cltjr Livestock. •Sioux City. la . Oct. 8.—Cattle— Re ceipts. 7.540 head; market alow, killers yearlings. 17.25012.0ft- xwtv 88,250 steady; sto'kera. weak; fat ateers and 10 50; fat rows Mid heifer* IS 5009 75; ( inner* and cutlers |2 2503.0ft grass « own and hetferr. $3.250 5 7.0; veals. $4 00 | " ’•» 0ft bulls. $3.0004 25; feeders $5 00® 7 f.o*. mfockers. $5nn®7 5ft; stock yearlings ’ml calve*. $4 0007.50. feeding cows and he'fer*. $3O(.05OO Hogg— Receipts. 6.000 bead market. 15c I*. 25<- lower; top, *7 60. hulk of sales, 16 *5497 50, ligh's. J», 7507 oo : butchers, $7 25 07.60. heavv pa. kers. $6 *00 7 oft Hheco and Lambs—Receipts. <,000 head; market atendy New York Produce. New York. Oct 8 —Butter—Steady; re ceipts. 5.656 tub*: creamerv. higher than extras. 4«S®47« ; creamerv extras (92 score). 46.-; creamery firsia (8* to 91 score). 42*4 45 l-r; packing stork cur rent make No 2. 31c. Fggs—Irregain i receipts. .*,.933 case* fresh gathered extra firsts. 4f'to44r: fresh gathered firsts. 35 0 '♦< ; fresh gathered second* and poorer 2* to 3 4c . New Jersey hennery white* locally selected extra*. *.*•(» 70c; nearby hennery whites locally selected **kras. 66{r»6*i . stale nearhv and nearby western hennery whites, firsts to extra*. 48*; 6 4c; nearby hennerv brown*, extras. 49065c; Pacific const white/ ex tras. 59toOttr. Pacific coast firsts to m »ra firsts. 48 0 58c; refrigerator firsts. 31 to 12 *4 c. Cheese—Trreguinr; receipts. 1 37.252 lbs ; • tale whole milk flats fresh fancy to fancy special*. 27 V» to 28c state w hole milk flats, average run. 26V,027c; sis * whole milk twin*, fresh fancy. 27c: state whoi# milk twins, average run. 2<Hc. PsrHgn Exchange. New York. »>ct X.—Foreign Exchange*— Market steady Quotations (In cents): Great Britain demand. 465 *« cables, i 4614V 60-day bills on banks. 4 52 V France—Demand 5 99V cables. 6.99*4 I Daly—Demand 4 52*4; cables. 4.53 Belgium—-Demand, 5.08rabies, 5.0* \ Germany--Demand, .00000012; cables, ,00000012 Holland Demand. 39 31; cables. 29 34. Norway- Demand, 15 66. Sweden Demand. 26 49 Denmark Demand. 17.67 Switzerland -Demand 17 90. Spain—Demand. 13 53 V Greece—Demand, 1 49 Poland Demand, 000l*£. Czecho Slovakia Demand. * 96 Jugo-Slavia—Demand 1.16. Austria—Demand. .0014 Bumania — Demand 46 >4 Arglntins—Demand. 38 00 Brazil—Demand. 9 70. Montreal—99 New York Metnla. New York Oct 6.—Copper Easy; elec trolytlc. spot and Inter. 13013V . tin casv- spot and nearby, 42.26c; futures. 41.75c j[ op—Steadv . No 1 northern. 24 00c; No. 2 northern. 23 00012$.60c; No. 2 southern, 2 1 * 00 24 00c Lead—Steady; spot, 6.85 0 7 00c Zinc—Ste#d> . East Hi I.oul* spot and nearby delivery, 6.2506 30 Alimony—Spot 7 5007 60c. 4 hirin’-. Potatoes. Chicago. Oct. 8 Pot at os Market Is slightly stronger on whits stock and steadv on e«rlv Ohio*; receipts. ,6 cars; loUl I' 3 ■hlnrnan". 1.191 c»r,: Wli» .in liiilk rciuii'1 whll-«. No 1. I* -••'■‘I* rwi ; muk.il II 5«1M 30 .«! : sacked rout’d whites. No. 1. <].*R \J, w* partly graded. $1 000 1 10 cwt Mlh nesot* and North Dakota sacked and bulk R#d river Dhlos. 91.Hi®! 16 cwt,; Idaho Marked rural*. No 1, $1 75 cwt. I^Mirlon Miinff. T.ondon. Oct, R H«r "llv«r. * ' % p«nc# p*r ounce; money. 2'* p*r rent, discount rnten; Hhort bill*. - 1»-1* ** J jifr rent; three month* bill*. R “-1* p*r cent. _ llnr Hllver. New York. O* t R B*r Silver—RR’4* Mexican Dollar*-- 41 %c. Grain Exports Slump. Washington, Oct. 8.—fJraln exports from the United Klntes Inst week amounted to 3,014,000 bushels, com* pared with 3,6*3,000 bushels the week previous. Figures made public today by the Commerce department gave the fot lowing comparison between grain ex ports last week and those of the previous week: Harley, 20,000, against 624,000 hush c!«; corn, 162,000, against 190,000; oats, 18.000, against 40,000 bushels; rye. 164.000, against 46,000 bushels; wheat, 2.640.000, against 2,727,000 bushels (lour. 393,500 barrels, ngalnst 291,GOO barrels. Omaha Livestock Omaha. Oct. I, 1923. Receipts were: rattle. Hogs. Sheep Monday estimate. ... 16,200 6,300 32,000 Same day last week . 16,8 13 0,434 22,813 Same two w'ks ago.23,629 8,047 37,3 1 6 Same three w’ks ago . 26,696 6,145 28,8V 9 Jjlame day last year.22,620 6,236 24,066 Cattle—Receipts, 16,200 head. V^itta about average supplies of cattls for the opening day of the week, the market was active and strong to 1*0 2oc higher on cornfeda. Best yearlings sold around III.00011.25. Western gras* beef was in moderate supply, good demand and gen-i erally steady. Demand f«»r cows and heifers was broad and prices a shad? firmer all around. Desirable yearlings and stock cattle ruled steady and the same was true of the best heavy steers. Medium and common stuff of all kinds ruled slow and lower. BEEF STEERS. No. Av. Pr. No. Av. Pr. 26.1104 $ 9 60 45. 611 110 00 7 6. 969 10 25 53. 899 10 75 STEERS AND HEIFERS. 30 . 769 8 25 CALVES. 3 . 123 10 00 WESTERN CATTLE. NEBRASKA. No. Av. Pr. 20 feeders .*70 *'* *0 18 Stockers . 65o 7 00 49 feeders .. 9o0 6 60 31 cows . 995 4 35 9 cows .911 4 60 8 calves . 457 6 26 OTTO BENDA. „ 2 feeders . 905 6 17 heitera .• 504 o 30 17 cows . 903 - 00 Quotations on cattle. <'hoice to ’ Mine beeves, $10.90012.00; good to •-lm.es beeves, 610.00® 10.85; fair to good 'i,'. ven, $6.75 09.75; common to fair beeves, 5• 8.75; choice to prime yearlings. 11.25; good to choice yearling*. 10.25; fair to good yearlings, $8. ib ® 9.00, common to fair yearlings. $7.2a0H,25; fair to prime cows. 66.0007.00; fair to prime heifers, $6.0008.75; choice to prime grass beeves, $8.000 8.76; good to choice grass beeves, $7.2608.00; fair to good grass beeves. $6.2507.26; common to fair grass beeves. $5.60 06.26; Mexicans, »4.26gi6.26; good to choice grass helfqrs, $500 06 fair to good grass heifers, }J !J2 7* «'!!n • choice to prime grass cows, $6.2506.00, good to cnolca grass cows. $4.2505.00, fair to good grass rows. $3.3504.-5; com mon to fair grass cows, $2.40(V/ 3.26; prime fleshy feeders. $8.00®H 75; good to choice feeders, $7.1508.00. fair to good feeders. $6.40®7.1«: common to fair feeder*. $,/ 50 0 6 25; good to choice stockers. 7.75;.fair to good stockers, i9.26gt-r-*: common to fair stockers, $6.2606 5''. trashy stockers. $350® 5.00; $3.2505.25; stock cow*. $2.76 03.7$ "jock .•alv.n. 14 604* 7 60; ve.l ralve., 14.40 4* 10.00; bull.. sta*<. etc . *3 40b i’ ll..*!* Receipt" 6.000 hea<l Choice IlKht buten-r bog" w-r. In tha IlKht .uppllea thin mornln* and nhlpp.rii found a aood d*al of difficulty In ... I/* \VH.n rariulr.-m.nta for Ihln Hnnn "t "tuff enouuh nil.* hnd h*.n made 14 r omparlnnnn. price. looked around tit’--. lower ihati Saturday No *»!** "f *•*»" seauence hud been made to packer. up to S hour! with bid. lookTng a quarter lower. Bulk of »he sales was from $6.»0 , to $7.40. with with practical top for the day early at $7 fij0,u(iS Vo Av Sh Pr. So. Av. Sh. Pr. 53.315 70 $*_• 90 68..316 70 $7 10 * 3 S hee'p— B e c *fP t n. * * ! 10 00 head. Tim fair ly lata, run of fat lamlia met with a brink demand thin mnrnin* and it - »»■ not Iona b.fnr' trade .waa In full a»ln* at1 .Iron* priree. Inqulrlea for feeder, were not overly numerous, hut of euffi .lent number to take .are of 'ha etuff here at prlren that looked full, with the .lone of lant week. Fheep were .h.en- Fat lamb., fair 1 fat . . heavy, «J.50tf6.no Rfcaipis and dlapoattlon of IlveatocK • tho Union atockyarda. Omaha, far »> hour, rndinj^.^^ooow I. Horses. Cattle Hog'- .Sheep Mule*. C . M * St. P • . I 1 Missouri Pacific . •■• ? *4 Union Pacific MS 10S C. .v N W . east \ ■ 1 ' C. dr N VV #e*t 142 4 i ll C. St F* . M Jk O.. J 4 r. h dt g. east i • - T B A O Wf*l 2*M l«t • * C . H I dr. P . east 1 1- rt I. A P.. west. * 1 • • Illinois Central ■• } i 1 Chi. Gt. Western... » 3 •• jj Total receipts *07 *- 72$ 14 DISPOSITION HF.\L» Cattle Hogs. Sheer*. Armour * Co. «*'* }••** !*• I'utlahv PatklnK Lo . . 102 -,<9a Doitl Pa' kina >.o. .. 3 3 ■ Morrla Pa.-kln* Co .. $-* J’* Hvi f>wlft A Co 1-21J »•*'>* 3'*5’ Hoffman Brno. ; . Mayerowlch A Vail. -** .. Mliiivoat Packing Co . a . Omaha Packing Co. . J . John Roth A Son* t . ft Omaha Picking C.o. .. • •••• Murphy. J W . *•* •••■ Lincoln Packing < •• fi* •. Anderson A Son. **- •••• Hull. J H ■ »S . Chock. W H . *- . f>ei*nl* A- Francis..... *»lf> •••• •••• Plh - .< Co l|l . Ilarvcy. John .. •» .. llunlgltiyor A Oliver . J’ .... ..." Inghram. T. .1. . • *- . Kellogg. F G • . Klrkpatc* k Bros dr L. •-* . Krehhs dr C. • •• - Longman Bros ** •••. Luberger. Henry 8 . 77 . Mo Kan t' dr Co ZU . Neb. Cattle O * • . Root. J B A Co. ** . Rnsonstock Bros •••• •••• Sargent * Finnegan -»* •; •••• Anility Bros *1 . Bull! van Bros 1* . Van Sant. W B. dr Co. 422 . \Ser;heimer A Uegen U* . Wo low its. M A Tn* • M her buyers • l- l « Hwlft from Texas -1* Cudahy. from Kftsas. 1©* Total . VS39 «.773 23.»«3 1 tiiengo 1.1 v estock. - Chi* ngo. 1 ’* ? * Cattle—Receipts. n ftti.i head, si 1**5* t grades f® d sloors 15$f-*»r* lower; yearlings in more active demand, la-gely stei.lv to 1 5«: off: top mature.! 112.60: several strings fIZOQfy 12 50 fid yearling* nervuui at $10 604* n.fin; strictly choice Anan* mixed steer•« and heifers averaging 1 :44 pounds $1-"". western gt asters anil ttockert and feed ers steady to strong, fpots hlghtr; loids m**aty Montanas tw kiUera. $; •-• numerous loads less desirable kind. $♦>-•» fi*7 S‘i. plain «iualttl#s westerns t«. feeler buyers $5 OOfr* 25. other . lasses genera ly steady; bulls closing strong, bulk v®al ers to packers. $11 OOffll 60; bulk Stock «■ r m and feeders $5 004# 7 00; numerous loads going on Maryland account uround U Mi for H00 to $(»o pound averages Hogs Receipts. *0.000 head; desirable mostly 16c lower, others I5c n 25c off: rinsed dull. 25* n :i6o lower; bulk good wnJ choice l'»o o £10 pound average. $* on 'i % 25 top. I*.30 one iond desirable 1*0 to lHO-pound average mostly $7*OM7.$0; packing to-.vx largely $4 X0417.10. G** weighty slaughter pigs largely $». V 7.23; estimated holdover. IX.ooo head Sheep anti l.iml'S Receipts. 25.000 head: lambs 25 c to 50r higher: shse|» steady; most f,«t ramie lambs $1 t *'"b 13 76; some held at $14 00; hulk fat na tives $13.0041*13 36; top to dtv butt hers. 11 3 40. culls lH' gely $9 50ft 1'» no. bulk fji ew es. $5.00 4rr 6 00; best feeding land s, ;i\ cm King eround 70 pound . $11.00; tome lighter weights hthl at $1 3 23. •if. 1.4>ids Llfftterk. Fast 5tf Loul". t tet • —BOgs—Rerelpfa. 22 00* head; slow; earlv tone, 16*'-'5< lower: .-losing 2504©c lower; ton $C25: desirable 210 to 240 round butchers. $« 10 .fH 25; Closing top. $‘ 15; run mostlv light hogs, hulk $7 73 tt* tn nigs steady tt* 25c lower; bulk 120 to 130-round averages $7.00417.25; lighter klnda and p**weee 14 6047 7 00 tiacker low*. 10f»15c lower at $* $04# 6 75. most good heavy Iowa. 9* 76 . # Cattle Receipts. 1 2,000: native beef steers, 25c lower; western steers low priced beef tows grass heifers and bo logna bulls. 15 tr 2f»t lower; canneae. KW lf,c lower at $2 35 large!v. light \ealet steady to $0. loper at $1 0 60ft ll 0" stocker steers urn hanged; no fattv goods here ami good beef and beef rows are scarce, top long \ carllng* 911 75: matured teers. $11.00; bulk native stems $" 2.* *i 9 50. western ateers largely $6 20fi ». 7<* built beef cows. $3 7S4f’ 4 75; must bulls. * Hheep arid T.ambs—Receipts, f.nno head fat lambs strong to 25c higher ; culls and sheep unchanged; run almost entirely soul hw est Missouri lambs nualftv nlgin on« lot of good southwest Jamba to butchers $13 00 packer fop. $ 17 .0. bulk. $1 2 26 fY !I.50; culls. $7f.O4fS O0. light mutton ewes. $* 00. heavies tt 00. Kansan Cltv IJvaatork. Kansas fltv. Mo ‘ t * -M nlled State* Department of Agriculture ) « at tie Receipts. 2R.000 head, calves. 5 head most killing steers Steady; snots stronger on yearlings and low juiced westerns: heat long vearllngs. Ill bulk shortfeds 20.5000 00. westerns larg* Iv 15.0007 00; she stock falrlv rtdhr steady to 1 Or highet . beef cows 13 JSru 5 MO- csnoers and cutters. I.' 3Ml 2 Go bulls steady bolognas. 12.600 4 00 *<»l\«s steadv to 26e higher practical top (cal ers |9 60; sleeker* and feeders active, dull to a shade higher ‘.’f. car siring horned Tesas feeders. 10 50; hulk other sabs. 19 70 097.00. Hog* Receipts. 10,000 head market 100 1 fir lower OU desirable grade; little doing on others; packers bidding around 2r..- lower: shipper top. 17 R0. bulk «>f sales 7.2007 10; bulk desirable 166 to 270 Ih average/ |7 7Mi 7 MO hulk 110 to 160 III averages 06 70097 70; packing sows mostly 16 20090 00; sto* k nigs l»*i 16c lower, bulk of sales. MOOfffi o. few St tf 60. Sheep Receipt s. 1 4 000 head; market, lambs 25 ff 36c higher top westerns. Ill 26- others largely 111 00fi II 00; ahsep around 26c higher, ahort feds of range . . s. 00 ; 0; other In ih kind I*. ?:■ MM. Joseph IHrstocU Mb Joseph. Mo "i * faille H celpts. f. 000 head, steady to I 5c lower steers 16 7 *r I I 76; • aw« slid h#ifer» 1.1 6010 25 calves. 14 m"Of 10,00 stockers and feeders 14 60fp . * ■ lings Receipts 00 head 100 1 > lower, top. IT on, hulk. $7 ’ »4f7.*c Mheep Receipts 4.000 head stegtly, lambs 112 0001100: ewes. ^ . i. r . , ft N. «»f Ames A V<’ , w- side. Minneapolis IIoilr. Mir n* spoils Minn Oct * 9*1 (MlI bo rh*ng*d »o 10c higher, family pattnts. • o nu^.hk Bran -222.00 © 21 40. Financial Total sales, storks. 712.400 shore*. Twenty industrial* axeraged *9.58 net loss. .71. High 1923. 105.38: low. 86.52. Twenty railroad* averaged 83.47 : net (oat*. .10. High 1923. 90 51; low. 79.53. New York. Oct. 8. — Prices Jo*t ground in today's relatively active stock market. Heavy bear selling of speculative indus trial nharta. which registered net losses of l to nearly 4 points, brought to "& halt a promising upward movement in ruilroatl shares, many of which advanced 1 to 2 points.before yielding to the gen eral selling pressure. The buying of railroad share* wag bas ed not -mix on high current earning* but on speculative expectations of some fa vorable merger and divided develop ments in some of the leading shares. Bal timore /fe Ohio and Chicago St Alton pre ferred. established new high records for the year in the first few minutes of trad ing. Substantial net gains also were reg istered bv Heading. I.ehigh Valley, Un aware * Hiidson. I.ackawanha sod Wabash preferred ,'A." but these were canceled or materially reduced before the close. Late heaviness of the rails was gener ally regarded as sympathetic with the weakness of industrials, but the outline of proposed rail legislation by the con gressional farm bloc at the December ses sion also had a bearish effect on aenti ment. Weakness of American Woolen, which dropped more than 3 points below $70 to a new low record for the year, was construed as a lack of speculative con fidence in ’he company'* ability to main tain the 87 dividend. Baldwin and Studebaker also sustained sinking spells, the former closing 2*4 points lower at 1168* and the latter showing a net loss of 1% at 96%. J'avison Chemical dropped nearly 4 points to 46% and Dupont was off 286 at 125. Pan-American Oil Issue* were depressed on publication of a report that the Stand ard Oil of New Jersey had abandoned drilling In Aguda, but the net losse were field to fractions Cosden closad more than a point lower. Uneasiness over the reduction in steel production xvas held responsible for the weakness of the steel shares. United States Steel common dropping ;i point to 87 % and Gulf States Steel dropping nearly 3 points to 78%. Jones Brothers' Tea. which had been under pressure recently on reporta of unsatisfactory earnings, touched another new low at 25*4 Strength of Murine preferred. - which closed a point higher at 24. was asso ciated with a report that the company was bringing suit for alleged violation of an agreement Jiy the United Staten government to purchase ships during the war. American Smelting crossed f.9 on publication of the semi-annual report showing net earnings for the period of $5.43 a share but it reacted later, clos ing at a small fractional loss fall money opened at 4% per cent, ad vanced to 5 and thence to 5%. The time money market was oulet. Some 30-day loans were made «t 6%. but the pulk of bUHinees WHS for 90 days at 6%. Foreign exchange trading was uuief. but firm Demand sterling advanced %e to $4.55%. and French francs gained nearly 10 points at 5.99 %r. German marks were back at 12c a hundred million. • New York Quotations New York Stock Exchange quotations furnished by .1 8. Bat he A Co., 224 Oma ha National Bank building: Sat_ Jligh. Low. Close. Close. Ajax Rubber. .... R'4 5% Allied Chemical .. *".% 62% «2% 64 Allis-fhaliners ..42 41 42 41 % Am. Beet Sugar. . , 36 2.'. S5 36 American Can . .. 92% 90% #0% 92% Am. far A Found... . . 159 Am. H A I. . pfd.39% 41 Am. Inf. Corp. . 17% 17% 17% J7 Am Linseed Oil.. . 17% 18 American Loco 70% 69% 69% 70% Am. S. A Comm’i e. 11 1"% Am. Smelting . ... 59% 68% 54% 5*% Am. Steel Found . 34% Y1 % 34% 35 Am Sugar. 63% 62% 62% 64 American Sum. 20% 21% Amer Tel. \ Tel 123% l2.;% 1 23 4 1 23 % American Tobacco 15"% 1 49 1 49 JT1 American Woolen. 73% 09% 7" 73 Anaconda . . .39 28% 38% 38% Associated Dry G. . 80 Atchison 99 98 % 9* % 98% A . 1; A- V I... 14 •Austin N: hols .. 2• • % * 24% 24% 25 Auto KnPtt-f .... ls% 18% 1“% 18% Baldwin .11*% 115% 115% 117% Baltimore A o.... 5 9% .'•* % 9% 59% Bethlehem Sti ...49% 4 ■> % 4* «I8% Bo*, h Magneto . 29% 29 29 % 28 4 California i'avk .. .. 79 79 % Cal Pete .20% 19% 19% 20 Canadian Pat 147% 115% 145% 145% Central I.eath. 16% Chandler Motors . 47 4* % 4*% 47 Chesapeake A »> . f.9% 67% 67% 6 9 Chicago A N W 64% 63 64 % 6.1% C M A St P .... US 16 16 16% c M A St P pfd 28% 27% 2 8 27 % C R I A P 4% 2 3% 23% 2 4* Chile Copper . . 26% 26% 26% 26% Chino .17% 17% 17% 17% Coca-Cola.. 77% 7.*% Colo Fuel A Iron . 27% 27 27 27 Columbia Gas .. 3 4 3 7 % 33% 34 Consolidated Clg . 21 26 20 21 Conti Can ... 4'% 47% 47% 49 Corn Products ...124% 123% 12.7% 124% Cosden .... 27 ’ ** 25% 27 Crucible *.l 59 59% 60% Cuba «‘ane Sugar 12% 12% 12 * 7*% Cuba «• 8 ofd 4* % 4* 46 % 4* Cuba-Avi Sugar. . 21% "0% ~n% Cuysmel Fruit ... *3 62% Davidson Them 49 4 4 % 45% 49 Del A Hudson 112% l«t % 111% 109% Dome Mining 3*>% 38% 38% .'■»% Kile . . 15% 14% 14% 14% Famous Pliyors... 72% 70% 71 71% Fisk Rubber 6% 6% Freeport Te**« 11% 11% 11% 12% General Asphalt 29% L’8% 26% 30 General Electric .171% 171% 171% 171% Generil Motors 14% 14 14% 14% Goodrich . 22% 2? 2 2 22 (It No urn 26% 29% CJt No Ry pfd ■> 4% 5 4% 63% Gulf States Steel 79% 76% 76% . 9 % Hudson Motors 23% 27** Houston 041 51% 51% 61% 52% Hupp Motors 18 111 Centra! . . 1««% 1«& . Inspiration . 26% 26 26% 2*% Int Harvester 7 5% 74% 74% 75% Int M V.. 6% Int M M pfd 24% 23% -4 23 Int Nl* ket.11% 11% 11% 11% Int Paper . . . ... ... 33 Invincible 011 .9% 9 »% * Kelly Springfield .24% 23% 24 % % K •* Southern .1*% 18 18 1*% Kennecott . 3 4 .“ ■ % 3 3% 34 Keystone Tire ... 2% 2% 2% Lee Rubber . . 16% 1 *4 16 16% Lehigh Valley .. 6;i% 61% 6 > % 61 % | Limn Lo« "motive . 64% 63 61 % *•.'% li'iui*/ A Nashville 8*% *8 s* 87% Mack Truck .. 7.5 7 3 7 7 7 % Mariand . ... 2** 24% 24% 25% Meghan Seaboard. in% 9% 10% 1;% Middle States Oil.. .. 5% 3% Midvale Steel. 2« % Missouri Pacific. l>% 1% 1" % 1"% Mo. Pacific, pfd. 29 27 % 27% 2«% Mon t - Wt r«1 ... 24 2 2 % 22% ; % National Enamel. 4*% 46% 46% 47 National Lead ..121% 121 121 121% N V Air Brake 36% 36% 36% .76 * N Y Central 102% 101% 161% 1«1% N Y. N H A H . 13% 12% 12% 13% Northern Pacific.. 66% 54% 65% 56 Orpheum . 1*% 18% Owens Bottle .... 43% 4 3 r3% 4 7 Pacific Oil ..... 39% 38 % 39 §f% | Pan-American 6‘ •'■'-% 56 s* 67% Pan American MB" 55% 64 % 6 4% 55% Penn K R 4.'% 62% % 42% Peonies Gas 91 Phillips Pete 25% 26% 25% 26% Pierce Arrow 7 % Pressed Steel Car . .49 Prod A Refiners 25% 2|% 24% 23% Pullman 116%117 Purs till .17% 17% li% 1*% Ry Steel Spring . 1*2 i’.aV Cm solid* t o.I 11% 11% 11% 1 Heading 80% ?4 % 7*% 78% Reploele. lft 1* Hep I A steel 4 4 43 % 47% 44% Hn>ul Dutch N. Y 44 47 ** 4 '% 42% St L. A S Fran . 2<»% 19 1* 19% Svars-Ho *buck .. 80% 77*4 77% 80% Shell t’nIon Oil . 15% 14 14% l'% Sinclair nil . 14% 18% 14% 14% Sloss Sheffield. 4 - 4"% Skelly i Ml .. 14 % 17 South Pacific ... 4 7% 97*, 87*-, 87 s* Southern Hv. 35% 34% 3 4*, M% Stand n of Cal . 63*, 53 62 % R3*, Stand. () of N J.. 34'* 3.3% 3 7*, 3 4% Stewart-Warner .. 81*, so xn% fcl% Storm berg Car bur . *4 • ' 6t% 64% Stud* baker 97 95 % 96% 97*. Texas Co . 41% 41*4 41 % 41% Tex A P*c.- . ..21% 2«% 2n% 2*% Timken Roller ... 35% 34% 8 4% 35% Tob Pi o.l 67% 66 % 6»> % 6«% Tob Pro«l "A” 87% 86% 96 % •*% Trans* emtInental O - % 2 % 2% . , * *v I n Pa. Iftr • 1S0% 130*, 120% 130 i’nlted Fruit .170 170 l’n Re Store* ... 76% C S In*! Al . 6.’ % 60% 6o% R2% V H Rubber . 7 8% 37% 37 % 3* C S Sti . 89% 67*. * : % 64% P H Sti pfd .119% 114% 119*4 119 Cl ah Conner . 5t% 6i% 69% 6° Vanadium . •• * * % 7 4% Vlvaudou . B„ Wabash . 1°% 9 % 9% 10 % Wabash ‘A’’ . 33% *2 32 32% Westing FI" . 64% 67% 6.% 54 Whit** E 8*lt. **% 21 White Motors .... ... 44% Willy* over ♦ % 6% *% 6 W ttaon ■ . 51 % Worthing Pumn . -« Total socks. 72.700 Total bonds. 9.201*006 Open Close Mark.. Sterling .454% 455 % Franca .5f9% }f°% Italy .*6h 450** N rxv York (inifral. New York <»• t *• Flout—Steady; aprlmr patent*. |6 2b<M.7f>, spring fleara. t , u , "oft Winter Straight- 14 ;S4j boo hard winter strnlght* * & 7 ’» CT »•' i*ui uitir-ui Kirin f]n# white and yellow *i nmila I ed. $2 <• S fi 2 7b Wheat Spot. ateadx. No 1 northern MirirtK * I r 11 *«’k New York domett h II 44 No. 2 fed. do fl 2«H . No 2 hard '•. inter. «• I f trm k New York e»t»ott. 41 ; I, Nil I Manitoba, ti 11V*; No. . mixed durum, do. SI 14V*. t orn Spot. at t on* No 2 yellow and No 2 whit, fl 2f>U. No 2 mixed, ft tSH, all i- I i New York tall Oat* Spot, *.fiM.I\, No ? white f.4'i. ♦ Sle lx . No 1, $20 Otlfliai.nO: No 2. lin tMif#29 «•<» No a. 124 nonrs oo. ahlDplng. Sltooiitl.oo Mopa rirm . atale, 102.1. MU Me: 1022. to., I’it.iflo po»at. 1923. .15 flj> 3 Mo; 1»22 2 b f ( 21k' l\»tk Steadx mraa. 125 6012 26 0(1: fain 11% tan oo^ai on tail la ay . middling weat. 91.10(10 i.i ir. I allow Uulet aperlal looae 7 44c. ex tro iooaa, 7%«* nominal Rica—Flim. fancy head. ?Vt0lo. New York Bonds New York Bonds. New York. o<l. *—Activity and strength of railroad mortgage*, particularly thrj low priced Doje*. continued today to be I the out standing feature of the trading! In bonds free* in other part* of thej list improved aoniewhaf under the stlmu- , lua of the rallroact rally. Humor* of a merger of the Chicago ft Art on and Wabash railroad* brought some spec ulative buying of thoae l**u -a, while fractional advance* were recorded by a sizable number of other railroad is sues. A /airly brisk demand for oil com pany liens resulted In light advance* In several such Issues, while unoficial state ments. published todav to the effect that tiro companies were in a good cash posi tion. despite lower tire prices, carried some of the tire company issue* up frac tionally. Utility company liens were s.ightly reactionary. Aside from further depression of »he first liberty 4%*. active United States government bond* held relatively steady. There was Nome buying of European bonds during the forenoon, but mostly foreign lasue* sagged In dull trading Public offering will be made tomorrow by a syndicate headed by J. I*. Morgan ft Co., and the First National bank of $8,625,000 l to 15-year 5 per cent equip ment trust certificates of the Great Northern railroad comparv at prices to yield 6.20 to’5.60 per rent. according to maturity. The Issue represents about 76 per cent of the Value of equipment purchased, the load putting up 25 per cent cash. I nlted state* Bond*. Kales (in 11,000. » High. Low'. Close 7 2 Liberty 3%s .. 99 16 99 14 99 14 120 Liberty 1st 4%*.. 97.1 4 97 8 97* 18 0 LIhertv 2d 4%*... 97 10 97.7 97.H 1390 Liberty 3d 4%*... 9810 9».H 98.9 540 Liberty 4th 4%*.. 97 12 97.8 *7 10 584 l H Gov 41 * s. . 98.22 98.15 b 17 Foreign. 10 Anton .T M Wka 6s 78% 78 78% 19 Argentine 7s .101%, 101U lot ft 35 Austrian gtd In 7s. 88 % *8% 88% 3 Chinese Gov Ky 6s. 43% 4:’. 4 3 13 Bordeaux 6s . M* 79 % 79% 6 Christiania 8* ....108% 108% 108% 7 Copenhagen 5%s .. 89% 89% 89% 16 Gr Prague 7 %«.... 76% 76% 76% 11 Lyons 6s .. 80% 80 80% 2 1 Marseilles 6s . 8 0 79 % 79% 2 Rio de Jan 8s *47.. 91 91 91 10 Chech 8m effs. . . 93% 93 % 93% 4 Dept of Heine 7s.. 85% 85% 85% 6 Can 5%» notes ’29.101 101 101 9 Canada 5s ’52. 99 % 98% 99% 31 Dutch E I 6s ’62... 96% 96% 96% 7 Dutch K 1 .* %* ’5.3. 91% 91*4 9Vi 34 Fram I D 7%s ... 90 89% 89% .30 French 8* .99% 99% 99% 51 French 7%s .... 95% 94% 95% 1 Hoi Am Line f.* .. 82% 82% 82% 20 Japanese 1st 4%s 9 3 92 % 92% 1 Japanese 4s . 78% 7s% 78% 23 Belgium 8s .100% 100% 100% 14 Belgium 7s .100% 100 100 20 Denmark 6s .. .97 96 % 97 6 Netherlands 6s .. 97% 97% 97% 10 Norway 6- . 95% 9'. 95 12 Herbs r'r Hlov 8s.. 66% 66 66 5 Sweden 6* .104% 104% 104% 7 P L M 6a. 7 2 72 % 73 9 Bolivia 8s . 88 87 % 87% 1 Chile «s ’46.104 DM 104 7 Chile 7s . 95 94 % 95 6 6 C u Iih 5 % * .9 1 % 9 1 % 91% 1 Haiti 6s A ’52 . 92 % 92% 92% 5 Queensland 6- ...101% 101% 101% 2 Han Paulo s f 8s 98% 98% 9*4 2 Swiss 8s.111% 111% 111% 21 r; B A I 5%« 1'9 .112 111 % 111% 11 G B Ac T 5 % s ’27.. 101% 101% 101% 6 Braz.i 8s. 94 94 94 22 Brazil-fen Rv El 7s 78% 78% 78% 3 l’ H Mexico 5*. 52% 52% 52% 9 C H of Mexico 4* 30% 30% 20% Railway and yflHcellaneoii*. 19 Amer Agr f*h 7 4* . 94% 9* 4 9*4 14 Ainer Smelt 6a 914 914 914 4 Amer Sugar «* 101 \ DU 4 1014 2$ Am T A T cv *a 117 4 117 4 15 Am T A T c.,1 tr 5a 97 4 97 S 97 4 31 Am T A- T col 4a . 92 4 9-4 924 5 Am AV K A H 5a. , . M §4 64 12 An fop 7a 1936 99% ©$4 994 33 An Cop *s 1 953 . 97 9*4 9«4 5 Arm A Co 44" *3% §14 §34 63 At T A M Fe gen 4- 9§ *74 §7%. 31 At T A S F a 4* *td 79% 794 794 2 At C L lat con 4a §54 £5 4 354 3 At I\-f deb r* .97 4 ©7 4 97 4 12 Halt A Ohio €« . 101 4 DM 4 101 4 3 1 Halt A Ohio cv 4 4* “34 *24 §34 22 B T of P lat A r 5a 97% 97 4 97 4 4 Tiet h S * on f.s S A 97 4 >7 4 97% 4 Heth Steel 54a ... *9 §54 §9 2 Brier Hill Steel 34a 93 93 t3 6 Cam Sugar 7a .... 9t»4 9*<4 9*4 2 Can Northern 7a 11.1 4 113 113 4 8 far. T'ac deb 4- 7 §4 7*4 7 - 4 1 far Clinch A O 6a 95 4 95 4 95 4 3 Central of Georg »* 10*4 1©®4 1004 9 Central leather 6* . >74 >7 97 4 21 Ontral Pacific gtd 4 §54 §54 654 10 Orro «le Pasco §a,.120 119 4 119 4 § ' Chea A Ohio cv 5a. . §-4 §§ 4 MS lit Chicago A A 34« 33 32% 324 2 C II A Q ref bn A 9*» 9-4 9*4 6 Chi A E 111 5» . 7* 4 76 4 76% 1 Chi Ugo a \v 4n 45 4' 45 1« f M A St P cv 4 4a. 66 % 56 4 5*4 3 C M A St P rf 4 4a 62 52 52 1§ C M A St P 4i ’25. . 75 4 74\ 76 4 2 C A N \V 7c.106 4 P’f- 2 06 4 10 Chicago Rv* 5a .. 75% 7.'. 75 2 3 C R I A rPf e 4* 74\ 74% 74 4 13 Chi A W Ind 4a . 7*4 70 7*4 16 Chile Copper 6a ...*994 99 99 * CCC A StL ref fa A 101 4 101U 101 4 4 Cleveland V T 5 4a 1014 1*14 10] % 1 Columbia O A E 5s. 96 4 9*4 9 Com Pow 6a .... *7 Va ** 4 9*4 5 Con Coal of Md 5a §7 -6 4 *64 5 Con Pow*>r 5a..... . §7 §64 *64 26 Cuba C R deb §a...1ftCU D»*§{ 196 4 1 Del A Hudson ref 4a §14 <G* §14 95 Den A H G r-f 5a M 4 42 \ .4 6 D A R G con 4s .7*4 70 4 7*4 1 Detroit Kdref *a 10. 4 1*24 DUS 1 Detroit V Rv 4 4a *6 *f. §6 7 DuP de NTS*. .10«U 1M 1*§4 19 Du<]Ue*ne L'trht 6a. 104 4 1014 1*4 4 2* Em G a F 7 4m ctfa 924 924 f|4 4 Erie pr lien 4s . . 6§4 6* 514 7 7 Erie gen lien 4*. . 51 60 4 50 4 in Flak Rubber §s_1*4 D>3 4 104 24 Goodrich «4» . . 59 9- 4 99 26 Goodyear T §e *31.103 4 1*1 4 1*2 4 1 Good*.ear T 9* ’41111 111 113 § Gd Tk Rv Can 7a 1*4 1*3 4 101*4 §1 G.i Tk Rv Can «s..l©*4 1*6 4 1©«S •5 at No 7a A 96 4 9*4 9<4 5 Gt Vo 8 4a R 99 9*4 9*4 5* Herahev «*ho 6- -14 §14 *14 3 2 If A M ref Urn A 5 7 6 4 £7 -HAM adj Inc 5*. 974 944 >74 21 Humble •» A R 54« 9*4. 9*4 924 MU n T ref 5* r,f* toil, 101 101 ; 3 T’l Central 6U« «"4 -14 -34 1 111 Central ref 4a 90 4 9© 4 90 4 27 Int R T Ta §'4 *’■ 4 §'4 9 lilt R T 6- 60S 60 «rt 15 Int ft T ref * atpd 60 4 «©4 * n»; «1 1 A C, S udf *« .4*4 414 414 21 Ini 'I M • f 6- 7-4 77 4 77 4 7 KCFtSAM t* 7 4 7 4 7 4 5 K c Southern 5- *«4 *4 4 §«4 1 K C Terminal 4a . §0 Id §*» * Ka"*a« G A E 6a 914 9 4 954 37 Kellv-Sor Tire 11114 D‘2 4 DU 4 4 D* k Hf.*c! 50 §-4 *44 «- 4 2 l.ehigh Valle? * - 1 »:• 4 D*2S 1"-“* 1 l.ir/et A M :* 96 >6 96 9 Lori I lard 5a 964 954 954 2 5 1 A N* tin I 4a .. §9 4 §94 - 9 ' • 6 Vagina Cop 7a 109 4 109 S ln*S 1 Manat l Sug 7 4" . >7 4 9:4 97 4 4 Mkt St Rv con 5a 93 S 93 4 93 4 5 >1 O •*« S A ww 10? 1014 J© 14 Jo .Mar O :u« ww 99 4 99 4 99 \ 2 Meg Pet «* ln« DU lf»4 2 Midvale Stl cv 5a. 9% *6 §6 5 MEAT pr I «" C 9* *1 9 4 14 M KTAT n pr 1 f* A 77 4 Tr 4 77 4 93 MEAT n * 3a A MS 614 M 4 £4 Mo Pac mn 6a *9 *§4 *§4 14 ! Mo Pac g, n 4a •* 4 '» t©4 6 Mont Pow 5s A >5 9 3 96 M N K T A T lat . » 97 4 97 97 4 12 N <> T A T Inc 5a 74 4 7 4 74 4 65 N Y C deb fa. 1044 IMS I044 49 N Y C rfg A! ta 95 4 *«\ 94 4 3 N Y C con 4a 79 4 79 4 79 4 • NY Ed -ef 64a 1MV, 1094 ins*, N Y EDHAPSa 974 »7\ 3’. NYNMAH E 7'. £*4 R*4 '*4 .1 NY NHAH . v fa 4« 55 65 65 1 N Y Rv rf 4a cf dp 2* 2§ 2* 13 NY Tel ref 6- '41 IN', I'M', D'<4 JO NY Tel gen 4 4a . 94 93 4 9 4 3 N Y M’ A H 4 4a 37 4 37 % 37 4 31 N A • v 6a DU 107 4 1 °7 4 16 N A Ediaon a f *- *2 *14 914 9 N Ohio TAD ref 6a 93 924 93 • Nor Par ref 6a H . . 1'U 4 10«4 10 4 4 6 N J’ new 6a I* tfa 93 9 4 91 9 NY- Pnc T.e? ’n 4* . §:4 §?4 §’, 1 N S power ref 6a A **4 *9 4 *94 1 l* W Hell Trl Ta .1074 1©74 1074 1 Oregon 8 D ref 4a . 92 4 97 4 97 4 1 title Steel -a ^cr A 97 97 97 1 Pacific G A K * . -94 -*S §*4 D* P.t a TAT - ■ 9<>4 * 4 ' ” 4 2 Par. A P A T 7a DU 1n* D'1 3 Penn R R 6 4a .10*4 D«4 D>« 4 10 Penn R U gen 6a P*o **4 *>*■ 12 Penn R It gen 44a 9"4 >*• *''4 9 Phil Co col tr *a.. 1©*S loo 1004 7 Piece Arrow «a 7 5 7 4 \ 74 \ 1 Prod A Rrf *a w w.lOPt 1©*’ 1ft Public Service ‘ - 79'a 7 9 4 7 9 4 7* Punt a. Alegre 8 7a 11©4 lft*H 11° 75 Rapid T 68c -f la A 6*4 *64 61 Rend gen 4a §7 4 §7’4 *7’, 16 Rein \ run a f 6a * t *-’4 •* 4 Re,* T A 8 54a *« -- §» 13 It T A A 1. 4 4a 7.3 4 71 73 4 1 Si T. 1 V’ AS ref 4a *3 § • *3 6 St DF pr 1 4" A 66% 66 4 *6 4 2 6 St I. A F ad I *a 71 704 70 4 10 4 SID A S F Inc *a. 67 £6 4 66 4 § St I. R\V con 4.a . 76 4 7 6 *4 75 \ 1 St PA K C Shi. 44" 76 75 75 14 6 S V D con 6a • f-4 ' 4 * 5 \ 236 Sen A 1. adj 5a .. 364 3 8 3*4 94 S* 1 Air T- ref 4a 4.»4 4*4 4 5 6 S’M 4'on t»il col 7a 94 IIS 94 5 Sin Crude 011 54" ** % *K 9§ 4 1 Sin Pipe 1, 6a §'*4 §*4 §’4 34 Sin Cona 011 *4" • § • 4 v7 * 1 »4 14 South Pac cv 4a . 92 93 9 3 4•> South Pac ref 4a §54 -'4 *54 ! South Pac col tr 4a *3 -2 4 § 4 61 South Rv gen *4a.lM4 DM 4 I«1 4 17 South Rv enn 6a . 94 4 94 94 4 63 Sou*h Rv gen 4a **4 '§4 1S4 7 Stl Tube 7a _1«8 4 D>5 105 9 Trim Elc 1 ef ,« .914 9 1 93 4 1 Thltd A\e ref 4a 6 5 6 5 6 6 19 Third Avc adj 6a 4R A’\ 46 36 Toha- co Prod 7a 107% 107 M7 4 1§ Toledo Ed I 7a .106 log 10* 2.1 I n Par lat 4a . . 91 4 >1 S 91 4 3 Vn Par cv 4 a ... 96 4 9 5 4 96 4 r, t nl-n Pac ref 4a *1*4 §14 §14 13 Vnlon T.,tik Car a .D'.l 101 10.3 1 Pnlted Drug §a 111 S 111 S ill 4 11 I n It* Tnv 1 ka P ll 934 914 934 1.3 m Rubber £« *6 §5 4 19 r 8 steel a f 6a.. mi 14 DM4 DU 4 1 In Mlorea Krai *a 9§4 9*4 MS 4 ' ',>!> l>on' * 1-t y*1* §74 §74 dT Street airs lead A diiTethf from the depots to o/Oniaha 2 v'ertelnte* Hugat »* “6% 9* % 4 Va-t’sr Ch 7%* w w 70% 79 70 II Va far Phern 7* 8“ *7 4 6 Virginia Ry '« . M% 93% 9J% 2 Warner Rug Ref 7* 103 J03 101 24 West Mtl 1st 4s. . 6»% 69 $• ft Western Pacific ft*.. 79 78% 76 8 West Electric 7s . . 1 *» 7 % 107% 10*% J Whe| ft I. K con 4s.. 69% 64% 54% U W’ll A CO » f 7 %*. . 64% 96% 94% 8 Wilson ft Co cv 95% 85% 86% Total sates of bonds today were 8.564,* 000 compared with 4.478.400 previous day and $13 81 1,000 a year ago. N. Y. Curb Bonds New York. October *.—Following Is the official list of tranaactlons on the New York curb exchange, giving *11 bond* traded In ; Domestic Bonds. 1 Allied Pack Cs.... 69 59 59 11 Aluminum 7s 26..102% 102% 102% 1 Aluminum 7* ’33.. 106 % 106% 106% 1ft Amer Pit Oil 6*. 98% 98% 98% 2 Am Gas ft El 6* 94% *4% 94% .7 Am Roll Mill* 6s 98% 98% 98% 9 Am T ft T €* ?4 . .100% 100% 100% 2 At aconda Cop t,s .101% 101% 101% 17 Anglo Am Oil 7%S.102% 102 103 0 Armour ft Co £>%* 89% 89% 89% 6 Beth Hteel 7s *35..163 102% 102% J Can Nat Ka eq 7*. 107 107 107 2 Charcoal Iron 8a . 91 91 91 1 Con Gas Balt 6*. 101% 101% 101% 8 Con Textile 8a.... 95% 9ft 95 1 ' ui»sn Tel 7%*.. 3 06 106 105 1 Det City Gas 6* 99% 99% 99% 7 Detroit Kd €».. 102 101% 102 2 Dunlap T ft R 7s 94 94 9 4 H Fed Hug 6* 1933 98 98 98 6 Fisher Bod 6 1925 100 106 100 9 Fisher Bod 6 1928 97% 96% 97% 8 Grand Trk 6%a. 1 OS loft 10ft 4 Kennecott Cop 7 103% 103% 103% 1 Maracaibo 7* new 200 200 200 5 Morris ft Co 7%* 100% 100% 100% ft Nat'! Beat her 8s 96% 9»’% 96% 2 New Or P 8er 5 83% 83% 82% 7 Ohio Pow fa 13 8C% 8ft 85 1 Pen Pow ft I.t 5* 86% 86% 86% 1 Phil K 6». 10% 10% 10% 1 P Ser Cor NJ 7 100% 100% 100% 8 P Her G ft El 6s 95% 95% 95% 3 Hoivay ft Cb 8s 104% 104% ]04* 2 Houth Cal Ed ft* 90 89% 9'* 2 Htan O NY 7 1920 106 105% 106 1 Htan O NY 7 1931 107 % 107% 107% 4 Htan O NY 6%« 106% ltt*% 166% 3 Swift ft Co. 5s.. 91% 91% 91% 3 Tidal Osage 7s...101 10] 101 26 U Fii W<. 99% 99% 99% 4 l td Oil Prod S*.. 80 79% 79% 2 %%c uurn Oil 7*. 106 105% 106 Foreign Bonds. 12 Argentine 6s vv 1. 99% 99% 99% 5 K Netherlarid* 6a. 97% 97% 97% 10 Mexico gov 6*... 55 55 55 1 Russian 6%s ... 10 1(l lft ft do «%a c:tfs- 9 % * % 9 % 2 Swiss 5 %* . 99 99 99 42 do 5s w 1 . 97 94 % 97 11 U 8 Mexico 4s_ 34 34 34 Omaha Produce Omaha, Oct. I. BUTTER Creamery—Local jobbing price to retail ors. extras. 46c; extras, in 60-lb. tube, 45c; standards. 45c; firsts, 45c. Dairy—Buyers are paying J36c for best table butter In roils or tubs, 4 le for common jacking stock. For best sweet, unsaited butter some buyers art bidding 40c. BUTTERFAT. For No. 1 rf»m local buyers sre pay ing 36c at country stations, 43c delivered Umaha. FRESH MILK. 12 40 per cwt. for fresh milk testing 3.5 delivered on dairy platform Omaha. EGGS. Most buyers are quoting on graded basis, delivered Omaha, in new cases, fancy whites. 31c; selects. 30c; small afcd dirty. 24c; cracks. 20021c. Jobbing price to retailer*; U. 8. specials, 35c. L'. g extras 33c; No. 1 small, 27 0 26c; checks, 23 0 24c. POULTRY. Live—Heavy nens. 20c; Ugbt hens, lie; l.fghorns about 3c leas; springs. 17c lb. broilers ,14 lbs. and under. 22c lb.; Leg horn bros-rs. Ec less; old roosters.loc; spring ducks, fat and full feathered. 16c per lb ; old ducks, fat and full feathered 12 014c; ge#se. 10012c: no culls, sick or «. rippled poultry wanted. ' Jobbing prices of dressed poultry to re 's. !*-ra spr;ng*. . broilers. 25c; hens. 25026*'; roosters. 17011c; spring ducks. 30c. Frozen stocks; iJu-'k*. 20 0 25c; tur keys. 25 0 40c: geese. 20 025c. BEEF CUT*. Wholesale prices of beef cuts affective today are as follows: No. 1 ribs. 3 0c; No. 2, 22c; No t. 14c; No. 1 rminda, 2!c; No. 2. 14c; No. S, 104c; No. 1 Joins, 40c: No. 2. 26c: No 3. 17c. No. 1 chucks. 3 4c; No. 2.114c; No. 2. tc. No. 1 plates. Ic; No. 2. 74c; No. I. 64c. FRESH FISH. Omaha jobber* are selling at about the foHowing prices fob. Omaha. Fancy 'vhUefish. 2tc; lake trout, 24^. fancy sli er salmon. 22c; pir.k aalmon. 17c; halibut, mkt.; northern bullheads, jumbo. 2>>c; cat fish, regular run. l*4c: channel, northern. 200 32c; Alaska Red Chinook salmon, 24c; striped ba.«s. 20* ; yellow pike, fancy, 22c; pickerel, lie: fillet of haddock. 25c: per^h. He; black cod sable fish stead, 2<>c; smelt*. 20c: flounders, lfcc; crapp'.es. large, 20025c; black bass. 35c: red snapper gen uine. from Gulf of Mexico. 2«c; fresh oysters, per gallon. tS.000 4.15. CHEESE. Local Jobbers are selling American ' h*e*e fancy grade at the following price*: Single daisies. 29 *<*c; double daisies, .•c, Toung Americas lie. longhorns, 20c, square prints, lie; brick. 2fc. FRUITS. Grapefruit—Florida, all sizes per box, I5OO04OO; Isle of Fines. $6 0006 96. Cranberries — 100-lb barrels, f 10.00# 1100; 60-lb. boxes, 15 256 5 60 Oranges—California Valantlaa, fancy, per box. $5 6004 25 J reaches—Washington Elbertas. 10-Ib. ®®** 11 26. Colorado Elbertas standard. • box, |l.25; Utah, bushel baskets. mZ. 1 Lemons—California. fanev. ner box, !• 60. rhoire per box. 17 000 « 50 Hnnanas—Per pound. 9c. Quinces—^California 40-!b. box. S3 00 IVari—Washington and Oregon Bart lett# fancy. per box. 93 5003 75. Mi^h gan K*“lfers. basket $2 00; Colorado f: 25. L»e An ou*. box. $3 76. Crane* Michigan concord *. ner has. kat. 11 75. 4-ll> gross. S5r; California muscatel, about 24 lb*, net 61 76; Tokaxs do. 12 50 June grapes. 25-|b. lug. 12 00‘ Avocados—t Alligator pears), per dozen, 16 00 Prune*—Idaho Ttahan. 11-lb. lugs, f5c; Idaho. >4-bushel basket |i lu. AppJ#* — Iowa ard Missouri Jonathans. fan< y. barrels 16.00; Canadian eta I*. 34 lb. in' per box. 12 -n grimes golden. p*r box. f2nOg»2?5. Idaho K.ng David, bas ket, $1 75; l*eli- ou*. fancy, ter box 15 7; V EGETABGE8. Cantaloupe* — Standard* ner crate. 14 00; fiats. |1 €i. Colorado flats. II 10; h"iejr dews. 12.60; casabas. per crate S3 U" New roots—Turnips and parantpa. pet market ba-k*t. 9Sc09l.O9: beets and car rota. ditto, fee; rutabagas. In u.kx 2c: less * ban sacks, *Hc. Celery — ldah* per dozen, according to ■**'* II 0901.90: Michigan, per dox.. 76c Peppers—Green Mango, p#r market basket 50 0 60c. red Mango, market. Potatoes—Nebraska. Chios, rcr hundred pounds. Si *5; Minnesota Ohioa. SI 50 Idaho whiter ?Sc per lb Onions—Washington vellow. In sacke. per lb. 4c: Iowa red sack. 4c; whites, in sacks 6c per lb . new Spanish, per • rat- 1150 whits picking per market basket. II £0 Tomatoes—r*r market basket, market; 19-lb. Climax baakef, |i oo. Cabbage—Wisconsin .'5-6" »h lots, per hampers. 1160; barrel 14 75; Jerae>. hamper. |?.S0. Sweet Potatoes—Southern fancy. «0-!h hampera. $1 50; barrel. |4 76; Jersev. hamper# 11* SO Means—Wax ©r green, per market bas ket. around II 00. Lettuce -Head, per crate. 96 60; par n. 61 6o. leaf. 40c Far nisnt —P r doren. 91 35. Cauliflower—Colorado*. ptj crate. 12 head*. |3.00, per pound. 15c FIELD SEED. Field see*!, fa r average quality, nrsv be prehased in Omaha at the following prices, per hundred pound*- Alfalfa. ?3 ' "0031.90; red clover. $1* 000 20 0" sisvke, 919no0HO9: ttmeth* 15.000 16 00. Prices art f n b. Omaha. HAT Prices at which Omaha dealers are sell ing in csrU>ts. f o. b Omaha: Upland Prairie No. 1. >16 00016 09; No 2. 91! 00ft 14.90. No % 91 9009 00 Midland Prairie—No. 1, >14 000 16 09; N•*. •; 113 50013 50. No. 3. 17 0004 00 Lowland Train#—No. 1. 99 00010 OC N\ 2. f« 0*0 7 00 Packing Hay 95.990? 00 Alfalfa—Choice $21 00023 00; Ho. 1. 179.00 0 $0 00; standard. 91 7 0069 19 90 No 2 91 & 00016 OP No 3. $10.00 013 90. St-xw—Oat 17 6006 50. wheat. 97 000 9.00. FLOUR First rate-M, In fa id bags. $6 300* 40 i per bb! fanev clear. In 44 !b hag* $6 2" per bhl White nr >ellow co'neal ier wt. $2 00. Quotations aie for round loti*, lota, t o. b. Omaha KEEP Omaha mills and jobbers art welling their products in carload lota at the fol lowing pit #* f. o b Omaha W'teat feeds, imedlate deiverv: Hran —127 50; brown short* $3100. erav short". HIM: middlings. S3. •">» reddo*. $14.1*; slfslfs r >•«*# |2«,10. No. 1. I1444. No ! »»»»: !mere I tnesl 34 per rent. 152*:". rotten seed mill, 41 per rent. 14" "0 f o. t. T»«e* common points; hominy feed, while nr veiiow 132 I": buttermilk. .undented, 10 bbl.' lots. 2 41c per )b.; flske bMter mllk. <00 to 1.100 Ibe »c per lb.; *tK shell, dried end around. 100-lb best 12.. "0 pee ton- dljreete. feedlns tenkase. 40 per cent. „,0° pe^lon. WOQIj TALLOW. Prlres printed below *re on the bails of burara’ welahta and selections, delivered ”"14*5."—Sirletly short haired hldea. No. 1, TUc: No 2. lie. lona-halred hide., W Sc end 4c arevn hides. Stac and 4V4' . bulla. Sc and 4c; branded hlder. Sc: alue hidee, 1c: relf. 10c and It*:: kin. »c and 6Vsc; deacons, «0c each; *lua_ aklna, 4o per lb.: horse hides. S3.10 and S2 SO each: ponies and aluea. 11 50 each; colta. - ■ u each; hoc aklna. 15c each: dry ek ns. No 1. 12c per lb ; dry salted. 1c par lb.; dry *!w’oo6|CPelts—11.15 for full woo’ed aklna: ■•pring limbi. 40CM0c. according to and length of wool; clip*, no vaiua Wool, Ta*l 7om Vnd** Grea ae —No. 1 tallow. • *‘B" tallow. No. 2 tallow. 6c; A gr/ase, 6%$c; '13" grease. U%e; ^J^rk greaae. 6c; brown grease. 4%c. pork crackling*. $56 per ton; beef «racklings, $25 per ton; beeawax. $20,00 per ton. Chicago Stock*. Armour A Co III irf<! •*!>* Armour * Co Del pfd. ***£ Albert Pick . I? ^ S Commonwealth Edison.\ H V Continental Motora . *• & Daniel Bootle . Diamond Match .H2 &111 Libby . 1 Zn National Leather . * Quaker Oats .115 Keo Motor* . Sw.ft Inti . }«%g >•?« Wahl . 47 V. er 44 \Vrly)ey 114 2 i If Yellow Mf* Co. V* Yellow Cab . ^1153*611$ • Chicago Batter. Chlcaro. Oct I —Demand was not ac tive enough to give the butter market here a firm tone today, though supplies were moderate and amail trade fairly *°Both Belter* and buyer* ’acked con? dence In the situation Seller* lost few opportunities to effect sabs and buyer* bought for current need> onlv. The car market was well supplied and quiet. It was easier to buy than «ell at the be low prices Fr*»«h Butter—92 score ** koo. 45c; 91 score. 44Hc; *7 a« ore. 4©S« 90 ssr-rt. 42ts»c; Sf, score. 4<" ; ** ** ore. 421**' Eentrallxed <ar!ot*—90 score. 44 . iS score. 41c; 49 score. 42Mt** »w York toffee. New York. Ort. 8.—The market for cof fee future* opened at a decline of 2 to 1*' point* on th** rather easier showing of the Brasilian cable* Offering* w*ro light. however, and af»er aellnr off *o 8.10c. March rallied to 8.23c on covering, accompanied by report* of a continue*! f.rm spot aituation The do** wa* net unchanged to 3 point* higher Sale* were reported of about 1C. 009 bag* Cloning ouotation* October. * 90c; December. * 80c: March. 8.23c May. 7.97c: July. 7.80c: September. 7.75c. Spot coffee was reported In good de mand with price* firm at 11c tor R‘o and tor Santo* 4» New York Dried Fruit. New York. Oct 8 —Evaporated Apple* —Dull: *tate choice. 19t9198*c; fancy. 11 «/ll Ac. Prune*—Steady: California*. I’ic: Ore gon s. 50 9 Vic ... Apricot*—Firtt choice. 10**r: extra choice. 110 11’-*'’: fancy. 14**015e. Pcs'* he*—Firm choice extra choice. * *» (ft 9t , fancy. 11 *4 #1 * 1 Nc. Raisin*—‘Wuiet; loose muscatel* choi e to fancy *ee<Jed. 9 0 9**c. *e#d!e*« 8016HC._ Vew York Drr 4iood». New York. Oct 8 —Cotton good* war* nuiet today, w'th easing price* report'd ;n gray good* and eh»''ing* Cotton varn* were lower A fair volume of dre»* good* bu*inee* was reported - spring and the lobber* noted a good t: ■ trade on *pecial*«e* and fancies. The silk markets were genera.ly nrnu Burian showed .-'tie charg' Jobbers did t fair advance bo'intM. v.:fh f ..'.nc ,n order* from retailers cor.atant. Turpentine and Rosin. Savannah. Os Oct • —Turpentine— F.rm. 941-»f'; sale* 142 barre’*; receipt*. 357 barrels shipment#. 2.768 barrels; stock 14.4 8 2 barrels Ro.in—Firm »»*«. i."j* r*,k,;„.rr; ceipts. 1.17k casks shlpmant* If .‘I casks: stock. 112.225 casks. . Quota: B D E r G l« »" ■ H T K M. 14 55; IN’. 14 45: WO. 15 15: WW X, 15.• Jtnr York P-ultry. New York. Oct I—LIT* eo»l<n-r Barely io*lr: broiler* by . 21c- br f-ei«ht. 2D® 26c: fowl*, 2«024 . roost.r.. 14c turkeys. S5c .. . . Pressed PouKrv—lrrscu-ar: chicken* 24943c; fowl*. 22032c: old rooster* 150 14c; turkeys No. 1 froxen. 3C0 41C. till Seed. Duluth. M nn CKt. 4—'*£_ October. 12 12H: November IMfU . *» cember. 12 445.; Msy. »- <« ■»• New York 4‘otton. Vew York Oct « —The cotton closed bsrelv tte»dy »t net declines of Jt to 45 poinu.^^__ ^ Ch tease Produce. Chicago. Ill . Oct. s —Butter—reset tled- creamery extrss. 4S4,c. stsndsrd , 44. ' extra firsts. 424.0 444.0; firsts, 41 0 434jc; seconds. 4#C4(14»r ... E«*s—Vnchsr.sed. Receipt* V>**' esses* first* S0«14He; ordinary flrs-s. 210 34c. __ Kansu rlly Produce . K areas city. Vo.. Oct 4—Butter—IS lower creamery. 41044c: ■ S F.*r»—fnchsnsed; firsts. -Or. selected, 5‘poultry—Unohant*d : hers lRc; krel.e-s. ZZ‘~; *rrings. 17c. roo*T'r* j • . 4 hicagn TowItrY rhicaf" Til- ,v? * —pr.uVrr—A ; low'- fo* *. 14 0 214c: *\ r.r*. roo*tnr*. 11 Nett Issue— Public Service Co. of Colorado Yield, 6.559c $*Giaiia Trust Gmpany {Wit.MW ftri KEEP POSTED Taka the guesswork out of your investments. Our Weekly Market Review analyze* \arioua issues candid ly. which should enable in vestors to eliminate "jruess work.” The following stocks are fea tured in thia week’s issue— Superior St#*l Corn Product* Alii* Ch*lm*r* Con era 1 Motor* Baldwin Loco. Gonorol AapKalt Iron Product* Cuba Con* Sugar Baltimore A OhicCbondlor Motor* Stowort Warner Coaden A Co. COPY FREE ON REQUEST P. G. STAMM 4 CO. Dooler* in Stock* and Bond* 35 S. William St. New York Updike Grain Corporation iPHnU Wild Pepertmea') • / Ckiogd Rwrl #f Tr*4e Ml MRFRS \ m«4 l All Oilier leading Flrher.gee Order* for grain for future delivery in the prin cipal market* given careful and prompt attention. OMAHA OFFICE: 618 25 Omaha Grain Exchange Phone ATlantic 6812 LINCOLN OFFICF: 724 “ft Terminal Buikiing Phone B-12SS Long Diatanca ISO