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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (July 29, 1924)
Wheat Stages Recovery After Earlier Break Leading Cereal Closes at Slightly Lower Prices— Corn, Oats and Rye Active. Br CIIARI.ES 3. LEYDEN Pnlveniiil Service Staff Correspondent. Chicago, July 28.—Tremendous selling for profit broke wheat prices sharply dur ing the early hours today, but in the late session a .quick recovery followed which ended prices st slightly lower levels for the day. Irresponsive foreign cables ' and scattered rainfall over Canada In duced the realising, but the market’s stability to absorb this realizing was easily the feature of the trading. Wheat closed 74 to 74c lower, corn 184 to 3%c higher oats were 1 to 2%c. higher, and rye ruled 3 74 to 4c adva/nced. A statement by James A. Pattep to the effect that wheat might sell up to $2 a bushel on this crop was largely respon sible for the recovery. The buoyancy of wheat early was .relinquished to corn, oats and rye. These grains received an excellent class of speculative buying. Ex port sales of wheat were placed at 70,000 bushels. The latness of the corn crop over wide areas of the belt, and the absolute neces sity of most favorable weather conditions from now on were influences that swung tTfe speculative frame of mind to the bull side today. Commission house buying in the new crop months was aggressive throughout the session, the May delivery selling up to the dollar level for the first time since August. 1920. Trade In oats was much broader than recently, especially during the late ses sion. September, December and May oats reached new highs on the crop. Rye was a bull affair Pit. traders re ported the biggest, outside interest since the movement upward started. Free profit taking came out on the hard spots, but It was all well taken. Provisions were strong and active. Lard was 32 74 to 35c, higher and ribs were • 4274 to 60c higher. Pit Notee. Eastern houses were the most, conspicu ous sellers of wheat today. Much of this realizing was credited to one of the big gest Wall street operators, who has been interested in the grain market for sev eral weeks. It was easy to trace the sell ing. as pit traders noted, but the buying came from all directions on the dips. Winnipeg futures also rallied well from the bottom levels. The .trade paid little attention to the reports from Canada, claiming that black rust Infection over the provinces was not present. Local experts have verified the presence of rust in the wheat fields there, and there has been no complaints .forthcoming from the United States grain administration to th*» contrary. The country again sold considerable new crop wheat. The movement is grad ually picking up, Kansas City today get ting record receipts of 1.872 cars. There 1s nothing unusual about this heavy run of grain to market. A bumper crop in Kansas has been harvested and It is nat ural that receipts will swell at this season of the year. The significant fea ture is the ability of the speculative huving to more than absorb this move ment as reflected by hedging pressure Wheat and flour on ocean supply for the week decreased 6,320.000 bushels. The supply now Is less than last year, total ing 41.400,000 bushels, compared with 43.742.000 bushels a year ago. Foreign tolitlcal news was more cheerful todny. tocks of grain In the United Kingdom are below last year. Foreign demand for North American grain Is gradually broadening. The crop calamity in Rus sia and Canada and the outlook for re duced yields over the continent appar ently are urging foreigners to anticipate their wants from surplus countries. CHICAGO CASH PRICES. By Updike Grain company. Atlantic 8813. Art. I Open. I High. I Low. I Cloee. I Set. •tvSt. | 1 r | ' July I 1 85% I 1.36%l 1 84 I 138 % I 1 36% S-p. 1.34 % I 1.35%' 136%l 1.34V 1.35 1.33%'. I.I 1.34 % I 1 35% Dee. 1.36%! 1.38%! 1.34% 1.37%! 1.38 1.36 . 1. 1.37V 1 37% May 1.40 I 1.43%' 1.38%' 1.41%' 142 1.39%'.I.I.I 1.41% nye July .90% I .95 I .90% .96 I .91 Sep. 94%! .98% .93% .97%' .94% Dee. .98 I 1.02%! .97 1.01%' .97% . .I. 1.01% I. 4'orn 1 * July I 1 10%l 1.11 ' 1.09% 1.11 1.09% ' 1 10 I.'. . Sep. I 1.06%' 1.09 t 1.06 % I l.og%| 1 05% I 1.07%!.!.I 1 08%' 1.08 Dee. I .94% .09% 04 %! .98% .95% I .95 !.! .98%! .95% May .95% 1.00% .95%' 1.00 I .96% I .95%.1.I.! .96% Oata I 1 | July I .64% .64%' .63% .64 ' .55 Sep. I .48% >«2%l 48%' .61 ' .49% I 49 . .I .51 %' . Dee. I .51%! .54% 50%l .63%! .51% ! .51 I. . . . 51% May I 53 %! .57 I 53V ,66%l .64% T.ard I ! 1 1 ! July 113.27 '13 43 '13 37 13 43 13 06 Sep. 113.25 113 50 111 25 113 50 13.15 j'u*!* '11.55 J3«0 Ml.60 112 00 11 1 40 Sep 111.83 ! 12 00 111 82 112.00 111 40 >fw York Prodorp. New York, .Tulv 28.—Butter—Market ate-idv; receipts. 2.830 tubs Creamery higher than extras. T$<f23*He; creamery extras (92 score). 374c. creamery firsts <88 to 91 score). 354^37c; packing atock. current make. No 2. 28c. Eggs—Market firm, receipts. 10,012 casts; fresh gathered extra firsts, 3!dJ32c: fresh gathered firsts. 29®30c: fresh gathered seconds and poorer. 281>4f22Stye; nearby hpnn<*rv whites, closely selected extras 48!b4Sc: nearbv and nearby western hen_ r e? v whites, first to average extras. 3^ (ft 45c; nearby hennery browns, extras. 3< r? 44c; Pacific coast whites, extras. 41 42 Uc; Paiifie coast whites, first or extra firsts. 35<0394c. Cheese—Market steady to firm: receipts. 88 442 pounds; state, whole milk flats, fresh, fancy to fancy specials. 2043*21 4c, Htate. while milk flats, averas-e run. 19 *M94c; state, whole milk flats, held, fancy to fanev special*, unquoted: state. who1« milk twins, fresh, fancy, 200204c. MILKBOTTLES HIS WEAPONS IN FRAY Ted Keller, 3802 O street, was ar rested Saturday night following a gang tight at Twenty sixth and H •treets His alleged rompanlons had fled when police arrived. According to officers, Keller was armed with two milk bottles. FIGHTER LOSES PART OF NOSE Right side of the nose of Peter •Btlla. South Omaha, was cut off In a fight with another Mexican at Twenty fifth and T atreets Sunday. No arr^ata were made American Lawyers Settle Beer Bill Left by George Washington s Great Uncle L-——-> By AMOflatcd Pihi. Oxford, England. July 27.—Mem bers of tlie American Bar associa tion have paid a college debt of 17 shilling* 1» pence for "battel" more specifically, bread and beer which was left unpaid by I-awrenre Washington, great uncle of George Washington, when he left Brase nose college in 1033. After luncheon in fhe hall of the college with the principal and fel lows of Brasenose jesterday the visiting lawyer* were shown old col lege records. Including this unpaid bill of Washington'*. Immediately afterward the American* held a meeting and, with the amused sanc tion of th* principal and In recog nition of the hospit ality they had enjoyed, but with one condition, that the (|iic*|ion of accrued Inter terest b» definitely waived, they subscribed tile outstanding 17 shill lug* and 10 pence. With some ceremony they handed the money to the principal ao that the Brasenose record* no longer would show any blot on the escut cheon of the Washingtons. f-;--s Omaha Grain -I-—-S July II. Cash wheat wm In good demand at pricea generally unchanged to %c lower. Receipts were 222 cara and tables were well cleared of samples at the close. Corn sold at generally unchanged prices. Receipts were 68 cars. Gate were , in falrlV good demand at prices ranging unchanged to %c higher. Receipts were 22 cara. Rye was several cents higher and barlay nominally unchanged Omaha Carlo* Sales. WHEAT. No. 1 hard: 11 cars, 11.21' 13 **** $1.24%; 2 cara, $1.22%. No. 2 hard. 2 cars. $1.25; 1 car. I1:??* 1 car, $1.26; 14 cars. $1.24; 4 cara, $1.24%;, 4 cars, $1.23; 2 cara, $1.23%. No. 3 hard: t car. $1.27; 2 cars, 11.24; 1 car. $1.22; 2 cara. $1.25; 1 car. $1.23; 1 car, $1.22%. No. 4 hard: 1 car, $1.21; 2-6 car, $1.22; 1 car, $1 26. No. 6 hard: 1 car (smutty), $1.21. Special: 1 car. $1.22%; 1 car. $1.20. No. 1 yellow hard: 1 car, $1.25; 3 cara, ^No.S yellow hard: 2 cara, $1.24; 1 car, $1 22 % No. 2 fcixed: 1 car durum. $1 23. No 3 mixed: 1 car durum (smutty). $121; 3-6 car. $1.20. No. 3 special: 1 car. $1.27. CORN. No. 2 white: 2 cars, $1.03. No. 3 white: 4 3-6 cars, $1.02. No. 4 white: 2 cars. $1.01 \ car. $1.02. No. 2 yellow: 2 cars, $1.05. No. 3 yellow: 6 cars, $1.04. No. 4 yellow: 3 cars. $1.03. No. 6 yellow; 2 cars, $1.02; 2 cara. $1.01. No. 6 yellow: 1 car, $1 02; 1 car, $1.01. Special yellow: 1 car. $1.00; 1 car, 82c; i car (smutty), 92c. No. 2 mixed: 1 car, $1.03; 1 car, $1.02%; 1 car. $1.02. No. 3 mixed: 1 car. $1.03; 1 car, $1.02%; % car, $1.02; 6 cars, $1.02. No. 4 mixed: 2 cars. $1.01. No. 6 mixed: 1 car, 97c; 1 car, 96c. OATS. No. 2 white: 3 cars, 60%c. No. 3 white: 1 car. 50%c; 9 cara, BOc. No. 4 white: 1 car. 50c; 3-5 car, 49 %c. NNo. 3 mixed: 1 car, new, 60c. RYE. No. 2: 1 car, new, 96c; 1 car, 96c; 3 cars, 95c. BARLEY. Special: 2-5 car, 76c. Dally Inspection of Grain Received. WHEAT. Hard: 18 cars No. 1; 25 cars No. 2; 19 cars No. 3; 16 cars No. 4; 1 car special. Mixed: 2 cars No. 2; 1 car No. 4; 1 car No. 5. Sring: 1 car No. 3. Total, 84 cars. CORN. Yellow: 1 car No. 1; 6 cars No. 2; 8 cars No. 3. 3 cara No. 4; 2 cara No. 6; 1 car No. 6. White: 1 car No. 1; 10 cara No. 3; 3 cara No. 4; 1 car No. 8; 1 car No. 6. Mixed: 1 car No. 2; 1 car No. 4. Total, 38 cars. OATS. Whlta: 1 car No. 2; 12 cara No. 3 Total, 14 cara. RYE. t car No. 3. Total. 1 car. OMAHA RECEIPTS AND SHIPMENTS (Carlota) Year Receipts— Today Ago Wheat . 222 160 Corn . 68 60 Oats . 22 17 Rye . 4 Barley . 1 Shipments— Wheat . 42 86 Corn . 24 66 Oats . 23 24 Rye . I $ CHICAGO RECEIPTS Carlota— Wheat .181 .. Corn .135 153 Oata . 65 89 Corn and Wheat Region Bulletin. For the 48 hours ending at S a in. Monday: Stations. High. Low. Bain. Ashland, clear .85 64 0 63 Auburn, clear .91 65 0.20 Broken Bow* clear.92 57 0.00 I’olumbus. clear .92 56 0.15 Culbertson, clear .96 55 0.26 Fairbury. clear .96 64 0 05 Fairmont, clear .92 60 0.05 CJrand Island, clear.95 56 0.00 Hartlngton, clear .92 65 0.00 Holdrege, clear* .95 6* 0 00 Lincoln, clear .88 66 0.14 North Loup, clear .......97 62 0.00 North Platte, clear.96 62 0.00 Uakdale, clear .91 68 0 05 Omaha, clear .89 68 o.oo O'Neill, clear .94 59 0.00 Red Cloud, clear .99 56 0.00 Tekamah. clear .90 68 0.00 Valentine, part cloudy...90 58 0.00 Minneapolis Cash firain. Minneapolis. July 28—Wheat—Cash No. 1 northern. $11601.41; No. 1 dark northern spring Choice to fancy. $1 51 ft 1.58; goad to choice, $1.4201.50; or dinary to good. $1 3801.41; July. $1.35%; September. $1.36; December $148%. Corn—No. 3 yellow, $1.07 01.08. Oats—No .1 white. 35%#SS%e. Ba%*ey—62 077c. Ry>-No. 2. 91 ]4 0 91 %c. Flag—No. 1. $2-54. _ Fast St. liOiils Livestock. East St Louis. July 28—Cattle— Re ceipts, 8,000 head; beat beef steers end good to choice light yearlings snd heifers 25c higher; low»r grades native steers, common to good beef cows, canners snd western steers, 25c lower; choice beef cows steady; bulls about steady; top ralvea. $9 00; bulk. $8.000 8 50; weighty steers. $10.50; best yearlings. fl^OO; western steel’s. $5.0007 65. Hogs—Receipts. 12.000 head; most sales butcher. :i0c to 35e higher; top. $10 55; bulk 160 pounds and up. $10,350 10 50; light weighs selling on top- late trade slow and weak with moderate holdover; light lights snd pigs 25c to 50c higher, bulk 140 to 160 pounds. $10.00<& 10 40; 110 to 130 pounds, $9 0009 75; packer sows, $8.7508 65. Sheep and Lamb* -Receipts. 3.000 head; earl lambs market steady to strong: spots Higher; run mostlv southwest Missouri hiinbs; bulks, $12 00012 25; culls. $6 00; weak tendency late; sheep steady; bulk tHi wee *3 5005.00; few choice handy welght, $5 50. Rloux City Livestock. Rloux City. July 28—Cattle—Receipts. 3 500 head; market active; killers steady. 25c higher; stockers strong; fat steers, and -carlings. $7.00011 n0: hulk of sale* $8 0009 75; fat cows and heifers. $5 60*5 9 00; canners and cutters. $2.2503 50, grass cows and heifers. $3 6005 76. veals. $6 00fi 11 00; bulls. $3 6005 25; feeders. $6.6007 75; stockers, $i 0007 60; stock yearlings and calves. $4 0007.60; feeding cows and heifers, $3 000 6 on. Hogs—Receipts 11 000 head; market 40060c higher; top. $1° 00; bulk of sales. $9 00010 00. lights. $9 50 010.00; butchers. 19 85010 10; mixed. $9 2609 75; heavy packers. $8 9009 26; stags. $6 0006 50, good pigs. $8.0008 50 Sheep and Lamb*—Receipts. 400 head, market steady; lambs. $12 76, ewes, 6 25. HI. Joseph Livestock. J8t Joseph. Mo. July 28—c*attl«—Re ceipts. J.500 head, market steady to 16c higher; bulk of steers. $8 5009 65; top. $10 00; cows and heifers. $3 2609 00; calves. 14OO0I5O. storkere snd feeders, $4 00 0 7 60 Hogs Receipts. 3.500 head market 60075c higher, top. $10 oo. hulk of sales. $9 600 10 60. Sheep—Receipts 3 ooo hesd market steady, lambs. $12 00011 00; swes $6 60 06 60. i i ■ i rttlrago < n*h Grain. fhlrago. Ill July 24—Whaat—N« 2. rad. $136%. NO 2. hard, $1360136%. torn — Nn 2. mixed. $1 1O%0I.1O%; No, 2. yellow. $1 lo% 0 i 11%. Oat*—Nn 2. whlta. 63%0 66r. No. J, whlta. 62 0 54%* Hya—IJnq uotad Barley ?604Or Read—Timothy, $6.24 Ot nn, Hover. $12 76021.on Lard $13 4 2. riba $2100; belli#*. $1300 Manana City Cn*h Grain. Hanna* t'lty. July 24 Whaat No 2 hard. $1220)137, No. 3 rad. $137013*; July $124% aakad. ff*pt*mb*r, $124% aakad: Da<ambar. $1,26% aakad Com —No 3 white. $1 08; No 2 yellow. $1.0601.07: No 8 yellow. $1.06; No 2 mixed $104 July. $1.04% aakad; Hap tamhar. $1 01% bid; Lac-amber. #2% aakad. Vlelbl* Groin fltipply. New York. July 24—Th* vlalhl* aur ply of American grain ahowa th* fol lowing rhangaa In buohala: Wheat: Inrraaaad. 2.242.000 t'orn: Inrraaaad *4.000 Oata: darraaad 4*0.000. Rye darraaaad 100,000 Barley: darraaaad 21.000 Rt. 1/fMila Groin Fntiirra. fit. Lot» I a. July 24 -Wheat—Cloa* July. ?! 31; September $1 32% Corn- -July. $1 10. Reptemhar. $1 04% Oata—July, 56r IJharty Bnnda New York July 24 —Liberty bond; at 1 p m 3V4» 101 13 flr.t 4U«. 142 ?. .•r«n4, 4Vi«. 101 3( thlril. toj li. fourth 4T4«. 102 IS; IT. (4 *ov*rnm»nl, 4'4«, 10S 10 14»ndnn Money London. July 24 Bar allvar. 34%d per ntinaa. money, 3 par rant; dtarpunt rataa. ; short hi I la 3%0I% par rant; I month Mila, 3% 03 13 14 par rent. Manana lit/ Mar. Kanaaa City. Mo . July 2a —May—ITn hanged No 1 timothy. $14 00014 00; No I prnlrl* $12 60011 60; Mover mixed, light $16 00014 00. rhnl<* alfalfa, $2100 _ Minneapolis Flour. Minneapolis. July 24 Flour—10* lower tf» 20* higher, family patanta, $7 460 4 10 Bran—$23 00 N*w Yark •llrrr Maw York, July II—Bar Silver— 6$%r Max Iran DOllaVa—!!%«. I/—"1 Omaha Livestock ---—--J Receipts were: Cattle. Hogs. Sheep. Monday estimate ... 6,800 9,Quo 17,000 Same day last wli.. b,689 13,706 13,146 Same 2 wka ago.... 7,896 17,732 10,704 Same 3 wka ago. ... 11.287 17,512 11,383 Same day yr. ago.. 9,113 16,871 11,986 Cattle—Receipts. 6.800 head. The week opens out with a comparatively light run of cattle 6,800 head and another lufcl5c advance in prices making the market generally #1.00 higher than a week ago. Best beeves on sale brought |10.6o fc 10. i 5. Fed cows and heifers were also active and stronger, but grass cowa were alow sale at unimproved figures. Stock cattle and feeding steers were in rather better supply than last week and prices were generally somewhat stronger for desirable offerings. Quotations on Cattle—Choice to prime beeves. f 10.26fcl0.76; good to choice beeves,$9.75 fc 10.10, fair to good beeves. $8.75fc 9.50; common to fair beeves, $8.0Ufc 8.75; choice to prime yearlings. $9.76 fc 10.50; good to choice yearlings. ♦9.26 fc 9.75; fair to good yearlings, $8.36fc9.10, common to fair yearlings, $7.25fc8.25; choice to prime fed heifera, $8.75fc9.25; good to choice fed heifers. $7.75fc8.60; tair to good fed heifers, $6.60fc7.5U; com mon to fair fed heifers, $5.25 fc 6.25; choice to prime fred cows, |7.75fc».oU: good to choice fed cows, $6.60fc 7.60; good to choice grass cows, $5.50fc6.60; fgir to good grass cows, $3.75fcb.ou; common ta lair grass cowa, $2.60fc3./6; good to choice feeders, $7.00 fc 7.75; fair to good feeders. $6.00fc 6.86; common to fair feeders, fo.uu fc6.00; good to choice stoekers, $6.25fc 7.00; fair to good stoekers, $5.50fcb.0U; common to tair stoekers, $4.5ofc5.60; trashy stoekers, $3.60fc4.50; stock heifers. $3.50fc6.60; ‘stock cows. $2.60fc3.75; stock calves, $3.60 fc 7.26; veal calves, $4.00fc 9.00; bulls, stags, etc., $4.25fc7.25. BEEF STEERS No. Av. Pr. No. Av. Pr. 4u. 908 $7 50 13 926 $8 00 18 . 964 8 00 11 718 8 66 10.1082 8 90 38.1008 9 00 37 . 996 9 10 51.1001 9 26 22 .1064 9 35 2b. 1218 9 60 27.1368 9 66 20.1236 9 75 27. 838 9 85 21.1062 10 00 17.1017 10 10 21 1164 10 26 19 .1224 10 70 19.1156 10 76 STEERS A HEIFERS 14. 647 7 50 15. 750 9 00 10. 714 9 25 27 X64 9 6Q 27 . 866 9 70 23 896 9 76 24. 808 9 85 22. 976 10 Oil 19 . 921 10 25 COWS 2.1105 4 50 25 606 4 75 10 .1024 5 00 2.118b 8 00 HEIFERS 11 . 918 9 10 20 807 9 7fip STOCKERS AND FEEDERS 14. 453 4 00 BULLS. 1.1290 4 50 1 1600 6 00 • CALVES 1 bull . . . .,. 660 4 76 6 . 314 5 00 1 370 7 00 1 . 250 8 00 1. 250 9 00 Western Cattle SOUTH DAKOTA. • No. Wt. Pr. 11 stoekers .. 674 $6 60 9 calves . 211 7 0(| 10 cuws .. 846 3 #0 9 hsifera .7 31 6 6u CHRIS CHRISTIANSEN 55 feedera . 918 6 65 NEBRASKA 14 cows .. 925 6 00 28 cow’s .. 976 4 60 8 cows . 987 4 00 32 feeders .1061 6 75 23 stoekers . 710 6 00 38 feedera . 896 6 25 1 bull . 660 4 75 Hogs—Receipts, 9,000 head. Shlppeia were urgent buyers of the best butcher grades this morning owing to bullish wires from other centers and movement to thla hranch of the trade was noted at prices fully 35fc50c higher than Saturday, while the packer market was slowr at just fair advances Bulk of the sales was at $8.66fc> 10.00. with top for the day. $10.00. HOGS No. Av. Sh. Pr. No. Av. Sh. Pr 30.. 267 .. $8 86 29.290 70 $9 00 63.. 246 140 9 25 48.-249 ... 9 30 65.. 253 70 9 50 61..208 ... 9 65 67.. 249 80 9 75 30..262 » 80 60.. 211 ... 9 85 62..283 40 9 90 31. 282 120 9 95 54..260 ... 10 00 Sheep—Receipts, 17,000 head. Supplies wrere liberal for the opening day of the week and with markets elsewhere rather unfavorable local packers took a de termined and successful stand to lower their cost. Feeders were* in urgent de mand and ruled strong while aged sheep cleared on a steady basis. Quotations on Shsep and Lambs—Spring lambs, good to choice. $12.25fc 12.76; spring lambs, fair to good, $1 l.OOfc 12.00; feeding lainbi, $1 l.OOfc 11.65. wethers, $6.50fc8.76; yearlings, fed. $9.26fclo.90; yearlings, range, |8.00fc9.00, fat swea. $3.71 fc 626. SPRING LAMBS No. Wt. Pr. 107 f< D. .68 $12 00 FEEDER EWES 102 8. D. 89 6 Receipts and disposition of livestock at the Union stockyards. Omaha. Neb . for 24 hours ending at 3 p. ni July 28. 1924. RECEIPTS—C A RLOT. Horses and Gttttle Hoaa Sh p Mules C M A fit P Ry .. 6 4 Mo Pac Ry. 5 V P R R . 46 18 64 C A N W east .... 6 6 . . C A N W west 94 62 3 1 C St P M A O _ 16 10 C R A Q east ... 7 . * C B A Q west . 66 20 R I A P **«»t 5 1 C R I A P west- 4 I C R K. 1 2 C G W R R .... 3 . Total receipts . . 247 123 67 1 DISPOSITION— HEAD. Cattle Hogs Sheep Armour A Co . 995 472 41 46 Cudahy Pack Co . 117K 1406 3032 Mold Pack Co . 303 1405 t Morris Park Co . 352 477 1 2 86 Swift A Co . 1000 1 199 2545 Glassberg M . 10 . Hoffman Bros ... 12 . Mayerowlch A Vail .. 11 .... .... Midwest Pack Co ... 18 . Omaha Pack Co . 16 . John Roth * Sons 18 . S Omaha Pack Co . . 22 .... Murphy J W . 1*57 .... Lincoln Fkg Co. 2 5 . Sinclair Pkg Co. t2 . H. Worth .. 60 . Wilson. Ft Worth.... *»n . I*uud Keeper . 121 .... .... Kennett-Murray ..... . ... 1*4* .... Anderson A Son . 104 . Bulla J H . 70 . Dennis A Francis .... 188 . Kills A Co . 78 . Harvev John . 127 . Inghrain T J . 2* . Kellogg F G . 63 Kirkpatrick Bros .... 170 . Longman Bros . I • ••• • ••• Luberger H S ...... <8 . Mo-Kan C * C Co ... * •••• •••• Root J B A Co . 105 . Koaenstocy. Bros 318 .. Sargent A Finnegan . 148 . Sullivan Bros . 66 Van Sant W B A Co 65 . Wertheimer A Degen 78 .. Other buyers . 36^8 Totals • 878« 8764 16021 « mcwgo Chicago. July 28. —Hogg - Receipt* 17 000 head, very active on hettar kinds, unevenly 400 70c higher, packing m»i. 25036c up slaughter pigs. 76085c high er. lower grade* slow, sales, lighter re celpts and active shipping demand; big packers Inactive; top. $10 60: bulk, good and choice !6n to 240-pound weight. $10 10 010.40; packing sows. $8 300170 good and rhotca atrong weight slaughter Pigs. $9 5009.75; heavyweight. $10 00010 80; medium weight $10 26010 60. weight. $9 80010.60. light lights. $9 40010 40. packing hogs smooth $8 6009 oft pack mg hogs rough. 18 1008 50. slaughter pigs. $8 7609.15. Cattle Receipts. 17 00ft head; generally active market beef steers, yearlings and desirable grades beef heifers. 16040c higher, mostly 25015c Up: to between grade* fed steers and yearlings showing bent advance, active shipping demand top matured steers. $11.60; average weight 1.396 p<unds; some 1.153 pound averages. $11 40 ecvern! loads handy and weighty. $110001130; bulk fed steers and yearl ings. $9 0001#.7$. bulk fat cows showing advance bulls strong to 16c higher; heat heavy bolognas around $4 1604 90 few $5 00; vealera strong to 26c higher, hulk to packers early. $9 2509 60. outsiders paving $10.00 and better; atockars and feeders In moderate supply; trada firm: hulk early aales storkera. $6 6006.60 Sheep and Lambs- Receipts, nead; alok. few early sales; f*t nattY* lambs strong to 26c higher at $11.760 13 00. few to city butchers. $1160. no action on westerns; asking •round 0 • cull natives steady at 1.1009 00. aheap. 26060c higher 120 pound rang# awes to killers. $7 00. feeders steady. Kansas City Livestock. Kansas City. M*> Jttlj H t fltstee Department of Agriculture )- < • ♦ tie- Receipt* 19.000 he*d. calve* 4.000 head fed steers and better grade# "f grassers. 10015c higher. plain light grassers strong, top Kandy weight* I10..6. bulk native fed steers and yearlings $8 26010 00; few Kansas grassers. $* 2f> 0h f>0. she etnek strong to 2 6c higher, mostly 10016c higher; beef <*ows. $1600 f, r.0. runners and cutters $2 260L16. bulls and calves steady; bolognas $4 Mi or 4 7k. bulk of best veals. $7.6008 00. medium and heavle*. $S 0006 00 Stock era and feeders. firm. fleahy feeders. $7 76. bulk of sales $6 0006 76 Hogs Receipts. 7.000 head; market moetlv 4O06Or higher epnta up more on lights; ehlpper for. $10 06; packer top. 99 71; hulk of salsa $*6O0|ftftft. desirable |80 to 300 pound aver.lgee. $9.70010 00. 130 to 160 pounds. $9 0009 60. packing sows $8 650* 00. Slock pigs, mostly $8 0ft * Aheap and Lambs Receipt* 6 ftftft head mntket lambs uneven, generally stead' top Colorado* $ 1 3 36: ot here »$l *$•« D $6 < > rag on a, $17 76, practical top n» Hve* $12 60. sorted lot* mostly $1? ft«0 12 6o'. sheep I r« 0 2 5c lower; ewes. $6 2* 0 6 6ft < huago Faultrf. Chicago July 2* Poultry—Allva, tin •attied, fowls. 170 2Oiv. broiler* l«0 11r , roosters. 14 5** N«w York ftftot totlon Nsw York. July 2$.— Cotton—• pat. luuti middling. Ilil* f Fortune Smiles on Wall Street as Well as on Farms Businesi Increases Almost Over Night—Million-Share Days Again Common on Stock Market. By RICHARD sriI.I.ANE, Universal Service Financial Editor. New York, July 28.—Grain farmers of ♦ he west and middle west and cotton growers of the south and southwest are not the only ones upon whom good for tune suddenly has smiled. A few months ago the agriculturalist was In the depths of despair. There was no money in crops. This year, the poor stock brokers of Wall street have been suffer ing as the man of the hoe has suffered. Business was terrible. No one was In the" market. He wasn't making expenses. He felt like putting up the shutters. But now the aun shines. Almost over night business was Increased. Million share days again are fairly common. The public Is beginning to look toward Wall street. People are again longlqg to hear the tick of the tfcker. A few weeks ago transacttona for an entire day totaled not infrequently less than 500,000 shares. Where and when the present bull move Is going to end remains to be seen The market today was as buoyant an If the advance was a thing of years and not of weeks or months. There was a re markable amotint of buying of United States Steel, Cerro De Pasco, Kenneoott, Lehigh Valley. U. S Industrial Alcohol. Montgomery Ward. Transcontinental Oil and General Petroleum. Steel was the leader. It went to 104 and closed at the top. 2*4 up for the day. That advance dissipated any doubt there may have been regarding the extra divi dend. Kennecott was only second to steel. The buying was not spectacular, but It was persistent. Cerro Pe Pasco was sold In chunks. Trouble with the Chilean government threatens to disturb operations at the company's mine. American Can was \ ery strong and made a new high. The rails assumed to keep pace with the industrials, but couldn't and dropped back. The department store corporations, mall order houses, fertilizer properties, agricultural machinery concerns were In high demand. Transactions sggregated 1,018,000 shares. industrials advanced an average of nearly % of a point. Rails declined 1-20 of a point. Foreign exchange was slightly lower. Call money 2 per cent. With the ending of the revolution In Sao Paulo, the coffee market had an exciting session. Fluctuations In the Sep tember option ranged from 15 60 to 15.00. The close was 15.40 asked, a decline of 27 points from Friday. Sugar was dull as ever and closed from unchanged to 2 points up. Cotton kept the speculators guessing. Prices had advanced so rapidly and so much of late that bulls were hesitant about pressing them further. At the close prices were back to about where they were at noon Saturday Rain throughout Texas would raui* a severe break Oklahoma has fared much better than the Lone Star state apparently. /■ ' ' --% ^ New York Quotations J New York Stork exchange quotations furnished by J S. Hache * Co, 22* Omaha National bank building: Sat. High. Low close Close Ag Chemical. 16% 16% 16% 16% Ajax Rubber.. 9% 8% 8% 8% Allied Chemical... 79 77 % ?*% 78% Allla-Chalmere .. 56% 55% 56% 65% Am. Meet Sugar . 43 42 % 42% 43 Am H S. Fdry. 81 American Can_122% 120% 122% 120% Am Car * Fdry.172 271% Am H & F pfd. • 8% A Hide * L pfd . 56% Am. Int'l Corp. .. 23% 21% 21% 22% Am, Linseed Oil. li 21% Am. Lacomotlve.. 80% 79% *0 *0 I Am. Ship. * Com 12% 12% 12% 13% American Smelting 69% 69 69% 6f t Am. Smelting, pfd.103% 103% Am. Steel Fdry. 37 37 American Sugar.. 48% 47% 48 47% •ABi. Sumatra. 9% 8% 9% 9 Am. Tel * T. 123 122% 122% 123 Am. Tobacco.148% 148 148% i*8 Am. W. W & Elc.108% 104% 106% 105% American Wolen.. 73% 72% 73% 72 a Anaconda . .. 36% 34% 36% 24% Asad Dry Goods. 108% I05 105% 103% Associated Oil.... . .. ... 28% 28% ^ Atchison . 105 104 % 104% 1M% At. Coast Line .1 28 127 % 127% 128 At Gulf * W. I . 16% 15% 15% ]« Atlas Truck . . . 9 9 Atlantic Refining. 14 82% 83% 83% Austln-Nlrhnla . 13 2C % i Auto Knitter. 2 % Baldwin .118% 117% us H$ B A O . 44% 63% 43% 6* Beth Steel . 46 44% 45% 43% Bosch Magneto.. ;s % 28% Bkyn-Man Ry . ... 28 57 27 27% Bkyn-Man pfd . . 69% 49% 69% 49% Calif Parking .... 85% 85 8 5% 64% Calif Petroleum ..22% 21% 22% 22% Cal * Arl* Mining . ... ... 64 53% Canadian Pacific .149 1 47 % 118% 148% Cent leather . 13% 13% Cent Leather pfd.47 Cerro de Pasco . 48% 44% 46% '’handler Motors .48% 47% 44% 48 Ches * Ohio. 89% 89% 8* 68% Chi Ot Western. 6% 4% <* * N W . 42% 42 a: 42% C M * StP.17 14% 16% 14% Chi Gf West pfd.. 17% 17% 17% 17% CM* StP pfd 28% 27% 27% 28% '" R T A P .34% 35 J6 % 34 C StP M A O Ry.4 3 Chile Copper . 11% 31 11% .11% Chinn . jn 19% • ’luett-Peabody . 43% 43% 43% 4?% ‘'luett Peabody pfd . 103 103 Coca-Cola . 74 73 7 3% 73% Colo Fuel * Iron 44 4 1% 45% 45% Col Carbon .. .... 42 Columbia Gas .42 41% 41% 42 Ccngnieum . 48 44% 47 47% Consol Ogam ....18 17% 17% 18 Cont Can . 54% 55% $4 5 4 Cont Motors . 4% 4% Corn Product* ... 34% 33% 3<% 34% Cosden . 28% 27% 27% -8% Crucible 5% 45% 45% 4% Cuba Cane Sugar. 15% 15% 15% 15% Cuba Cane Rug p 47% r* **.% 67% ‘ uba-Amer Sugar .3.3% 32% 12% “2% Cuyamel Fruit .. . 56% 65 66 54% Danlej Boone ... 14% 15% 14 17 Davidson (’hem .. 40% 5t% 6f% Ml Deleware * Hud 122% 121% 12!% 121% Dome Mining . ... 15% 16% 16% 14 Dupont D* Nem 127% 124% 126% 127% Kastman Kodak 110% 108 110% 1«8 Krle.34% 8.3% 33% 23% Klee Stor Bat .64 57 % 57% 57% Famous Players 84 84 86 81 % 5th Ave Bus Line 11% 11% 11% 11% Fisk Rubber 8% 7% 1% *% Fleisrhman s T . 11% «« 41% 4b Freeport. Tex 9% 9% ■» % 10 Gen Asphalt . ... 43% 43 43 % 43% (Jen F.lertrlo. ...251% 15.3% 257 2 «% Gen Motors . 14% 14% 14% 14 % Gold Dust . 41% 41 41% 4« % Goodrich . 22% 22% 21% 22% Ot. North Or#... 30% in so 3b Ot. North By., p 48% 47 47% *«% Gulf City Steel 74 11% 73% 71% Hartmann Trunk 89% 37% 37% 18% Hayes Wheel . 34% 34 34 % «7% Hudson Motors 24% 24% 24% 24% Homestake M Co . . . 42% Houston Oil . 7b% 71% Hupp Motors . 11% Illinois Central 112% 111% 112 111 % III Central. rfd IH 1 .2% 113 11 1 % Inspiration . ?6% 24', ?*% 24% Int Kng Com C . 35% 55% 25% ?4 N A W Ry 123% 121% 121% 122% Orphaum . ?b% 2b% 20% ?b% Owens Bottle 4 4 4 4 % Pacific 011 41% 47% 47% 4«% Packard Motor. IIS 11% 11% 11% Pan A mar 57% 55% 64 54% Pan Atner "B . 64S 64 65 66'-, l’ennsylvanlo R R 44% 44 46% 44 Peoples Gas , Ibb 101% Pare Marquette 64% 54 54 •% Phil Co 51% M 51 91% Phi III na Betro 15% 34% 36 34% Pierre Arrow 1b% |b% 10% jb% Poatum Cereal 5b% 5b% 6b% sn% Piessed steel Car 49% 49 4* 5| Prod A Ref 24 -7 Pullman 124 126U 124 1"5% Punas Alegre Sug 6i 55% 55% 55% Pire OH 24% 24% 24% MS Hallway Steel Sp U* Rnv Conaolldated 12% 11% 1? 11% Heading 41% 4ft% 61% 41% Raping!# . 11 11% 13 11% Rep Iron A St . . *8% 47 48 44 % Rova! Dutch N Y 45% 44% 4 4 4 4 % St Louis A S Fran 24 36% 25% ?4% St Louie A ft W 44% 43% 43% 44% RrhUite c Store* 124% 1!«% 125% 124 Rears Roebuck 106 102 |b5 101% Shell Union 0,1.. 17 l*H 17 17% Kltninona Co .. 27 26% 27 27 Sinclair 011 17% 17% 17% 17% SI os. Sheffield 64 63 % 64 «? % Sketlv on . H% 1* % 1*% * J south rnrlflc 94% 95 % 94% J' Internafl Her . 94% 94 94 94 J In Merc Marine . . **% 9% In Merc Ms pfd 37% 36% 35 *J% Ini Tel A Tel 7J% JT Internafl Nickel 1* 17% 17% 1J Internafl Taper 64% 63% 53% 54% Invincible oil 13 12% 12% * % lone# Tea Jordse Motor ... 3i% ••% K O Southern .. 23% 3.3% 23% U Kelly S-pt lng 16% 16 16% 14% Kennerntt ..... *4% 46% 45% 45% Keystone Tlra .... 2% % Lee Rubber . 10% 10% 1«% 11 Lehigh Valiev ...13 Rb% 11% 61 Lima Locomotive 6'% * ■* % Loose Wile# 43% Louis A Naah 9"% 9" % Hr4 96 Mack Truck 92% »1% ■» i 91% Mav Dept Store 4.1 92% 92% 91% Maxwell Motor D 13% 12% 13 11 % Maxwell Motor A 63% 63 .?% 61% Marland ai . 32% 31% 31% 32% Max Sea bn 1 rd . 21 2"% ?b% 21 61lamt Copper . .. 71% 2.3% 93% 23% Mid States on ? 1% 1% 1% M K A T .. 11% 14% 16% 14% Mo Pacific . §0 18% 19% l*% Bu.w.rV*lift it it* * Mother Lod. - Mi *1* «H N»«h Motors •••,..1*** lf»f* National Biscuit .61% 60* 61* 61 National Enamel ... . 24 National Lead ...145 144* 1 44* 146% N Y Air Brake. 42* 42* N T Central _108 107* 107% 107% N Y C A St Louie 29* 28* 2*% 28* North American . 26% 26% 26% 26% North Pacific .... 66% 66% 65% 66% Southern Rail . 66% 65% 65% 66 Stan Oil of Cal.. 68% 67% 67% 58* Stan Oil of N J.. 36% 35% 36% 36 Stewart-Warner .. 54% 62% 64% 64* Stromberg Car .. .. , . 63 iStudebaker . 38* 37% 38 27% Sub Boat . 9% 9% Texas Co . 40 * 40 40% 40* Tex A Pacific ... 34 3 3 33% 34 Tim Roll Bear.... 35 34% 35 34% Tobacco Product* 64 63* 64 61 Tob Prod ••A”.... 92% 92 * 92% 92 Transcon Oil . 6 6% 5% 5% Union Pacific .143% 142% 143% 143* United Fruit . 205 204 IT S C I Pipe ...101% 100* 100% 100% IT fi Jnd Alcohol.. 71% 70% 71% 71% U 8 Rubber . 30% 30% 30% 30% U S Rubber pfd ..81* *1 81* 81 32 IT S Steel a f 5a.104% 104* 1<»4% U 8 Steel pfd_123 122% 123 122% Utah Copper . 80% 79% 80% 79* Vanadium . 24 23* 24 23 Vivaudou .. . . 6% 6% Wabash . 16 15% 15% 15% Wabash “A1’ - 45 * 44% 44% 44% Western Union ..113% 112 113% 112* Westing A B . 94 92% Wentjnghouse Elec 64% 64 64% 64 White Eagle Oil . 23% 24 White Motors ... 56% 55% 56% 56 Woolworth Co ...114* 114 114* 114* Wiliys-Overland .9* 9% 9% 9% W-Over pfd . . . . 73% 72 * 73 72% Wilson .8* 8 8* 8* Wilson pfd . 26 Worthington Pump. 28% 28* Wrigley Co . 42 41 % 41* 41% Yellow Mfg Co„ .. 54 54* Yellow Cab T Co. 49 50 Total sales Saturday stocks. 512,100 shares. Total stocks, 1,096.300. New York, July 29 —Bond prices forged slowly ahead In today’s moderately aitTva trading, which was featured by a rally In Brazilian issues on the reported crushing of the Sao Paulo revolution. An active demand for public utility and sev eral individual industrial Hen* devel oped. but rail Issues encountered profit taking after an early display of strength. The day's most significant development in investment circles lay in the ready subscription of new Isaues, which totaled more than $5 0.00 0,000. a figure exceed ing the entire volume of laat week., of fering of two Canadian National railways issues. aggregating almost 130,000,000, brought a good response The 6 per cent bonds of the Public Service Corporation of New York, of which a $20,000,000 Issue was sold to day. commanded a premium on the open market. The 5s. which recently were strengthened by alteration of the com pany's financial structure, added another 3 points to their gain. Advances of the Brazilian Issues ranged from 1 to about 9 points Included were the Rio de Janeiro 8s. Sao Paulo 8s, Bra zilian government 8s and Central Rail ways 7*. all of which are expected to benefit by the quelling of the insurrec tion. Improvement In agricultural conditions, resulting from the rise in grain and cot ton prices, was reflected in a better de mand for obligations of the fertilizer com ?anies American Agricultural Chemical 4a moved up 1 4 points I nlfed Sts*r« Honda. Rales fin $1 ono). High Low Close 20 Liberty 34s 101.14 10113 ini.13 113 Liberty 1st 4%* 102 15 102.11 102 15 620 Liberty 2d 4%s .101 26 101 24 101.26 407 Liberty 3d 4%a..)02.]« 102 13 102 16 323 Liberty 4th 4%s 102 17 102 13 102 17 438 u 4 Govt 44a. 105 14 105.6 105.16 Foreign. 21 Anton J M Wka 6s. 80 79% 80 25 Argentine 7s .102% 102% 102% 34 Argentine *1 . 94 93% 94 70 Austrian 7t . 94 4 *3% 94 12 Bordeaux 6s . 8 3% 854 85% 5 Copenhagen 64a ..96 94% 94% 11 Gr Prague 74* *94 *8% *94 17 Lyons 6s . 8 3% 85% 854 15 Marseille* 6s . 85% 65% 85% 43 Rio de Jan 8a '47. 94 934 §14 8 Czech Rep 8s 99 9*4 99 21 Dept of Seine 7s... 90 *9% *9% 1 Dominican 54* ... *0 90 90 10 Canada 54* '29. .103% 1034 1034 39 Canada 6a '52 . 102 % 1024 1A24 25 Dutch E I 6* '42 .. 954 93 #54 20 Dutch E I 54a '61 $o 69% 90 5 Frameri'-an 7%s 93% 93 98 29 French Republic 8a.102% 1°2% 102% 74 French Rep 7 4*... 100 99% 100 65 Japanese 6%a. 91% 91% 91% 4 K of Belgium *a ..106% 105% 106% 2* K of Denmark 6s . 99 9*% 98% 1 King of Italy «4a 10*>% 100% 100% 21 K of Nether 6s '72. 97 % 96% 96% 23 K of Norway 6s '43. 97 % 97% 97% 99 King S C 8 8a - *6 85% 86% jo K of Sweden 6s .1034 D*3% 108% 6 Oriental Dev deb 6s *5% 854 854 17 Parle-L-Medlter 6s. 79 7*4 78% 120 Rep of Bolivia *s 92% 19% 92% 3 Rep of Chile Is '41. 106% 1064 104 20 Rep of Chile 7s ..9* 97% 98 5 Rep of Col 64* ..•* 9* 9* 70 Rep of Cuba 5 4s 96% 96% 96% 1 Rp of El Sal a f *• 101 4 101 4 101 4 9 Rep of Finland «• .87% 87% 87% 12 S of R|o O do R 8s. 9« 944 ** 68 R of Ran P s f 8s 98% 94 9*4 6 Swiss Confed 8» . 114 114 <14 *3 Swiss Gov 64a '46 .94 4 96% 96 4 4 DKofGBAl 64s. 29 109% D»4 1 a» % 29 CKofGBAI l%s. *37.104 % 1*4 1*4% 142 V P of Brazil 8a 95% 94 94 % 102 IT R of B C Ry E 7a 684 *0% *2% jo J Am Agr Ch 74a 92 90% 92 2 Am Ch « f deb 6a 94% 94% 94% 7 Am Rmelt 4* .. 104% 105% 106% 14 Amer Rmeifing 6a 95% 94% 95 9 Amer Fugar 6s . 101% 101% 101% 66 Am T A T 6%s 102%% 102% 102% I03 Arn T A T c tr 5a 1*2 101 % 101% 66 Am T A T 64* 1*2% 102% 1 oj % 44 Anae Cop 7s ‘3* ..100 99% 99% 94 Anac Cop 6s 'S3 97% 97% 974 66 Arm A Co of D $4s *2 •<% *2 22 \ssoristed OH 6* 101% 101 % 101% 23 At T A S F* I li 9* % 9* % 90% 1 ATARF ad 4s s» *4% 84% 84% 3 A» oCaat L 1st 4a 9 2 91 % 9 2 10 A tl Ref deb 5s *•% 98% 98% 10 RsIt A Ohio 6p . . . 10J% 10J% 101% 21 Bait A G rv 44s.. 90 89% 89% 24 Balt A O go 4s *»% *7% *7% 4 B TofP IstArf 5a.1004 ieo% 10«% 80 Beth St ro 4# A 96'« 94 94 5 Beth Rt 54* ** 4 *4 88 27 Brier Hill St 54a 97 96 % 97 1 Bklvn Edla g 5s A 100*4 l*o% nn% 155 Bklvn M T s f 6a 81 |0% «1 7 Calif ePt 64* *•% *•% *4** 8 Can Nor deb 64* 1154 116 1154 Csnad T*c deb 4s . . II % 61% *14 2 Cen of Georgia 5 4* 1**4 9*4 *9% 14 Central Leather 5s 99% 99% 99% 33 Can Pae «td 4s 4* 5«% «*% 192 Chess A O cv. 5a 101 % lftn% !*•% 16 Chess A G rv 4%* ** 85% 96 II Chic A Alton 3%s 41% 41 41 18 Chic A Fast. Ill Se 7! 72% 73 23 Chic tit West 4s 84% 64 % 64% 1 «>R C M A R F cv 4 4*. 63 4 6 3 63 37 C M A R P rfg 44§ 64% 56% '•4% $5 C M A R P 48 25 814 %i 81 30 Chic A N W 6# 97% 97 *7 88 chic Rys 5# 99% 95% *64 2 C R I A P g 4* «4 83% 8.3% 76 r R I A P r 4s 12% «*4 *3% 2 C . T H A R F. 5a 80 78% ** 59 C A W Ind 4a 77% 77 77 % 73 Chile Copper 6a.. 105% 1°4% 108 1 C C C A S L «s A 104% 101% 103% 4 Clave r. T. 6e.10* 100 1** 25 Colo A Ro 4 4• ■ • • 4*% *4 15 Col r, A F 5s §..!"•% I** 1** 17 Com Pow 4* 94% 84 *4% 10 Cons C. Of M 5s ««% 88% *8% 9 Consum Pow 5s 90% 404 §•% 191 Cuba C Rugsr ts 1*14 ln* 1ftAS II Den ARloG la.. 46 44% 44% 7 Den A RiO <1 4s 7« 78 78 7 Def Edison rfg *».1<'*% 1*5% 1*5% 8 PuP de N*m 74* 1n,i 4 lf|4% 108 4 13 DUOU l ight 6s . ,1*5% 1*5% IO64 7? Fas Cu Rug 7%s .10*% 1*8 % 108 % 37 F.tn G A F 7%* *4 •*!» •« 15 ECe pr Hen 4s .. 74 71 % 71% "5 FHe gen lien 4s . . *6 64% *4% * Fisk rubber 8* ..101 100% 1004 R Gen Elec deb 6a..10.8% 1*14 1*3 4 13 Goodrich 44* 47 4 47 *7% 4> Goody T 8s 1911 10«% 104% 1*4% 8 Goodv T 9s 1941 117 116% 117 *8 G I Rv of Can 7s 115% 115 114% i 4 O T U Of Can 4s 106% 106% 1*4% 17 Gt North 7s A .104% 1**4 1 8 Gt North 54s R 1*1% 101 1*1 7 4 If A M rfg 6s A *7% 97% 87% * 14 Hum O A R 64s 49% *9 % 49% 4 If A M a Inc 5s 47% 67 *7% 30 Til Bell T rfg &s 4» % 97% 94 l 5 III ' >n ’ ■ . . . i"* 1R irVRI^NO i fir Ra 47% 9’H 47% ? Ill St| dah 4%« 44 44 44 I Indiana Stl Ra ...Ml Ml Ml 4R In Hap Tr 7a 9-!% 91 % 9' % Mi Intar II Tran* «a 71% 70 70% RR In R T T fa ■ Ra atpd R4 R7 % R7% 104 f * O Nr* adj Ra FF% M% MS ?0 \ A O Nn lat Ra .94% *9% 44% 1R In Man' M a f Ra 4R% *«% MS ! 4 Intar P rvt Ra A **% 4ft % 4R v, 41 K r Ft S A M 4a 41 % 41% 41 v, 1 K r r * 1, Fa 44 49% 44 9 Kan «* Smith Ra . MU 40 ao% 10 Kan C T 4a 48% 4*% 95% II Kao «1 4 P: Ra 4*% 94% 9«% 1 K S T 4a 48% 44% 97% I I .an O of St I, R % a »R % 48% 9R 4 11 I. S * M S d 4a ’31 o«% 94% 44 S. i l.lff * M Ra 104% 104% 104% 1® I .null n * K Ra 41% 91% 41% 17 Maim* ‘"OP 7# IIS 114% 114% JO Manatl Su* 7%a 91% 94% 44% l Man Rv .on 4a 43 «3 R2 7 Mkf J*» Rv 7a 44 4« \ 98% 7 M 011 7 % a w w joj 102 10? 57 RP d St| cv Ra 8 4% «*% 8«% 3 M St r * S S MR%a *4% 4R% «R% U MK AT pr 1 Ra 0 M2 Ml % Ml% R4 M K Sr T n r 1 Ra A 4*% a«% *% **% 94 MKAT na Ra A . R2% R? R*% 10 Mo Par lat Ra 48% 44% 4» V. 47 Mo Par t*n 4a . 42% »*2 *'% ?0 Mont Pntv Ra A 44% 44 44 4 N F T A T lat la Ml % Ml % Ml % ?0 N T r dah Ra 108% 108% 10*% "4 V T r rfr * Imp Ra 84% 49% 49% t NY t* A St I. Ra A 10?% to?% |o;% 10 v T r.d if* R % a 11-% 117% 11 *N ?l NTNHAM Fr 7a 44% 48% 48% *4 NTNHAVI «a '44 74 78 % 78% 21 NY Rt a la 4 4 4 5 NY Tal Ra 41 Ml % MR % Mr % "0 NT Tal 4 % a 4R % 9R % 4R % .4 NT XV A ft 4%a R 4 '7% R7 % It N A XV «a 11*% 137 It? "7 No Am Rdlann Ra 9R% 9R% 9« % 1 Nn Ohio TA1. Ra 90% 40% 4|% «5 No Par Ra to? MR % 1«? IS No Par 4a . 4R 4« 4R 14 No St pow lat Ra 44 9X% 48% 0 n W Rail Tal 7a M9 M* % M«S 4 n A C |#t Ra Ml % Ml Ml * Ora 9 I. rfa 4a 47% 4?% 97% 11 Ora Waah Ra . «F% *4% 1 Qtlt S* aa! 7 %• 49 84 % 44% 21 Pacifie OAF. Ra ... 14% Ja% 94% IT Pac TAT 5. 'll »»H »*$ 3 Penn RR 6%a 110% 110% 4 Penn RR gen 5i...l0« 103% 104 4 Penn RR gen <%*■ **2» 54 Par** Msrq rff M. . . • * •*_. 11 Phila Co rfg 6a •••103% 133% 103% 20 Phila Co 6%a. »3% 93% 93% 69 Pierce-Arrow »•-... 90% <9% 80% 7 Port Ry LAP let 6s 94 94 94 94 Prod A Ref 8. 109% 109% 09% 368 Public Service 5l,.104% 101% 164% 73 Punta, %A1 Sug 7s .110% 101% 11? 24 Reading gen 4%i 96% 96% 9a% 6 Heeding gen 4a . 94% 94% 94% 6 Rem Arma a f Ha 93% 93% 93 o 3 Rep I r A St 6%. . 90% 90% 90% 9 Rio Or W c t 4a . 71 70% 70% 44 Rock la A A L 4 % a 83% 83 83% 1(1 St U I M A R 4a.. 92% 92% 9e% 73 St L (MAS 4a.. 86 84% 88 91 St I, A R F 4a A.. 71% 71% 71% 4« St V A S F 6a 79% 79 79% 163 St L A 8 F *i ... 72% iS% 72% 2 St L 8 c 4a 86% 86% 86% 10 St P A K C 4%a . 80% 80% 60% 7 St P U D Sa .101% 101 101% 43 Seaboard A Una 6a 84% 83% 84 63 Sea A Line 5a .... 87% 66 67% 63 Sea A Line 4a ... 68 67% 6714 10 Sin Con O 7a - 91% 91 91 4 Sin <2 O 6 % a .... 85% "4% 85% 3 Sin Crude Oil 5%e.l00 loo 100 32 Sin Pipe L 6a - 64% 84 .84% 23 Sou Par cv 4a .... *7% 97% 9i% 5 Sou Pac rfg 4a . 90% 90% 90% 4 Sou Pac 4a ..551'* ,55$ ,25^ 7 Sou Rail r 6%i ..107 108% 107 20 Sou Rail 6a .102% 102 10.% 17 Sou Rail 6a .101% 100% 101% 23 Sou Rail g 4a - 75 74% .5 146 Sou Hell Tel rfg a 96% 96% 96% 3 Steel Tube 7a -105% 1J»% 106% 8 Tenn El rfg 6a . .98 97% 98 126 Third Ave ad 6a.. 66 64% 64% 31 Third Ave rfg 4a 60% 60 60 5 Toledo Edleon 7a. 108% 108% 108% 20 Tnl St L A W 4a 83% 63% *3-* 5 Un El Lt A B rf 5a 98% 98% 98% 27 Union Pac lat 4a. 93% 93% 93% . 16 Union Pac cv 4a. 99% 99% 99% 7 V 8 Rubber 7%a...l03% 103% 103% 24 U R Rubber 5a... 63% 88 63% 32 U 8 Steel a f 6i .704% 104% 14 Utah Po A Lrt 5a 92% 92 92% 19 Vi-Ce Ch 7 % a w w 35 34 34 84 Va-Car Ch 7a. «3% «*% 63% 13 Virginia Ry 5a 96% 96% 96% 6 Warner Sug Ref 5a. 102 102 10. 73 Weat Elec 5a. 98% 98% 9«% 38 Weat Mary lit 4a. 64 63 63% 79 Weal Pac 5a. » % 89% 91 - 10 Weat Union 6%;..111% 111 12 Weatlngho Elec. 7a.108% 108% 108% u Weat Shore 4« .... 84% *3% 84% 1 Wlckwlre-8pe St 7a 6» 69 69 7 Wlllya-Ove lit 6%e 98 97% 98 3 Wlla A Co a f 7%a 57% 67% 5. * 46 Wilann A Co lit 6a *8% 88 88 17 Young Sh A T 6a 9o% 95% 95% Total bonds. $14,110,000. 1 N. Y. Curb Bonds New York. July 21.— Following !■ the official Hat of transaction* In the New York Curb Exchange, giving all atocka and bond* traded in: Domestic Honda. 1 Allied Pack 6«- «5 •* *{ 7 Allied Pack S». 83 83 83 7 Am Gal a Kl Si • 95% »J* 3 Amer Roll Mill* 6a.100 100 100 2 Am Sum Tob 74a 75 76 76 l Tro Thread Co 6a.103% 103% J93% 6 Ana-’ Cop 6a... .1034 103% 193% 1 Analo Am O 74a 103% 1?2% 1«2% 1 Aaao Sim Hdw 64a 78% 18% .8% 14 All G A W I 5a .54 63 4 64 6 Beaver Board 8a.. 78 79 79 2 Beth St 7a 35. .103% 193% 193% 10 Can Nat Rv *q 7a 111 ■'?** '’J 1 Citlee Serv 7» "D" 94 94 94 13 Deere A Co 4a_ ■ J 6 }•* }!?* 1 Detroit City 0 6* -}®*}$:L 3 Detroit Eluon 6a .10.% 107H 10'% 5 Dunlap Tire A R 7a 93% 92-* 92% 3 Flatter Bndv 6. '28.102% 102% in.% 3 Oen-ral Pet «•.. ..199 100 100 3 Hood Rubber 7a .1014 1J14 1014 7 Inter a.VD Mil... 96 4 964 96% 1 Kenne-... 11 Cop ia..l«« JJ* 6 I,ehl*h val Ha 5.,100% 100% 100% 1 Murria A Co i 4 ■ • }J% JJJ* JiJ* 10 N Orleana Pub 8 Si 8i% Jj4 *• * \ ?.Sir¥:w8r^.1Ji% 1 $ ‘ijg ti Pub SE,c‘of N > 7J..I 5 , 5 J 1 fvir. % 1! 5 14 9 at Oil N Y 7a 7.10$ 10$ 10$ 1 St Oil N Y 7a JS.IOSH JJJJJ ' St Oil N T 7a '29 106'-, 1064 1064 11 Sun Oil 6a . .. 1"0% 100 100% 11 Swift A Co 6* J* * J.'J* 1*2 7 T'n El la & P a'ya 3 ‘ **% 5 ‘ * 4 I n Oil Cal $s 24.IJlJj 1.1* 3 United Oil Prod is 44% }3 JJ ! Un Rys of H*7Hs.}2J IS? 4 Vacuum 011 7s-107^4 lf>** Foreign Honda. iwi!?; c$s >•** I %W)f« ^ le | .10l *0l 1 Swim 6a.1*% 100 * < hirafo Stoeke. Furnished b* J S Bache A Co- 2.4 Dmaha National bank bulldm* Phone tAckaon 6187-88-81. Bld Aakod Armour * Co. Ill. rM J«% j*1* Armour Co., dal, pfd. 8.4 Albert Pick . Baaai.'k Alemlte . -*% . r%rb.de .,.,,,2 Brtlaon. com .*-* 4% 'ontlnental Motor* . * rudaBy *• Daniel Boone . *• .ij* Diamond Match ........ell» 11‘ Deere. _ pfd . *» JJ Eddy Paper . 18 *. u Libby • . ,2 National Leather ........ 3% -4 Quaker Data . - > ,.i* Reo Motor. . 1* ■*% ift a >-o. % . Swift International . . 77% Thmnpaon . *• «ahi . ;*> ;,V Yellow MMf* Co 88% 64 Yellow Cab . 6*4 ” New lork Oenrrwl. New York. July .'I—Floor—Firm. aprina patent.. 17.75 0 8 25 ; aoft winter • iralaht. 16 26.0.6 if; hard winter ",rRy*hKiour- fum fair •» ««*< ** **• 160. choice to fancy. Cornmaal-Kirm. fin. 13:04,3 30. yellow do. I. IsOl.t R}» St.-one No : weatern, 61 97, f o b. New York, and 11.91. e. I t. **• ^Barley—Firm. maltlaf. 89%e®»l»a%, elf. New York Wheel Spot, firm; No 1 dark north ern aprln*. c. t. f. New York. lake end rail. 6169. No 3 hard winter, f o b leke and rail. 11.694 • No. 1 Manitoba, do, 8167% No 2 mixed durum, do, "corn- Spot. atron*; No 2 /Allow, e t f track, New York itke and rail. |l 21. Oats Spot, firmer. No . white. mv*c Feed--Steady. city bran. 100-pound M,ki, 13106. weatern bran. do. 116 ><*y "lily Quiet No. 1. 131 00* 31 99; No 2 |*8 09*. 9 80. No. 3. |23 00® 25 90. ehlp ring |1» ^6 a * 4 op rXpJ-Quiet .tats. ltJI. 42#4tc: 1J12. 309.4c, r*< ific coast* lfJ3. 210 33c. iij; Pork Firm: me##, |?«00O27e0; fam ily $:t 00<Mt oo Hard strong, middla weat. Ill *ACj 14 06 Tallow—St re* ng. special looae. 7%c. extra, • _ ., _, Rice steady; fancy head Tiltlf York Mlger New York. July ?* Haw eugar d# Mined 1-lSc today to the bast* of I 6*c for Cuban, duty paid faiea were 1S»©6 baga Cuban, prompt Shipment to a local [♦finer Farly advance* of 4 to % pqint* in raw innr fufur#a on Wall street buying in »P r*d by report* that Hueaia was facing a famtne in augar. were followed by *et haclia under tiade eell'.ng Th# decline m the apot market waa « feature of the late reaction.‘with final price*, unchanged m S point a net higher September cloeed 9 40r. December. I Jk, Xla^rh. J 36c. Mav. ' 3 Huainea# in refined augar waa light and price* were unchanged at % 4«<• to «,7Sc ft'r fine gr; nutated Rrfined future# were nominal. Coffee Future*. New York. July :$ - The market for offec future* wa# active and irregular mday It broke #7 point# to IS 66c for September, after th# opening under liquidation du* to repoita th«t rebel* had capitulated and that Rant*># ship ^enta would aoon ba teaumed on a large r ule Suhatgnt'ai pattial reco'erie* e ere turned on firmer Rio cable# and th# ma» «et cloeed steady at 1ft to 33 point* net decline Rale# were e#tlmaied at tft.oftft Hoc* Closing quotation# September 1140c; October, 18 16c. November, 14 76c December 1 4 46c. .March. 14 66c. May. II Tlic m j4poi coffee quiet; Rio *#. Hf UHf i - 4b. iikdim1. Npw York Cotton. Now York Cotton othanga quotation*, furnlahad by J. S Hacho .% CtJ, *** Omaha National flank building. rhonoa Ta.kaon. M*7. MM. »1*t. Art. ! Opon High I l«rw C'oar I Sat^ ~ -7*k :»•: iVrs" ?* 14 if ?* r*oc 24 73 7* 1<* 3*1* 2* M ?* 4* tan j« :* .« t* jfl.lt :*.** :* *s Mar < ft ?f ft* ll*Ml 3* «« ?» b5 May 3* <>4 i* ik :> ** :» *t :> ;s Npw York buffer Quotation* Furntahod by .! S flarho A Co 114 Omaha National flank building Phono* larkaon H*7-** ** ___ I Qyvon I Hlah * Low I Clo— 1 Clo— Bant III 14 4 I M 1 4ft I * 4ft | *ar. .1 1* 1 41 1 HI 1 •* 1*5* Mar 151 *34 i 1 ?ft >30 1 I IT Oil* an*l Hoaln. Savannah t'.a . July •* Turponiln# Firm. 74c. aalo* till bbla . rooolpta, M« bbla ahlpmonto, 3,172 bbla,. ato. k. I0.**T bbla floaln Firm: aaloa. 2 1*1 raaka tp ratpta. I.J.’>4 raaka. ahlpmonla, Ifl.ftft* raaka at orb. tt.4M • aaka quotation* It |4 4ft r>. F and F 14 7* Cl. 11 1 and K 9 4 73 M 9* 77** N. 9 4 *ft. Wtl. 94 44 WW, \, 3*3 4 Non lork Cotton Now York dal' ?• Tho gonoral rot Ion rloaod ll point* htghrr to S3 point* oat lowar. * ^ " I Omaha Produce [ _ j Omaha. July R BUTTER. Creamery—Local jobbing ©flee# to re tainers: Extra* 42c; extra* tn 00-lb. tuba. 41c; standard. 41c. flrat*. 40c Dairy—Buyer* arc paying 30c for beat fable butter tn roll* or tuba *' packing stock. For beat aweet, unaaited butter. 31c. „_ A _ BUTTERFAT For No. 1 cream Omaha buyer* are Dry ing. 26c per lb. at country atatlona; 22c delivered at Omaha. FRESH MILK . t _ $2 00 per cwt. for frean milk teatlnf l.t delivered on dairy platform Omaha. EGGH. , ## Fo# egga delivered Omaha, on losa-ofl baala. around $7 00 per caae. #'or No.:l fresh egg*, graded basis, 87.3;j#7.50 gen erally $7.35 per case; second*, per dozen. 21# 22c. cracks, 19#20c. Price* above are for eggs received In new or No. 1 whitewood case#; a deduc tion of 25c will be made for aecond-hand rases. No. 1 eggs must be good average Hize, 44 lbs. net. No. 2 eggs Mconda. consist of small, slightly dirty stained or washed eggs, Irregular shaped, ahrunken or weakbodied egga. , . In some quarter* s fair premium 1* being paid for selected eggs, which must not be more than 48 hour* old. uniform in size and color (meaning all solid color*— all chalky whit© or all brown and of the same shade). The shell must be clean and sound and the egga weigh 25 ounces per dozen or over. Producer* must neces sarily deliver their own egga to benefit by the Matter classification. Jobbing pricea to retailer#: U. 8. spe cials. 30© 31 r; U. 8. extras, commonly known as selects, 28c; No. 1, small, 24# L5c; checks, 22c POULTRY. Pricea quotable for No 1 atock. alive: Broiler*, around 30c; broilers, over 2 lbs., 25©30c; leghorn broilers, 24#27c; hens, over 4 lbs. 17# 18c; hens under 4 lbs.. • 4# 15c; Leghorn hen*. 12# 13c; rooster*. 8# 11c; capon*. 7 lbs and over, 22©25c; '-apons, under 7 lbs.. 22#26c; ducks, f.f-f.. young, J2c; old ducks, f.f.f., 8#10c; geese, f.ff, 6#i0c; pigeons, $1.00 per dozen. . . Under grade poultry paid for at market value. Sick or crippled poultry not want ed and will not be paid for. Jobbing pricea of dressed poultry (U> retailers): Springs, soft, 35#35c; broiler*. 38© 40c: hene. 21# 24c; rooster*. 16# 18c, ducks, 22#25c; geese. K>©20c. FRESH FISH. Jobbing prices quotable as follows: Fancy whit© fish. 24c; lake trout, 25c; halibut, 27c; northern bullheads. Jumbo, 22c; catfish. 30© 32c; fillet of haddock, 27c; black cod sable fish, 18c; roe shad, 2 8c; flounder*. 20c; ersppies. 20© 25c; black bass, 32c; Spanlah mackerel, 14 to 2 lbs.. 25c; yellow pike, 22c; striped bass. 20c; white perch. 14c. pickerel, 15c; Chinook aalmon 30c; silver salmon, 22c; frozen fish. 2# 4c less than prices above; ling cod, 12c. CHE EKE. American cneese, fancy grade, Jobbing pricea quotable as follows Single daisies. 23c; double daisies, 224c; square prints. 234c, young America. 234#; longhcrns. 22 4c; brick, 22c; limburger. 1-lb., style, $3.25 er dozer; Hwlss. domes tic. 32c. imported Roquefort, 62c; New York arhlte. 32c. BEEF CUTS Market unchanged. Swift A Co.’* sales of fresh beef in Omaha week ending July 26th averaged K 15c per lb. Jobbing pricea quotable: No. 1 ribs, 26c. So. 2. 24c; No. 3. 17c; No. 1 loins. 25c; No. 2. Sic; No. 3. 20c; No. 1 rounds. 19 4c; No. 2. 19c; No. 3. 13 4c; No. 1 «hucks. 14c; No. 2, 13e; No. 2. 10c; No. 1 plates. 84c; No 2. 8c: No. 3. 7c. mi' its. Jobbing prices. Graphs — Thompson. ##edl*s». 25-lb crates, $2 60 Apples—New Early Harvest, bushel basket. $2 50 Lomons—California, extra fancy, per box. $7.00; fancy, per box. $6 00; choice, per box. $6 50; limes. 100 count, carton. $2 00. Pears—California Barlett, per box. $4 25 Raspberries — Black, 24-pint crates, $4 25. red. $4 26 Blackberries — Per crat*. $3 25 Peaches—California. per box. $1 28; Georgia, bush'd basket. $2 75 Pluma—California, per era’#. 12 15 0 $2 75. Banana#—Pet lb.. 74c. Loganberries—Per crate. $4 25 Grapefruit—Florida, extra fancy. $2 25 ©5 no. Oranges—Valencia*, extra fancy, per box. $3.75 ©7 or.. VEGETABLES Jobbing price* Sweet Potato**—Alabama. l*-!b. ham pers. S3 06 Honey Dew Melon*—• to 12 in crate. $3 00. Watermelon#—Crated, « melon*, 2© , 2 8%c per lb. Cauliflower—Denver, per lb . 15c. Cantaloup#—California standards. |2 16. ponies $2 75: flat*. »1 25. Cabbage—3c per lb.; crates. 2c per lb. Lettu'e—Head, per < rate, $* 50; per dozen. $1.75; leaf, per dozen, 46c. Roots—Beet*. carrota and tumlpa, market basket. 56c Onions—Spanish, crate. 8# !b*.. 12.5t; California, yellow. In aack*. 5c per lb.; home grown, doz^n bunch#*, 20c. Tomatoes — 4 - basket crate*, about If lbs . $2 06 Celery—California, 6 stalk*, per bunch, II 25© i 56. Pepper*—Green, market baaket. 81.56. Cucumber*—Southern, i er bushel, $2 06, ■hot hou»©. dozen. 81 50 Paraley—P#r dozen bunches 80©7Re. Radishes—Home grown, 26©25c per dozen bunches. Beans—Gr#en wsx. market bask*’ 50c. Potato#*—New crop, jn sacks, 14c per lb. FEED Market quotable per ton, carload lot*, f. o b Omaha. Wheat Fee t*—Bran. around •!$ 06. brown ahort* $?? rrav shorts. 129 n6; flour middlings. $29 06. reddog, 131.06© $6 00 Cottonseed Meal—43 per cent. $4« 00 Hominy Feed*—White or yellow |29 66. Digester Feeding Tankage—€9 per cent, 150 00. L r»-#d Me*? —34 per < #nt 14* *0 Butterm lk—Conder«ed. for feeding In bbl. !ot§. 3 45r per ib Take buttermilk. 500 to 1.506 lb*. 9c lb. Alfalfa Meal—Cb< e. prompt. „$?* 50. No 1. prompt. 125 50. No. i, fwerapt, $22 66. HAT Nominal quotation*, carload lot* Upland Prairie —No 1. $12 **©1 3 50. No. 2. $10 60© 110*; No 3. IT 60 © * 0* Alfalfa—Choice, old I19.00©20 00; No. 1 - id. 814 *'*©!$ **; No 1 new. 114*0© T 7 0n standard, old. J14 0O©!5 60. stand DO NT TRY TO RAISE your family without it. For Komach a elver and pains; sudden cramp*, severs intestinal colic and indiscretions of rating and drinking, changes in water. diet or climate, take CHAMBERLAIN'S COLIC and DIARRHOEA REMEDY Never fail to have it on head. Rinei is guaranteed to check worst Catarrh in fa hour* —or money hack. Send lac for f4 hour sample to Clinical l>abo rs tor tea Co.. Cleveland, fl 00 site on sale at all good druggist*. □I ' I tnv ERTisr.Mr.NT. Camphor Acts Quick TVopl* *r# »urprl##<1 *t fh# quirk • rtion of finipl# camphor, witchh»*»l, hy<1r»iit!«. #tr . a* mlx#d in Ijivoplik #y# wa*h. On# small boltl# h#!p* any raa# nor*. iv#ak or »train#d #y#.« Aluminum #y* cup fr##. Sh#rman « MoOonn#U druir *lor#». _ AllVrRTISV.MKNT Neuritis Means Nerve Torture The agonising pain caused hy neuritis has driven thousands of sufferers to the usa of narcotics or other habit-forming drugs. Probably no ailment that affecta mankind is capable of producing more e* cniciating torture than an advanced case of nerve inflammation. Thanks to medical science it is no longer necessary for anyone to resort to danger oua drugs for the relief of this distressing complaint. Fopa Neuritis Tablets go to the cans# of the trouble and help to remove it Quickly, safely and effectively They contain no ‘ dope’*—no habit forming drugs, Theii action is highly beneficial to the entire system, and the «ssk in flamed nerves usual!} respond to their , healing influence with amazing rapidity. If you want to he free from neuritis misery, go today and obtain a package of Fopa Nsunlts Tablets Pyice. 11 Of Fold in Omaha hy Sherman A McCon nell Drug Flores and all other leading drvig store#. Roerichs A Runyon Co , Mfra . San Piancice. I ' sh'VJXM-K. i: Lowland Prairie—No U $9.00®* 90, No. 2 96 no® 8.00. _ ,, .. P.cklng Price, quotable in round h»" 'less carload* lot,,, f. o b. Om»hJ follow: First patent. In 98 lb beg*. $7- ® ' r.er hbl fancy clear, In 48-lb. bag*. $■> 6a ®,95 per hbl ; white or yellow «r«»*ei. K 5S phideVwool. TALLOW. Price* are quotable aa follow*. 4#ttvere«l Omaha* dealer.' weight, and «l.ctlona: Hide*- Seasonable, No. 1, 7e; No. 2, *-S green. 9c and 6c; bull* «c *<& branded. 6c: glue hide.. 4 c; cnlf. IS® and 111.4c: kip. 11c; dry .. ted, «c dry 6c; dry hide., 11c; dry .sited, *«. dry glue 6e; deacon., *1 00 *«rh; hor»» hide. 13 25 and 12 25 each; ponle. and glues 91.16 each; colts. 26c each, bog *kin* 15c each. Wool—Pelts. *1 90 to 9175 pending on size and length of wo aI, lamb* 50c to «1.90 each, depending at size and length of wool, zhearlngz, 2b« to 30c each; clip, no xalue; wool. 25®I»c Tallow and Greaae.—No. ltallowgc, ■ tallow. Otic; No. 2 tallow. 8c. A grea.e fcc. H gree.e, SV*c: lr*,low. fesae 6c, brown greaae. 4c; pork crackling.. 140.00 per ton; beef crackling., 120.00 per ton, beeswax. $20.00 per ton. Foreign Exchange Kate,. Following are today’, rate, of exchange a. compared with the p,r valuation. Furni.hed by the Peter. National bank. Par Val. Today Austria .20 .OOCftll Belgium .18S Canada .l-"0 -J**® Czecho Slovakia . •** -?*®J Italy . .19» «94J» Ju go Slavla .^20 012$ Inland .|9 • Sweden .27 Switzerland .555 .1847 New York Metal*. New York July 28 —Copper— Firm j electrolytic, spot and nearby, I2%c, fu* tur<»e, 13%e. Tin—Easy; spot and future*. « W. Iron—Steady. No 1 northern. 19.509 20 00c; No. 2 northern. 19.00® 19.69«; No, 2 southern, 18 O0@19.5Oc. Lead—Steady. *po». 7 25^ Zinc—Firm; ‘East St. Loul*. spot. «9<e( luiui n, Kansas City produce. Kansas Citfr July 28.—Butter—Crea m - ery 2c lower, 37039c: packing unchanged, 24c P3ga—Unchanged; firata, 25c; aelec’ed 11c Poultry — Unchanged;: Hena. 184c roosters. 12c. broilers 28 026* Potato*# — Unchanged. Ki# Vsllej cobblers and Red Rlv.gr Ohio#, $1 15 01 20 cwt. New York Cotton Futures. N*w York. July 28—Cotton—Future* opened firm; October 29 56c; December. 2175c. January, 28.70c; March. 28 92c; May. 29 04* New York. July 28.—Cotton future# eloaed easy; October. 29 34029 40c; De cember. 2*.80028.56c: January. 2* *50 28 41c; March, 28.60 0,2*.65c; Ala 28 58c. _ Chicago Produce. Chicago. July 2*.—Butter—Market changed; creamery extra*. 28c; standard*. 35 4c; extra first# 550 354c; firg»». *4 0344c; seconds. 220X3*. Egg#—Mark*' higher, receipt# 2*1** case#; firata. 264 0 27 4c: ordinary firsts. 25 4 0 26c, storage pack firsts. 2* 0 28 4 New York Poultry. New York. July 28.—Live Poultry—Un settled; no freight quotation!, brollera, by express 28 0 32* fowl#, by express. 21 0 2 4*. turkey# by express 15 0 30c. Dressed Poultry—Steady; chicken# 12 0 35c; fowls 19 0 30c; old rooatera. 16 0 21c; turkey*. 20 0 30c. Chicago Potatoes. Chicago. Julyp 28 —Pota toe#—Market weak. receipt? 6? cara Total United Sta'es shipments. 53T cart; Kansas tack ed Irish cobblers 11200130; few ta.ei early up to 11 4*V s'aked Early Ohi^a around 11 75; V rgin'.a barrel cobbler#, asking 12 9001 00; practically no aalee KEEP POSTED Important development* contained (n thi* week’s market review regarding tha following securities: Mack Truck U. S. Rubber | Invincible Oil Baldwin Loco. Ajax Rubber Allis Chalmers Great Northern Rjr. New Haven Studebaker Seaboard Ah* Line Atlantic Gulf Stewart Warner Write for free copy. P.G.STAMM & CO. Dealers In Stocks and Bonds 35 South William St., New York Odd facts ! about Corns End than this new uuy SINCE man started to wear shoes hla feet hare hart him. Scores of ways to nd corns hava be-n tr.-d. Most sr. slika. Blue-jay is scientifically different, quick, safe the discovery of a noted scientist. It stops the pain instantly. Then the com loosen* ano comes oft That's all —no dangerous paring. Use it tonight, walk In comfort tomor row. Your druggist has it. Blue*jay f BIB 1134 \m FRT1SFMFNT Why Bleachodent Is Safest Way To Whiten Dark Teeth Blench I'd#** Combination wh:t#m dark <t!ngv spotted stained teeth in ar. en tirely new safe nay Conta a* m:‘.d qu d and special paste L'quid r* highly area t if :c and emt»od:ea certain harmless in gredient* w hich soft an surface stain* without affect.ng enamel ;n any wa> Paste gently rernov«* the** ftened Main* Perfected by two prominent der.’ista. who u»ed it on their o«n teeth and on their patient* teeth for feu year*. Defer# offering It to public Ita safety te proven St* ned teeth spot! ap pe.-»t-tnee c*u*e tooth decay and bad threath. t«et B <*achcdent COMBINATION today for small coat B*ware of cheap !tqu -1 imitation* At all §0*4 dealer* .*u h as Brand** Store (toilet goods dept.) Fberman A M-Connell. Beater Pius Co, Green Drug Cc. Beran k and Son__ "my Rheumatism is gone - ” •“’T'HERE ire thousand* of yon X men and women, just like I once wn—slaves to rheumatism, muscle pains, joint pains, and hor rible atiff ness. I had the wrong idea about rheumatism for Tears. I didn t realite that increar. i n g blood cells had the . T . effectof completely knocking out rheu matic impurities from the system. «Th*! * began using S. S. S.t Today I have the strength I used to have years agof ' do51 u*r my crutches any more. S. S. S. makes people talk about themselves the way it builds up their strength. Start S. S. S. today for that rheumatism. You'll feel the difference shortly. S. 1 & is sold at *n M*d etvg is two tin. Tis •srgsr Sin it mots nvviassi.U.