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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 26, 1924)
Wheat Recovers and Seeks High Levels for Day Corn, Oats and Rye Also Ad vance; Foreign Crop News ; Offsets Ideal Harvest Conditions. By CHARLES J. LEYDEN. Universal Service Staff Correspondent. Chicago, Aug. 26—Heavy buying ot wheat futures today against export sale* to Europe checked the early break and led to a brisk recovery to higher level* for the day. The seaboard confirmed be tween 3.000.000 and 4,000,000 bushels wheat and flour in all positions as the amount taken by Europe, while private estimates placed the total business in wheat, flour and rye at 10.000.oqo bush els. Other grains recovered also. Wheat closed %c to 1 He higher; corn was l*4c lower to l’ic higher, oats were He to He higher, and rye %c to l^c advanced. Belated liquidation of wheat carried the market down immediately after the opening, but the rebound was rapid. For eign crop newa was more favorable from a bull standpoint and offset the ideal har vest conditions in the northwest. On the late bulge in wheat there was selling here by the northwest, pnrtly hedging and the balance back spreading. Germany has been credited with taking considerable wbent and rye lately. The flour sales of 200.000 barrels, equal to $00,000 bushels, went to Hamburg. Dan*i gig. Finland, the near east and north Af rb a. Corn broke sharply during the first hour. Professional pressure was apparent. Later one of the biggest operators who Jims been bullish for some time, bought heavily, and attracted short covering. Prices bulged 6c from the low points. While weather conditions have improved ever the belt the crop reports coming in are inclined to remain unfavorable. Corn is still several weeks lste on the avetage and absolutely needs good weather. Dais dropped early and then recovered with wheat. Commission houses, one with country connections sold at the outset. The demand for cash oats remains active and the visible supply for the week de creased 2.650,000 bushels. Rye showed much better form and af ter an Initial setback rallied sharply. Provisions closed Irregularly. Lard was unchanged to 2He lower and ribs were 6c to 16c higher. Fit Notes. Apparently Europe is of the belief that wheat has plenty of merit at prevailing levels. On the hulg© foreign buying has been slow, but the breaks have repeatedly encountered good buying. Many reports from the* seaboard today advised that business was checked only because of the inability to secure the cash grain In the country. Ocean tonnage is being booked on a large scale, and it is believed that the clearances of wheat from North | America during September will be very heavy. The wheat market inav or may not be 1n debatable ground. Without steady ex port absorption it is highly questionable as to whether speculators will continue to support the market, especially on the sdvances. with hedging sales ho large. The movement of winter wheat continues large, and the spring wheat run is just around the corner. There seems to be every reason to look for an early and heavy run of wheat from the American northwest when threshed. The movement from Canada is also likely to be liberal. There appar ently has been considerable new crop Ca nadian wheat worked lor shipment during the next few months. At least there are claims to that effect. Cash wheat at Win nipeg today wss strong. Wheat and flour on ocean supply for the week decreased 8.216.000 bushels The total supply ia 34.320,000 bushels, against 35.464.0C0 bushels a year ago. It is quite true that the world shipments have fallen the last few weeks, and in a measure this may account for the reduction of supplies on ocean passage, but neverthe less Europe is absorbing the grain headfd that way, end will need much more wheat this year than last. Cables from Liver pool had It that weather conditions were unfavorable for harvesting in tne United Kingdom and France. CHICAGO CASH PRICES. _By Updike Grain company, Atlantic 6311.1 Art._1 Open. I High. I Low. | Cloae. \ Sat. Wht. t Sept. 1.22% | 1.24%' 1.21% 1.24 1.12% 124%' j 1.24 % 1.23 Dec. 1.28 1.29%! 1.26% 1 29 1.27 % 1.29 ; ; 1.29% 1.28 May 1.34% 1.36%’ 1.32% 1.34% 1 33% ! 1.34% I 1.34% Hya III Sept. .86% 86% 83% .86 .85 Dec. ! .9*74 .91 %1 .88% I 91 89% • 91%! ' 91% May .96 : .98% .93%! 95% .95 Corn l|l! Sept. 1.13 1.13%! 1.10 112 I 1 13% 1.12%! | 1.11%! 1.13% Dec. 1 1.05% 1.07% 1.02 1.05% 1.05% ! 1 04% : 1.06 I 1.06% May ' 1 .or. 1 1.08% 1.03 1.06%' 1.06% | 1.06% I 1 1.07 ! 1 06% Oats .Ijll Sept. .47% .48% .46 .47 %’ .47% I .47% .47%; 47% Dec. .50%' .51%, 49 .61 .60% I .50% i .60%! .5*% May .54% .55% .52% .54% 54% 1 .54%' I ! .54% Lard ! Sep!, i.1. . . . .11.60 Dec. i 13.00 13.07 112 85 13 07 113.10 Riba III Sept. 12 97 1 3 02 112 80 11 9 02 113 05 Chicago lint ter. Chtcago. Aug 25.—The butter market today traded very quiet and appeared easy with an unsettled undertone The centralized car market wa« easy with trading very quiet Freeh butt«r 92 score, 36 %c; 91 #cnre, 36c* 9* score,-35%e; 69 *rore, 34%c; 8* score. 34c, 87 acore, 33 %c; 86 score, ?,2'$c. « entrallzed car lots 90 acore, 36%c; 89 acore, 35c; 88 score. 31c New York Poultry. New York. Aug 25 -Poultry—Live Irregular; no freight quotation*; broiler* by expre**. 29® 31c; fowl* by expre**. 20© 26c; turkey* by expr*** 26©30r. Dressed irregular; chicken*. 33® 45c; fowl* 21© 31c; old rooster*, 35<®20c; turkey*. 30 © 42c. Ix>ndon Money. London. Aug. 26.—Bar Silver—24%d par ounce. Money—3 % per cent Discount Rates —Short. 3% per cent; three month*. 3% per cent. Chioigo Poultry. Chicago. Aug 25.—Poultry—Alive, high er; fowls, 17® 23c; springs. 26c; rooatera. 15c. New York Cotton. New York, Aug 25 —The general cot ton market closed steady today at net declines of 107 to 118 points. c % Out of the Records V-/ Births and Deaths. Hirtlia. James and Mary Vacek. Twenty-eighth and Harriaon streets, boy John and Mary Fitzgerald, hoapltal, boy Hyman and Anna Rosenbarg, hoapltal, boy. Ale* and Veronica Kamenaky. 3369 T street, girl. John and Se.ena Orabou, 4904 Walnut street, boy. Phlltlp and Alvina Kieaar, 4716 North Eighteenth street, boy Lewis and Marie fitraley, 6626 I. street, boy. Sam and Dori* Pelta. hospital, boy. Fiank and Marla Rldolfo, 1 608 Ohio street, girl. Archie and Sarah Young. 2624 Rlnnay street, girl. Edgar and Margaret Duff. 1810 Camden avenue, boy. Thomaa and Nellie Carroll, hoapltal, boy. CM no and Concetta Curcho, 606 Pop pleton avenue, boy. Sebaatiano and Antonia Marcheal. 1111 South Ninth atreat, boy. Alfred and Ellen Oloden. hoapltal, gin. Heaths. J a a ue Wilson, 17 yeara, 2208 N street. Jakie Koate, 2 yeara. hoapltal Jatnea H Naught, 62 years. 623 South Fortlfirat atreet Kate Wolfer. 76 year*, hospital L«urltx J. Fllaa. 72 year*, hoapltal. Janie# Parks. Infant, hospital Hen# Trapalia. 1 year, hoapltal. Theresa Franco. Infant, hospital William W. Agee, 77 yeara. 2H1 North Forty fourth street. Mrs. Ann McDermott. 60 yeara. 1111 Cagtalar gtreat. George MasgaJ. 41 yeara, 6110 South Fifty-third atreet. William T, Johnson, 10. 210 flout! Twenty-eighth avenue Mrs Linden McCorkle. 27 year*. 604’ Pinkney Street Alfred A Lyons. 28 years, hoapltal. Building Permits. IB C. Peck, 2871 Whitmore avenue frame dwelling, $4.Oft*. C. A Johnson. 4715 South Fourteen!! atreet. frame dwelling. $4,400. H E Pederaan 4709 South Fourteen!) •treet. dwelling. $4.on* W. D Cameron. 6021 Western avenue frame dwelling, $6 00* A Hagelln 1112 North Fourty-nlnt) •treet, frame and atuccn dwelling. $4 **o Lather Mettler. 24*2 North Fifty eighth atreet frame dwelling $3, *00 Alfred Malvy. 2307 North Fifty-fir# •treet. frame dwelling $5.6** T.ula Peterson. 1712 Coiby atreet, franc dwelling. $1,260. r " ' ' m ' Omaha Grain ---/ Omaha. Aug 25. Cash wheat aold on tha tables today at unchanged prices to lc higher. There was a fairly good demand anti tablet were well cleared of samples at {he close, although quite a number uf cars reported In did not reach the tables In time to be of fered for sale. There were 394 cars re ported in. Corn sold from %c to l%c lower. Receipt/ of corn were S9 cars. Oat* sold at unchanged prices to lc higher. Receipts of oats were 74 cars. Uye sold about unchanged to lc higher. Fourteen cars of rye were reported in. Barley sold ftom lc to 2c lower. Re ceipts 11 cars. Omaha C'arlot Sales. WHEAT. No. 1 hard winter: 1 car, 11.18; 2 cars, $1.16; 9 cars. $1.15; 4 cars. $1.14%; 1 car. $1.14%: 7 cars. $1.14; 1 car, $1.13%; 1 car, $1.12%; 1 car. $1 12. No 2 hard winter: 1 car, $1.18%; 1 car. $1.18; 1 car. $1.18%; 1 car, $1.16; 2 cars. $1.16; 8 cars, $1.14%; 19 cars, $1.14; 2 cars, $1.13%; 10 cars. $1.13%; 25 ears, $113, 13 cars. $1.12, 4 cars, $1.12%; 3 cars, $1.11. No. 2 yellow hard wintar: 3 cars. $1.14; 1 car, $1.13%; 1 car. $113; 1 car, $1.12%. No. 3 hard winter: 1 car, $1.18; 1 car. $1.16, 2 cars, $1.13%; 17 cars, $1.13; 1 car, $1.12%; 3 cars, $1.12; 6 cars, $1.11%; 5 cars, $1.11; 4 cars, $1.10; 7 cars, $1.09. No. 3 yellow hard winter: 1 car, $1.13%. No. 4 hard winter: 23 cars, $1.11%; 6 cars, $1.11%; 7 cars, $1.11; 18 cars, $1.10%; b cars, $1.10; 5 cars. $1.09%; 1 car. $1.09; 1 car, $1.08%; 1 car, $1.07%, 2 tars, $1.07. No. 4 yellow hftrd winter: 1 car, $1.11%; 1 chi, $1.11%; 1 car. $1.08%. No. 5 hard winter: 1 car, $1.09; 1 car. $1.08; 1 car. $1 06; 1 car. $1.06. Sample hard winter: 1 car, $1.10; 3 cars, $l.<i9%; 6 cars, $1.09; 2 cara, $1.08; 4 cars, $1.07; 4 cars. $1.06; 6 cars, $1.05. No. 2 durum: 1 car, $1.11. No. 3 durum; 1 car, $1.10. No. 1 spring: 1 car. $1.20. No. 2 spring: 1 car. $1.17. No. 1 mixed: 1 car. $1.12. No. 2 mixed: 1 car, $1.11; 2 cars. $1.10. No. 3 mixed 1 car. $1.11, 1 car, $1.10, 1 car. $l.o7 No. 4 mixed. 1 car. $1.10. TORN. No. 6 white: 1 car. 99c. No. 3 yellow : 3 cars, $1.04. No. 5 yellow. 2 cars, $1.01. No 6 yellow: 2 cars. $1.00 No. 2 mixed: 6 cars, $1.04 No. 3 mixed: 1 car, $1.03; 1 car, $1.02 No. 4 mixed: 1 car. $1.02. No. 5 mixed: 1 car. $1.01; 2 cars. $1.00. Sample mixed: 1 car, $1.02. OATS. No. 3 white: 1 car, 45 %c; 10 ears. 44%c. No. 4 white: 2 cars, 44c; 11 cars. 48c; 1 car, 42%c; 2 cars, 42c. Sample white: 2 cars, 41c; 1 car, 40c; 1 car, 39c. RYE. No. 2: 9 cars, 84c. No. 3: 3 cars, 83c. No. 4: 3 cars. R2c. BARLEY No. 3: 1 car, 75c; 1 car, 74c. Dally Inspection of drain Received. WHEAT Hard winter: No. 1. 22 cars; No. 2, 68 cars; No 3, 64 cars; No. 4. 71 cars; No 5, 3 cars; sample, 35 cars. Total. 246 cars. Mixed: No. 1. 1 car; No. 2. 4 cars; No. 3. 3 cars, No. 4, 1 car, No. 5. 1 car; sample, 1 car Total. 11 cars. Spring: No. 1, 3 car*; No. 2. 1 car; No. 3. 2 cars; No. 4. 1 car. Total, 7 cars. Durum: No. 3. 1 car. Total, 1 car. Hard spring: No. 1. 2 cars. Total. 2 cars. Mixed durum: No. 3. 1 car. Total. 1 car. CORN. Yellow: No. 2, 14 cars; No. 3. It cars; N5. 4. 8 cars; No. 6, 2 cars; sample, 1 car. Total. 45 cara White: No. 2. 8 cars; No. 3, 3 cars; No. 4. 4 cars. Total. 16 cars Mixed: No. 2, 11 cars; No. 3. 6 cars: No 4. 4 cars; No. 6, 1 car; No. 6. 1 car; sample. 1 car. Total. 24 cars. OATS. White: No. 2, 1 car; No. 8. 15 cars; No. 4, 17 cars; sample, 11 cars. Total. 44 cars. Mixed: Sample, 1 car. Total, 1 car. RYE No. 2. S cars; No. 3. 8 cars. Total. 6 cara. BARLEY No. 2. 1 car; No. 3. 2 cars; No. 4, 1 car. Total. 4 cars OMAHA RECEIPTS AND SHIPMENTS (Carlot*.) Week Year Receipts— Today. Ago. Ago. Wheat . 394 367 127 Corn . 89 67 39 Oata . 74 63 127 Rye . 14 lt> 4 Barley . 11 o 6 Shipments— Wheat . 266 364 27 Corn . 72 44 46 Oata . 21 11 72 Rye . 7 2 H Barley ... 2 CHICAGO RECEIPTS Week Year Carlota— Today. Ago Afo. Wheat _ 124 720 354 Corn .... 34 116 114 Oata . 168 167 142 KANSAS CITY RECEIPTS. Week Year Carlots— Today. Ago Ago. Wh**at .866 1,068 Corn . 73 66 . . . Oats . 89 46 ... ST. LOUIS RECEIPTS Week Tear Carlot*— Today. Ago. Ago Wheat .. 2 3A 337 283 Corn . 77 86 140 Oat* . 86 228 78 NORTHWESTERN WHEAT RECEIPTS. Week Year Carlota— Today. Ago. Ago. Minneapolla .314 21 167 Duluth .121 6 134 Winnipeg.4 1 62 160 OMAHA STOCKS Buehela— Week Ago Year Ago. Wheat . 4.079.000 2.229.000 Corn . 265.0OO 1 45.000 (rats . 335.000 414.000 Rye . 29.000 17.000 Barley . 8 000 14,000 Minneapolla Cash Grain. Minneapolla. Aug 25—Wheat—-No. 1 northern $1 26% @1 31%; No 1 hard aprlng, 91 31% © I 46%. No. 1 dark north ern spring, choice to fancy. 91 39% © 1 46%. good to choice. $131 % © 1.38% ; or dinary to good, 91 2* % ©1 ill % ; old. Sep tember. |1 26%; new, 91 26% old De com bar, 91 30% new, 91.30%, old, May. $135%; new. 11.36%. Corn—No. 3 .yellow, $1 11% ©1.12%. Oata—No 3 white, 44%®44%e. Barley—66080 e. Rye—No 2. 79%®8ftc Flax—No 1. 92 650 2 6ft. Chicago Cnah Grain. Chicago. Aug 28—Wheat—No 2 red, 112801.29; No. 2 hard $1.2301.24%. Corn—Nn 2 mixed 9! 13%©! 14%. No. 3 yellow. 91 1 4 % G 1 17. Oats—No. 1 white. 46 © 48 %c; No. 3 white. 4 4 % ® 16 % *• Rye—No \ 86 %c. Barley—75© iftc. Se«d—Timothy, 9* 0007.76; clover, 911 60021 60. Provisions—Lard. 91 3 20; riba. 912.00; bell lea, $13 12. Visible Grain ftupply. New York. Aug 25 The visible supply of American grain shows the following < hangea in buahela: Wheat Increased 7.66ft,000. Corn increased 283.00ft Oata Increased 2.560,000. Rye Increased 361.000. Barley increased 177,000. Kanaaa City Grain. Kansas City. Aug. 26—Wheat—No 2 hard. $1 13%®1 26. No 2 red, $1 80® I. 31, September, $1 16% asked; Decem ber, $1 20% saked. May, 91 26% bid. Corn—No 3 white. 91 03. No. 2 yallow, II. 06; No 3 yellow, 91 04, No 2 mixed, 91 02 % ® 1.03 , September, 9103%. Decein ber, 9*%<; a*k*d; May. $1 00% apllt bid. Ht. I-mils Grain. Rt. Louis, Aug 26.—Wheat Futures September. 91 22%; December, $1 27% Corn September, 91 10%, December. 91.04%. Oata—September. 4>%r. Minneapolis Floor. Minneapolis, Aug 26.—-Flour Market unchanged to lBc Tower, family patents, 17 46 ® 7 55 , bran. 125.0ft. Foreign Exchange. New York, Aug 25 Foreign Exchange —Firm. Quotations (In cental Great Britain—■Demand. 448 %; cables. 148%, 6ft day bills on banka, 446% P'ranr* Demand. 6 29 %, cables, 6 40. Italy—Demand. 4 41%; cable* 442 Belgium—'Demand, 4 99 %. cables, 6 ftft Germany—Demand (per trillion), 21%. Holland - 38 66 Norway—1 3 78. Sweden—26 67 Denmark—-16 18. HwPaerland —18 72. Spain—1 3.29. Greece—J 8 l Poland— 19 %. t’aecho Slovakia 2 99 % Jugn Hlavla— 1 24. A nutria—0014 %. Rumania—.47 % Argentina—33 87. Brasil—10.12. Toklo— 41 % Montreal—99 31 12 Foreign Rtchange Rate*. Following are today's rate* of exchange aa compared with the par valuation Fur nlahed by the Peters National bank Par Val. Today A uair la .|ft .ftftoOli Belgium . 196 .0606 «‘anode . 1 00 l oft Cserhti-Slovakia .20 .0306 Denmark .27 1629 England . 4 86 4 4$60 France . I9;i .(»64Z Greer e . .196 0183 Italy . 196 .0446 Jugoslavia .2 ft .oti8 Norway . .27 1 392 Sweden . 27 .2667 .swltxei land . 1 96 1 886 Henan* 4 Itv Hay. Kansas cnv Auit 26 |fav Maiket 6ftr lower ♦»> 11.00 higher. N** t prairie 11 ft ftft © 1 I ,« « h'*l' ** alfalfa $21 6ft«u I 28 0ft; No i timothy $1* 60© i« oo, clover, mixed, light, 912 600 13 6'* / t Omaha Livestock * Omaha, Aug. 25. Receipts were: Cattle Hogs Sheep Monday Estimate... 15,500 9.000 29.500 Same day last week. 14,712 10.261 27,210 Same dys 2 wks ago. 12,220 12.575 21,490 Same dys 3 wks ago. lb.493 7,199 14,199 Same days year ago.16,662 7.963 26,050 Cattle—Receipts, 15,500 head. Less than 20 per cent of Monday's liberal cattle tun was made up of corn fed steers snd on these the market was quotahly steady with best beeves selling around 910.400 10.65. Western rangers made up the big bulk of the arrivals snd bids snd sales were close to 25c lower on beef steers, cow stuff snd feeders. Some of the more desirable stock cattle sold about as well as last week but on fleshier cattle the tone to the trade was bearish at the full decline. Quotations on cattle: Choice to prime beeves, $10.00010.75; good to choice beeves. $9.1509.90. fair to good beeves, $8.6009.10; common to fair beeves. $7.75 08.80; choice to prime yearlings, $9,600 10.60; good to choice yearlings. $8.90# 9.50; fair to good yearlings. $8.150X36; ccmmon to fair yearlings, $7.2508.10; good to prime fed heifers. $7.75 09.25; fair to good fed heifers. $6 7507.76; good to prime fed cows, $5.5008.00. common to good fed cows. $3.000 5.26; good to choice grass beeves. $7.0008.00; fair to good grass beeves. $6.2507.00; common to fair rrass beeves, $6.250S.>O; Mexican steers, 3.2504.76; good to choice grass heifers, $4.7506.00; fair to good grass heifers, $4.0004.75; good to choice grass cows. $4.4005.26; fair to good grass cows, $3.50 4.85. canners and cutters, $2.0003.40; good to choice feeders, $7.2508.00; fair to good feeders. $6.2507.25; common to fair feed ers. $6.00 08 00; good to choice stockers, 9C.2507.26; fair to good stockers, $5.26# 6.00; common to fair stockers, $4 260 6.00; trashy stockers. $3 0004.00; stock heifers. $3.0005.00; stork cows $2,500 3.60 stock calves, $3.6007.26; veal calves. $2.0009.76; bulls, stags, etc.. $3.2604 16. REEF STEERS. Vo. Av. Pr No Av. Pr 24 ... 1084 $9 00 15.1231 $9 00 9 . 984 9 36 24. 920 9 40 25 . 11 21 9 60 27._ 921 9 65 17.1 41 6 10 35 25 .1176 11 00 STEERS AND HEIFERS 7. 684 8 35 24 . 905 10 00 Western Cattle. SOUTH DAKOTA Vo. • Wt. Pr. 10 calves .208 $8 00 6 calves .721 6 00 NEBRASKA 15 stockers ..785 6 50 29 cows .?976 4 60 21 cows .970 4 80 11 ralyss . 460 6 25 243 feeders . 808 5 60 35 feeders . 814 5 50 24 stockers .737 6 00 Hogs—Receipts, 7,800 head. The hog market was rather slow snd generally 10 016c lower with spots that looked close j to a quarter lower; bulk of sales was, $8.2509.30, and top at $9.40. HOCK). Vo. Av. Sh Pr Vo. Av. Sh. Pr. 25. .411 210 $8 1 5 29 .301 $8 25 57..282 ... 8 30 56..317 70 8 55 52..336 ... M 65 67. .1 57 ... 9 15 64. .238 9 20 35..212 ... 9 25 21..291 9 40 Fheep and Lambs—Receipts. 31 400 hfad Killing clauses were generally 250 50c lower than Saturday. Most of the good lambs sold sround $13.00019.26; feeding lambs are quotable to $12.50, and owes up to $5.76 Quotations on Sheep and T.ambiu—Lambs, good to choice. $13.00013.25; lambs, fair to good, $12.00013.00; feeding lambs, $12.00012 50 wethers. $6.0007.76; clipped lambs, fed. $12 00012 60; yearlings, range. $3. 00® 10.50. fat ewes, $4,260;, 75. FAT LAMBS Vo Wt. Pr I 822 Idaho .73 $13 25 Receipts snd disposition of livestock at the Union stockyards. Omaha. Nsb , for 24 hours, ending August 26: RECEIPTS—CARLOT Cattle Hogs Sheep Horses A Mules C . M A St P R R. 3 Mo Par. Ry. 9 U. P. R R. 106 24 8$ 1C. A V. W, east ... 10 1 1 1C. A N. W . wr-st ... 209 46 a 1 C . S. P. M. A O. 6 6 C., B A Q. east _ 8. C . B. A Q . west . 182 27 22 C., R. f . A P , east .13 3 1 C,, R. I. A P., west . 30 . I C. R. R. 1 1 .; C. Q. W. R. R. 3 . Total receipts . . 57$ 107 lot 41 DISPOSITION—HEAD Cattle Hogs Sheep Armour A Co. 843 1 633 1 800 j Cudahy Pack Co. 1157 1283 4084 Dold Parking Co ... 194 1066 I Morris Packing Co. 641 813 770; Swift A Co . 844 1 51 2 3360 Hoffman Bros. 4 . Mayerowich A Vail .... 18 . Midwest Packing Co. . . 5 .I Omaha Packing Co. 12 . John Roth A Sons .... 19 8. Omaha Packing Co. . 11 . Murphy. J. W. 478 .... Lincoln Packing Co. ... 150 . Nagle Packing Co. 36 . Kennett-Murray . 1436 I David Keeper 94 . | Anderson A Son . 65 . I Benton. VS A Hughes 419 . i Bulla, J H. Ml . cheek W. H. . 13* . Dennis A Franc!* 2*4 . . Ellis A Co III . Harvey. John . 5.', . Inghram. T J. 21 . Kellogg. F O . 4og . Kirkpatrick Bros . 283 . Krebh* A Co . 154 . . Longman Bros. . 64 . Lube»-ger, Henry S . 171 . Mo-Kan <’ AC Co 6 . Neb Cattle C6. . . 45 ... .... Root. J R. A Co. . . . 393 . Rnsenatock Bros. 34 . Sargent A Finnegan . .. 1*9 . Smiley Bros. 223 .... .... Sullivan Bros. 46 . Van Sant. W R A Co. 212 . Wertheimer A Degen .. 1142 . Other buyers . . . 470 $24n Total .9A44 1221 19262 ( lilrsfo l.liMiork Chicago. Aug 25 —Hogs—Receipts, 6* 000 head, market, uneven; steady to 10c nwer than Saturday’* bent time on d* aliahle grade*. weighty butcher* show minimum decline; light lights arid slaugh ter pig*. 10 to 25c off, Mg packer* doing little; top $10 oo. bulk good and hop* 160 to 325-pound average*. $9 t>5 ft 1 o 00 ; better 140 to ISO pound average* $9 00# 9 50 packing *ow*. I* 36ft* 7F, de sirable strong weight killing pigs. $*60 0 8 76: heavyweight* $9 600 10 00. medi um weights, $9 70010 00, light weight*. $■800 10 00. light light* $8.0009 80, parking hog* smooth. $8 45 98.86- park ing hog* rough. $7 100 8 45; slaughter pigs $7 760 8 75. bulk sales, $8.9000 to. top $10.00 Cattle—Receipt*. $0 000 hesd, very little done, few early **le*. yearling*, steady to 2$c lower: early fop. $10 75; some light, and handy weight steer# held shove $11 00. bidding 26c lower on matured steers: these predominating 1n fed steer contingent, killing quality largely medi um to good, moderate sprnkllng choir# long f»d offering both light and weighty; receipt.a Inrlude approximately 7.000 west ern gr***»^a largely In killer fleab; five loads at ring Montanas averaging around 800 pounds fr> feeder dealers $7 on four loads to same oijtltt. $6 7007 26 she stork compsratl vely scare#; slow weak; bulls firm to 15c higher; vealers more numerous, rholre kinds, steady to small killer* about 26c lower to large Interaata. ■elected offering* upward to $14 00; pack er* paying $13 25 downward ^heen—Receipt*. 35,000 head; market dull; few early *ale* fat native lambs, 50 to 75c lower at $ 1 $.000 1 3 2 j . sorting heavier; cull*, $8 60 early, no *,fion on weatern*; best e*rly bide, $19 60, sheep and feeders steady- early sale* feeding limbi, $13 oo Kansas City Livestock. Ken*** City. Mo Aug 25 —(United .Stats* Department «,f Agriculture)—Cat tie Receipt*. 30.000 hesd, calves. 7,000 head market alow, betfar grades of fed steer* snd yearling* scarce. fu!l\ steady bee f ateer* dull, egrlv bulk fed ateer* and yearling*. $8 0001.50; $1126 bid on long yearling* better grade* of gr*«*v *hs *tock to order, buyer* fully steadv plainer kind* slow: bull* strong to ||c higher, bologna■ nrv»afly $3 7604 00. light - "*lera steady, medium weigh! and heavv s|vea weak f op veals 110 O0, hulk to* dlums. $>.000 8 00; heavlc* $4 0006 50 feeders strong, stockers lO0iRr higher ' live* 16025c higher stock cow* and heifers strong to 16c higher; hulk *fock cr* and feeders 14 760 7 36 stock cow* end heifer* $2 6006 28, calves. $8 00 ft 7 23 flog* Receipt* 18.00# heed: shipper market mostly 6010c Inwar than Natur day ■ heat lime; top $9 66. hulk of sale*, to 000$ mi desirable l*o to 270 pound average*. $• 560 9 66. big packet* going ■h»v» bidding 18026c lower, parking sow*. $8 2608 60. stock pig* steady. $7 60 07 76 Sheep Receipt* 11.000 b**d; market, range lamb* fully 60r lower, top Colo rsdoa. $1 3 60; other weatern* $13 16 ns five* 26060c lower, practical top native*. $ 1 3 25. common to good Io>* $9 80013 36 ■ heap *leady to weak. Colorado ewes, $6 8606.00. 8ioni Clh Llteabnrk. •Ilotix Clt v fs Aug ?6 Cattle —Re ceipt*, 5 600 head; market aloe killer* weak. 25c lower. atockar* steady. fat • teer* *nd yearling* $7 0001) 00 bulk of • ala* $8 00010 5n fat row* and hstfsfw $6 1009 50; canners and cutter* $2 000 3 26. grs** cow's snd helfera, $3 2606 76, vesl*. f4oo0joon. bulls. $3 4006 60, feeders. $5 6 00 8 00; atorWer*. $ 4 60 0 7 60, *tnrk yearlings and calve*. $ 4 00 07 00, feeding cow* and heifer*. $2 6005 60 Hugs Receipt* 7.600 head. msrkst 10015c lower top. $9 60; hulk of sales $■ 4009 40. light* $9 0009 60 butcher* $9 26 0 9 60, mixed, $8 6 609 16 packer* $« 760* 60 Hhoep Receipt*, 800 head. marks! weak M. Joaepli llieafnrlt Hf Joseph. Mo, Aug 26 Cattle Re csiplg 6.500 head. market irregular, bulk nf ateera, $7 600,(0 00 top. $1100 cow* snd heifer*. $.7 v tj t» so calve* $6©n*i II on at nr k er* end feeders. $ 4 360 8 00 Huge Receipt* 4000 head. market • teedy to Jftr lower, fop, $9 66. bulk of *a|c 19 26 ft 9 40 Mieap Receipt* .600 head. market ■ I-, • lamb*. $13 71013.71, e ve* $&"> 01.00. I Heavy Buying of Rails Follows Tip About Erie Business Restricted as Com pared With Markets of Last Month—Gain for Industrials. By KICHAKD brll.l.ANfc, Universal Her vice Financial Editor. NCY/ York. Aug. 25.—There wa« a quiet tip circulated In Wall street this after noon to buy the rails. It was good, or at least, had a good basis, for a little after the market closed official an nouncement came that the Erie direc tors had accepted the Van Sweringen proposal for acquisition of control of that properly. Probably because of this there was better buying of the rails than at any time In the lust week. Baltimore A Ohio, Chesapeake A Ohio, St. Paul preferreo. Erie, New York Central. Norfolk A West ern. Reading. Southern, Union Pacific, Pere Marquette, Pittsburgh A West Vir ginia and Home others made fair gains, the advances in the instance of the Erie shares, Norfolk A Western, Pere Aiar quette and Pittsburgh A West Virginia, ranging from 1 to 2% points. Business was much restricted as com pared with the markets of last month, transactions aggregating lews than 700,000 shares, or only about one-half those of some recent days. Colorado Fuel snd Iron again was dumped overboard. Dealings in this is sue were unusually heavy. Reports of tha appointment in New Jersey of a receiver for Wilson A Co. did not tend to increase confidence, even if the financial difficulties of that cor poration have been common knowledge. International Paper was also weak. So far as the struggle between the bulls and bears is concerned the day ended in what chess people might call a stale mate. On a general average industrials gained one-fifth of a point, and rails one-six teenth of a point. Led by Liverpool, cotton opened almost 100 points down, and before all the orders accumulated since Saturdays close had been executed there was a further drop of about 40 points. Then there was a mild recovery. Coffee, to which thera seems to be no top price, again advanced, closing 15 to25 up. Sugar was dull and heavy, closing S to 12 down, the extreme decline being in the September option. All the grains were under pressure early in the session, corn in particular Wheat iie( lined a cent or more, corn more thhn 2 cents, oats more than 1 cent and rye from 1 % 4 1 4 cents. Commission house helling was very heavy. Export de mand was large, but seemingly not suf ficient to offset the heavy volume of selling, which. In case of September wheat, carried the price down from |1 25 % to $1.21%. Bearish news was plentiful. Wheat was moving too fast for the foreign mar ket to absorb Weather was generally favorable Added to this, reports w »-re that conditions in relation to the grow ing corn wete better The bears were too ambitious When some good buying developed, owing to report* of a continuation of the drouth in Argentine and a broadening of Eu ropean purchasing, prices moved up. Then, on bear covering the advance was accelerated. Wheat closed from 7% tr 1 to • up. corn from 1 %c down to %c up, oats %c up and rye from %01V4c up. Lard was from 2c down to 3c up Bartlett Frasier A Co. said the export business in wheat on the break In the morning was estimated by some persons as amounting to 6,000.000 bushels. r~ —\ | New York Quotations | New Tork atook exchange quotation* furnlehed by J. 8. Bach* A Co, 224 Omaha National Bank building Sat. High. Low Close Close Agriculture Cham 13% 12% 13 12% Ajax Rubber .... 10 9% 9% 10% Allied Chemical . . 73% 72% 7* 73V* Allla-Chalmers 4 42 4ft% 42 41% Amer Beet Sugar. .. 41 41% Amer Brake Shoe. 43% Amerlran Can -123% 131%-132% 132% Amer Car A Fdry .. 147 144 Amer H A Leath lft % 11% Amer Hid* A L pf 42 41 % 61% 62 Amer Int Corp. 17% 17 27 % 27% Amer Linated Oil . . 11% 19% Amer Lineeed 19% 19% Amer Loco .10 79% 79% *0 Amer Ship A Com. . 11% 11% Amer Smelt . 74% 71 74% 74% Amer Smelt pfd .... 104% 104 Amber 8t Fdrs . . .. 24% 37% Amer Sugar 44% 44% 44% 45% Amer Sumatra 7% 7% Amer TAT... 117% 126% 127 127 % Amer Tobacco .111% 161 111 152 Amer W W A El .117% 114% 114% 116%! Amer Woolen ... 74 74 % 75% 76 Animnda 29% *4% J*% 39% i Amo Dry Qoodt ..114 116% 117% 117% Amo Oil . 29 39% Atchison .104% 104% 104% 104% At Coast Line . 142% J32% At G A W I. 15% 16% [Atlas Tark. S% At Ref Co . 19 17% «• • "% Austln-NIchols . 23 % Auto Knitter. . . 2 % .121% 130% 122% 122% Bait A Ohio . 62% 61% 62% 42 iBfeth steel . 45% 44 46% 46% I Doerh Magneto. 30% Hkln-Manhet Ry 21% 24% 36 36% Bk'n-Msn Ry pfd. 41 4k Cal Packing. . . **% Cal Petroleum 21% 21% 21% 31% Cal A Arl* Min 51 % '•n Pacific . 160% 16ft lfcft 149% •>nt Leather 14% 14% 14% 16 Cent Leath pfd 4' 47% 47% 4* cerro de Pasco 44% 44 44% 46 Chandler Motors 47% 44% 44% 47 Ches \ Ohio 96% 62% #.'» % >m % < hi Ot Western 4% i> % h % 6 • 111 AS W 4 2 41 6| 41 % C M A St V. . 14% 16% 14% 16% Chi Ot W**t pfd 15% 16% 16% |h^ C M A St P pfd 27% 24% 26% 3*% C R I A P 22 31 % 32 % 33 C St P M A O.. 4 % Chile Copper 33% 21% 33% 5 % • hlno 21 % 2ft % 21 11 % Ciuett Peabody . 69% 69% Cluett P rfd 102% 104 Coca Cola 77% 7*5% 77% 7. Colo r A I 43% 36% 36% 32 Columbian Carbon 41% 44 Columbia Os* 39% 33% 19% i?V4 Coneol Clgare 19 17% 14% 1 * % Cont Can 67% 66% 17 6* Con! Motors 7% 7% 7% 7 % I Cotn Product* 34% 37% 34% 24 c^sden.27% 14 % 3;% 27 crucible 64% 6: % 4 64 j Cuba C Sugar. 11% 14% cubs c p pfd . 43% 6!% *2% »;%! Cube Am Sugar.. 3! 31% 31% 32% cuysmel Fruit .. 6«»% 4«% 49% fcft % I'anlel Boon* .. 15% 12% 14% 16% I avid eon <’hem 44% 47% 4 % 44 Delaware A 11 126 124% 174% 126% Dome Mining ... 14 15% 11% 14-% Dupont De N 131 179% 130% 131 Kastman Kodak.. 111 111 IMe 99% 34 29 % 39 Elec Stor Rattery 67% 57% Famous Players 41% 11% *?% 43% fifth Ave Bus L. 11% 12 Fisk Rubber. . . lft 9% #u 9% Fleiechmatva T... 71 Tft% 71 7 % Freeport Tex . 9% 1% •% * General Asphalt. 44 41 % 49 <.;•« Gen 1 Electric . 174 143 % 173% l«r>% Gen'l Motors 16 14% 14% 1 ;> % Gold Dust. 39% Goodrich 34 11% 12% 23% G. Northern Or# . . . ?9% 19% G Nor By rfd *5% 44% ««, 65% Gulf State* Steel 74% 71% 74 74 Hartmann Trunk . 36% 34% 34% 34 Have* Wheel. 9 6 34% Hudson Motor* f*% 1* ?•% ? < Homeatak* 6f Co 4? Houston OH .. 71 7o% 7? :>.* Hupp Motor 13% 19 U% 13% Illinois Central .110% ill Central, pfd H3 Inspiration ?I% 7«% ?4% 27 In i Fng Com Cp, 16% 14% V. % ?r % Inf Harvester 99% 94 94 94 % I«f M M . 1 ft % 1ft lft J <r lot M M pfd . 4ft% 3*% 39% 4ft % Int Nickel .... 14% 17% it 1 • % Int T A T . lft 79 79% 9ft fnt Paper |6% 41% 60% % Invincible OR . % .. 1;% n Jones Tea lft% H Iordan Motor 31% 30% 11 % 3n% K C Southern 31 3ft% -0% 21 Kelley Springfield i«% 1* 14% jg% Kenneroft 44% 46% 44% 44% Keyafon* Tire ... % 7% 1 #** Rubber 1 I % 1 1 % Lehigh Valley 53% ft 4 % S % Ume Lorn .. 42% 41% 43 42 fjonae Wile* ..... 70 Lou A Naah 99% 99 Mack Truck lftft% 97 94 % jno May Dept Store . 97% 96 9 7 97 % Maxwell Motor A M% 57 67 % 67 Maxwell Motor W15 14% 14% 14% Marland 3! 41 % 33 32 Mexlran Seaboard. 21% 2"% 21 3|% Miami copper . 33% J3 23 % 21% Mid State* oil 1% 1% 1% 1% MR AT . 14% 14% 14% 14% Mo Par . 11% 19% 16% 19 Mo Poe pfd . 63 6 1 % 63 62 % Mont Ward 35% 34% 36% 34% Mother !*>d# . 9% «% «% 6% Nash Motor# _ 1 f4 124% HI ]|| Nat Blecult . 47 44 % 47 47 % Nat Fngmei . 2? % 21 % Nat < ead 151 1 61 169 169 % N T Air Brake 41 N T Central |4l 1t»4% |fti 107% N T C A St Louis.Ill lift 111 110% N T N M A H 25 23% 2 3% 26 North Amerlran 17% "4% 27% 27 Northern Paclflr . 4«% 43% 44% 44% N A W Rv If',% 151% 136 113% Orpheum . I»% ii% 1 tern* Rot He ... 43 % Paclflr 011 47% 44% 47% 47 Packard Mn|or . 11% 11% 11% 11% Pan A met lean 14% 66% ;*% 64 Penn RR 46% 44% 44% 46 [people* Has . . 99% Jftn Per* Marouell* 4t% 64% a 1 % 69 Phil Co 49% 4»% 49% 49 . Phillips Petrol 44 ' ' % 31% ' Pierre Arrow 1t% 11% 11% 11% I Postum ('areal 64% 67% 64 6s% Ptsesed ateei Car. 41 42% 42% 43 Prod A Refiners.. 28% 17% 17% 19 1 Pullman .12*% 127% 127% 11*% Punta Ale Sugar. 63 Pure Oil . 28 23 % Ry Steel Spring .. Ill % 120 120 121 % Ray Consolidated.. 13 12% 13 11% Reading .«l% 6n% 6i% 61 % Replogle . 12 11% 11% 12 Rep Iron A Steel.. 47% 46% 47 47 % Royal Hutch N Y. 43 42 % 42% 43% Stl* ASF. 24% 23% 24 24 % HtH A S W. 41% 40% 41% 42 Schulte Cigar flt.126% Seara - Roebuck ...104% 103% 104% 103% Shell Union Oil... 16% 16% 16% 16% Simmons Co . 25% Ik Sinclair Oil . 17% 17% 17% n % Sloaa- Sheffield ... 73% 73 73% 73% Shelly Oil . 19% 19 19% 19 Southern Pacific.. 96% 94% 94% 95% Southern Railway. 68% 67 «*% 6* Standard Oil Calif 67% 66% 67 67 % Standard Oil N J. 36% 34% 94% 36% Stewart-Warner. . . 61% 61% 52% 62% Strom Car . 66 64% 65 66 Studebaker . 38% 3* 38% 38% Submarine Boat 9% 9% 9% 10 Texas Co . 41% 41% 41% 41% Tex & Pac . 37% 36% 36% 36 Titnken R B ... 36 33% 34% 34 Tobacco Prod .... 64% 64% 64% 66% Tob Prod “A”. 92 91 % Trans OH . 6 4% 6 4% Union Pacific .143% 143% 143% 143% United Fruit .214% 218 U 8 Cast I Pipe.106% 102% 106% 103% U 8 Ind Alcohol. 73% 72 72 Vi 72 % 1J S Rubber . 36% 34 35 35% U S Rub pfd ... 88% 87% 87% 88% U S Steel .109 107% 108% 108 | U S Steel pfd .121 121 % Utah Copper . 79% 78% 78% 79% Vanadium . 26% 24% 24% 25% Vivaudou ... iW h '4 Wabaah . 16 4* 1414 ir, 18 44 Wabaah "A" .... 4844 4014 42 42 84 Wratarn Union ...113 110 113 114 'Vfll Air B . 9314 93 H 9344 91 Wilt Klee . 62 *4 6 2 44 6 2 44 6 2 44 White Eagle Oil. 2 3 44 23J* White Motore ... 681. 6 2 44 6 2 44 0 214 Woo I wort h Co ...11014 1 09 4a 110’* 11044 Willy*.Over . 81* 8 44 8 4* 9 Willye-Over pM . 6 9 6 6 6 8 44 6 9 44 Wlleon . 6 44 4 44 6 44 6 44 Wlleon off! .16 44 11 18 1 644 Worthing Pump .. 2 8 2 7 44 2 8 2 9*4 Wrigley Co . 4144 4144 4 1 44 41 44 Wrlgley Co . 6 8 6 2 44 63 63 44 Yellow C T Co... .... . 47 Saturday', total «*le*. 450,000 Saturday’, total bond*, 86,983.000. Total aalea of atoeka Monday, 876.200 ah area. New York Bonds 1 V_—-/ New York. Aug 25 —Sharp breaks In Wilson and company Issues following the appointment of a receiver for the com pany unsettled the entire bond market today Prices crumbled generally In all groUMS except the first grade rails, most of which close the day with small net Although the Wlleon liens fluctuate'! nervously from th# start of trading, heavy selling did not break out until after the announcement that receivership proceed Ings had been started The decline in the convertible 7%» at on* time extended to about six points but an official state ment from the company that the action would be contested brought about a feeble rslly toward the close Net losses were 2% points for the first *s. 3% point* for the convertible 7%s and four points for the convertible sixes. Pronounced irregularity in the stock market accounted to some extent for the hesitancy of trading In other bonds, not ably the rail Issues St. Paul mortgages again were active, but subject to con flirting movements, the fours of 1925 die playlng m firmer tone, while the refund ing 4%a lost more than a point Heavi ness cropped out In Pennsylvania general 4%*. Chicago Orest Western 4s. Missouri, Pacific 6s and Northern Pacific refunding, sixes Both the French government active is sues declined a point each on reports that the Datfi* plan will encounter serious opposition In Germany. Public offering will be made tomorrow of tl2.500.noo Pa effic Gas and Electric 5% per cent bond* due In 1952 at a price of 98 and accrued interest to yield about 5 65 per cent Pro ceed* will be used for plant Improve ments. I nltrd State* Bondi tSales in 11,000 ) High Low Clowe II Liberty 34* ...100 30 100 26 100 2* I Liberty Id 4* _101.2 1012 1012 32 Liberty lat 44*. 102 6 1 Of 2 102 3 366 Liberty 2d 44* 101 7 101 6 101 6 513 Liberty Id 44w m2* 102 3 102 4 711 Liberty 4th 44* 102 6 102 6 10**3 64 U » Got 4 *4 * ...106 6 105 4 101.4 Foreign. II Anton Jurgen 6e II 4 II 4 II4 23 Argentine 7e 1024 1024 1024 16 Argentine 6e 934 934 924 5 Austrian 7 a.95 4 96 4 96 4 23 Bordeaux *a . *■ 47 *7 4 Copenhagen *4» 964 964 *&4 n Greater Prague 74a 914 904 904 30 Lyons 6a . 14 4 *74 47 4 JO Marseilles la 44 #7 4 *74 4 Rio de Janeiro la 47 #44 944 9*4 *4 Ciecho Rep t« ...1004 994 loo 76 Pept Seine 7a 9«4 94 94 15 Dnm Rep 64a 914 914 914 14 Dom fan 64s 29 .104 101% 1034 52 Dom Can 6s 62 .103 10:4 1024 30 Dtch E Ind 6a 62 96 4 95 4 95 4 44 Dtch E Inda 54a 62 9"% 9« 904 24 Framerlcan 7 4a 954 95 4 95\ ' 4 4 French Rep *a .10154 1054 l‘»5S 104 French Rep 74a IO24 1014 1014 e7 JapariM* #4* *24 *74 924 155 Japanese 4s *#4 #1 *3’* 5 Belgium I w .107H 107 4 107S 14 Belgium 74a ...109 1094 109% 17 Denmark 6s 1004 1004 10*4 1 Ttalr 64a 101 101 1«1 ".0 Netherlands «« 72 994 **4 994 '* Norway 6s 43 . 97% 974 97% 12* Kina Serb* Crota la 194 394 994 13 Sweden 6s . .104% 10*4 IO44 7 Oriental Dev 6a 174 *74 17 4 *0 Parla Ly Med 6a #2 H\ <1% «« Rep Bolivia la 934 924 »3 74 Rep Chile la 41...105 4 1054 1054 5 Rap Chile 7a 974 9744 9:4 «2 Rep Cuba 64s 96 S 9*4 96 4 i Rap El Salvador la m3 102 loi 1 Rep Finland 6s l?4 *74 *74 79 Queensland la .103 10j 703 9 State San Paulo la 101 1004 1004 jo Swiss Con is 117 111 4 116 4 *? Swiss Gov 64s 4« 9««i 97 4 9» 4 26 K G B A T 64s 17 106 1044 m«\ 17 r g Brasil la 9«4 96 4 964 M r * Brat-CREI 7a fcj #24 *3 Dome* tie. 34 Am Ag Chem T4e 944 ** 94 1 Am ^melting 6s 1044 1044 1044 33 Am Smelting Is 944 93 93 5 Am Sugar 6s .1004 70*4 Jft0 4 m* Am TAT 14s W14 1004 if14 23 Am TAT la ... IO14 1014 1014 6 Am TAT 4s 974 97 9-4 ’ 7 Ain W W A F 6e 11>4 91 4 91 4 30 Ana Cop 7a *36 1004 10*14 j«o \ 37 Ana Cop 6s ‘61 9« 97 4 9:4 44 Armour Co Da! 64a 924 *14 92 4 Associated 011 6s 1004 1004 1/104 22 ATASF gen 4s 81 % **4 *1 ATASF adj 4s IIS 114 ns 10 At Ct T.ins lat 4a 1*4 «i’, <14 * R A O *e . 102S loj m2 1.1 R A O rv 44a *«S »*S ''S '0 R a D VaM la ■ 6 S MS M\ B*ll Tel pa 1st Is me *94 **4 7* Beth St 6a 9« 4 96 944 3 Be»h Steel 6<,a 1*4 *14 9* 1 *• Brier Mill St 7*4* **\ 94’, *<4 172 Bkvn-Man Tr *s 79 714 7«* 14 ralff Pat 64a 1004 1004 loft 6 ran No 64e 111% 11 7 4 11 S ► *n r»n Tao 4s. .... . 904 *04 104 4 3C c A O 6s 104 S 104S 1014 II t'ant nfGa6 4s 9«4 *14 94 4 1« C#ntral elaith 6a 9*4 99% .eat, * rant Pae gtd 4a l?4 974 1:4 r A o CV 6s 99 991, 994 16 rhea A o rv 44* 954 954 954 23 «*hl A Alton #4« 1424 1424 14:4 7 C R A Q rfg 6a A IO04 jo<#4 1004 I I Chic A Fast 111 6a 714 71 Tt 4 1 Ebb Gt West 4a 64 4 4 61% 59 C M A St P cv 44s 624 61 4 6J 3 C M A St P rfg 4 4« 64% 64 64 11 r A N W rfg 6a. 97 4 97 % 9:4 1 rhf Eye 6a 714 77 4 76 4 II C R 1 A P gen 4s 6.* 4 *7 4 *74 • « Chi R I A P rfg 4s 90S 904 404 9 c Tar M A S r 6s 7*4 7* '*4 II C A West Ind 4a 76% 76 I64 11 Chile Copper 6a 106 4 10* 106’, 2 C. « a I* rfg «a A ’**3% Ml M3 4 11 Colo A S rfg 4 4a 96 9, *44 3 Col (5,. A E 6a at 1004 1004 1*04 1 t Com Pow 6s 914 964 944 it rons c of Md 6s 69 174 «■ I Cone Pow 6s *94 194 *94 ' Cu C g deh «s atp 100 *94 ion 6 Cuban Am Sug la 10*4 10*4 10*4 1 Den A R G rfg 6a 43 4 43 4 43 4 ! 0 Dan A R G con 4a 77% 77 4 77 4 7 Dupont 74a 1094 m« 1,11 12 Duquasna l.f 6s .1664 1*4% 104 4 fast Cuba Sug ?4s 1044 10*4 1*6% 4” Empire GAF 7<4> . 96 \ 94 4 96 4 '3 Er e pr Hen 4* 71 ?6 70 ’ Fr;e gen Han 4s 6.74 624 *3 4 :■ flak Rubber «e 103U 106 mi Gen FI deb 6s . IO44 1044 ln4! Goodrich *4* 9*4 9* 99 « Goodyear Is ’ll .106% in:. 4 14»k% w Goodvear la 41 11*4 1114 11*4 1' Grand Trunk 7s 115 4 1164 1114 II Grand Trunk 6a 10*4 106 \ 196% 71 Gt Northern 7a A 10*4 1*9 1094 6 Gt North 64a R 103’% 1*3 4 1014 4 Marshev Choc 6s .1084 103 103 33 H A M rfg 6* 97 4 96% x6 \ 4 If A 61 s d 1 6s 67 664 6«» 20 Mumble nil 64a 100 9*4 944 7 111 Bell Tel 6a 4*4 «• 4 *kS 47 III Cent r Stl. la. 954 96 9" 6 111 St deb 44s 944 944 94L 1 Indians Steal 6s mi 4 mi % mi 4 79 Int It T 7s II 17 Nl 2* Int R T rfg 6a 66% 66 66 92 I A G N ad 1 6a 664 66 664 2 2 I A G N 1st *s 9*4 *>'i% 99 4 17 Int M M ai 6* 9 9 99 4 9 9 16 Inf I p cv 6a A 1*4 ”.4 *64 29 K C Ft H A M 4s 10 |0 in 3 K r P A 1. la 41’i 47 4 97 4 10 K C Terminal 4s 13 4 *14 14 Kan Gas 9 Elec 6s 94’- *9 4 99% * Kelly* Tire la. 474 *:s 0:4 7 l.ac G of st I. K 4a *44 *4 *4 3 l 1 g get t A Mvete 6s *94 99 9X * I oula Gas A E 6a 904 *04 9*4 3 Magma Copper 7a 116% 118% 116% 31 Man Rv con 4s 604 *04 **4 6 Market St Rv 7a »« *• *9 1 Mid'ute Steel cv 6s 114 114 mu 11 M St P A S8M 64s *6 9 ft % so 1 M KAT pr In 6s c 1004 100% H104 6 MKAT n nr In 6a A 144 *44 944 nil M K A T n ad t 6s A 68% 6| 67 % II Mo Pacific let 6a 9« 974 9:4 f-6 Mo Pacific gen 4s *04 60 4 *04 II Mont I ’ow ft- A .914 474 97% , N 1 Te| A T I si 6s mt*% 100% I00\ 2 N o T A M Inc 6s »o% 904 404 3* N Y ren deb 6s 1*7 4 107 4 107% 61 N Y Can rfg A tm Rs 99 *1% 414 6 N T c A St 1. os A 102% 10J% 103 4 11 N Y Ed rfg 6 %s 1174 1114 113 % 146 NTN'HAM trance *» Jft\ 494 944 II NTNMAH cv «« f9 7* 76% 7 » *5 N Y It x a adj 9s 4494 II N Y 1 el laf 6a 41.. IOC % IK 10ft 45 N Y Tal fan 4%*.. 95% »6% *6 46 N Y W A B 4%s . . 53% 62 52 12 Norfolk A W cv 6s 123% 122% 123% 16 N Am Edison sf 6s 96% 96 96% 3 Nor Pac ref 6s R 106% 105% 106% 2 Nor Pac new 5a D. . 96 96 96 1 Nor Pac pr lien 4» 84% 84% 84% 20 Nor States 1st 6sA 93% 9S 92 61 N W Bel! Tel 7s... 108% 108% 108% 16 Ore-W K R A N 4s 82% 82% »2% 9 Otis steel 7%8_ 89% 69 «9% 5 Pac Gas A Elec 5s. 93% 93% 93% 13 Pac T A T 5s 1 962. 92 91 % 91% 2 Penn R R 6%s ..!«»% 109% 109% 1 Penna R R gen 6a .101 101 101 3 Penna R R gen 4%s 92% 92% 92% 10 Pere Marq rfg 5s.. 96 % 96% 96% 6 Phlla Co rfg 6s .103 102 % 102% 10 Phlla Co 5%g . 94% 94% 94% 6 Phil A ReadCAI 5s 97% 97% 97% 71 Pierce Arrow hs. . . 85% 84% 85 2 Public Service 6s .104% 104% 104% 18 Punta Aleg Sug 7s.109% 109 109 5 Reading gen 4%a.. 92% 92 92% 1 Remington . ..92 92 92 2 Rep I A St 5 % a . 9! % °1% »1% 3 Rio Grande 4n ... 69% 49 69 7 R I A A L 4 % a. . 80% «0% 80% 6 St L I MAS rf 4a 91% *1% 91% 15 St L IMAS 4a R-O 83% 82% 82% 33 St I,AS r p 1 4a A. 69% 69% 69% 19 St LAS F ad 6a.. 79% 79% 79% 48 St LAS F Inc 6a.. 72% 72 72% 5 St I. S W con 4s 85% 85% 85% 9 St Paul Un Dap 5s.100 100 100 22 Seaboard A I, cn 6B 80% 80 80% 6 Seaboard A L ad 5a 62 61 % 62 4 4 Seaboard A L rf 4s 56% 55% 56 » Sinclair Con col 7s 92 92 % 92% 12 Sinclair Con «%a . 86% 86% 86% 6 Sinclair Pipe 5s 84% 84 84 27 South Pac cv 4a... 97% 97 97% 33 South Phc rf 4a... 88 87% 87% 20 South Ry gn «%■ .106% 106% 106% 11 South Ry gen 6s. .102% 102% 102% 7 South Ry con 5s .100% 100% 100% 24 South Ry gen 4s. 74% 74 74% 13S W Bell Tel rf 6s 96% 96 96 3 Steel Tube 7s .105% 105% 105% 45 Tenn F.ler rf 6«... 97% 97% 97% 114 Third Ave ad 6s... 50 48 % 48% 12 Third Ave rf 4s... 56% 55 65% 9 Un EUAP rf 5a. 98% 98% 9* % 31 Un Pac 1st 4s. 91 90% 91 20 Un Pac cv 4s 99% 99% 99% 6 l* S Rubber 7%a .103% 103% 103% 11 U S Rubber 5a .. 84% 84% 84% 45 U S Steel sf 5a 1047* 104 % 104% 2 Utah PAT, 5a _ 91% 91% 91% 2 Va-Car f’hm 7%a. *3 33 33 42 Va-Car Chm 7a 63% 62% 62% 9 Va Ry 6s 96% 95% 96 1 Wabash 1st 6s 100% 100% 100% 1 Warner Sug Ref 7«.102 102 102 75 West Elec 5s . 98% 97% 98% 8 West Md 1st 4s ... 64% 64% 64% T3 Weat Pac 5s _ 91 91 91 15 Westing El 7a . 108% 10 8% 108% 13 Wlck-Spen St 7s... 72 69 69 2 Wlllys-Over 1st 6%s 98 98 98 ! 68 Wilson sf 7 % s . ... 53 48 % 48% ! 100 Wilson 1st 6s . . . . 8» 86% «7% I 86 Wilson cv 6s . 60 44 46 14 Young SAT 6s 96 95% 95% ' Total sales of bonds, Monday, 110, j 302,000. N. Y. Curb Bonds v----/ New York. Aug. 25.—Following la the official Hat of transactions on the New York curb exchange, giving ail bond* traded in; Domestic Bonds. •**«!**■ High Low Clost 16 Allied Packer 6s .. *.'j % 6 9% *. Allied Packer ** 83% % 8:%, 63 Am Ha* A El 6s 96% 95% 95% - Am Roll Mis 6s .100% U>0% 100% 3 Anaconda Cpr 6s .103% 103% 103 % 9 Anglo Am Oil 7%s 102% 102% 12% 36 Asad Sirn Hdw 6%s 8 9 *7% 2 Heaver Hoard 8s 79 79 79 2 Childs Co 6s .103% 103% 103% 7 Cities Serv 7s C . 97% 97% 97% 12 Cities Serv 7s D .. 96 95 % 96 i 1 f'on Gas Balt 6%s 101% 102% 101% < Con Gas Balt 6» 104% 104% 104% 12 Con Gas Halt 6%s 108% ir.8% 108% 7 Con Textile «s 80 79 % 79% 9 Con Pa A Bag 6 %s 9 4 93% 9 4 6 Detroit City Gas *s lor, 102% 101 4 I>etrolt Kdiscn 6s 108% 106% 108% 4 Fisher By 6s 1925..100% 100% 100% 3 Fisher By 6s 1 927.. 102 % 102% 102% 15 Fisher By Cs 192*..in?% 1*2% 102% 2 Galr, Robert 7s 99% 99% 99% 1 Genersl Asphalt 8s U5 105 1«5 12 Genera! Pet 6s . .10] 100% 100% 10 Grand Trunk 6%a 10»% 107% m% 17 Gulf Oil 5s . 9‘ 98 9* 4 Intern! Match 6%a 97% 97% 97% 1 Kennecott Copr 7» 106% 106% 106% 10 Tyehlgh Pwr Sec 6s 1Q0% 100% ior.% 6 Libby McN A L 7s 100% ion 100% * Morns A Co 7%a 98% 98% 98% 5 Natl I„ea»her 1 25 New Or Pub Ser 6s 87% *6% 86% 6 Nor Sta Pow 6%» 96% 96% 96% 17 Nor St Pw cvt 6%s 100% 1<0% 100% 17 Ohio Pow 6s B **% 88 56 1 Penn Pow A I. 6s . 92 % 92% 92% :> P S Cor N J 7a . 108% 108% 1 »% 1 Pure oil 6%s 95% 95% 95% 2 SIoss Sheffield •>* lo;% 101% D'1% 13 St Oil N Y 7s '29 106 10« 10« 3 Sf Oil N Y 7s 30. 106% 106 106% 2 Sun 011 6s .101 % 101 % 101 L 4 Swift A Co 6r *4 % 94% 94% 6 T'n K LA P 5%a . t*% 98 98 5 U Rys Hav 7%s . 107 106% 1«7 12 Vacuum 011 7* .107 106% 106% 8 Virginia Rv 6a.. . 95 95 96 8 Webster Mills 6 % * 1°2% 103% 103% Foreign Bonds. 20 Russian 6%s 18% 1* 1* 36 Rus «%s rtfs N C 1* 1* 1* 20 Russian 5%s 17 17 17 5 Solvay A Co «a . . . . 1*1 % l«i % lol % 4 Swiss 6%• 102 101% 102 13 Fwls« 5a .100% !0Q% 100% New ^ ork General. New York. Aug 2* —Flour—Unsettled spring patents *7.16ft7 6S soft winter straight- |6 lift* 45; hard winter straights $* 4nf? * 90 Rve Flour Steady fair t« good 15 35 1 ft • 65 choke to fancy, U.ffftfOO fommesl—Unsettled fire whit* and ye"ow granulated. 13 45ft3 55 Steady N’c weste-n. 9Re. f ©. b New York, and 93c r 1. f esport Barley Steady malting 91 02ft 104 c. f New York Wheat—1-Spot, steadv. No 1 dark north ern spring, r I f N'ew York, lake and raU 91 57 N’c 2 bard winter f o b . | lake and rail. 91 39 No l Manitoba, do. , 91 52% Ne ; mixed durum do 91 J* Corn—Spot easy No J yellow c * * | track. New York, lake and rail, 91 10% No 2 mixed do fl 2* % 0*1* Spot quiet. No ? white ilc: 6ee«! steady city bran 10n.pound sacks. 933 5«; western bran do. 133 21 Hav—Steady old N'n 1 isooefttioe. No 2 927 00 \p j $12 ftfift 23 °o. ship ping. 91 9 06 ff 20 00 Hope—Steadv state 1921 2«ft4?c; 1922. I«ft2br. Pacific coast. 1929 24ft:9c. if!2, 21 ft 2 4c Pork Steady, m^ee 329.'flft79 7l, fam ily |30 Lard Steady, mlddlyweat. 913 toft]] to | Tallow — Barel> e*eadV. spe(-tal loose. «%- extra * %r Rica—Steady fancy head 7% ft 9c. Fwul *•. Voui* livestock Fas' St T.ouls. Auk 25 —Tattle—Rf ealpta. l*.60rt head native beef ■».»rn, 25c lower f»w sales fat ataara. 1*250 1* 50, western *te#»-«t 25c lower at |5 25 07 5* light yearlings and hejfera and cinnert. steady mm* vearllngs. $7 500 * ** cannera. S1 7502 25 beef -~owa *^d hulls. barely s'eady. cows $17504 50. Hulls. II 5*04 0*. top veal era. $11 5*. bulk 111. few $1*50 Mog* Receipt. 10*66 head; hog mar ket strong to l*c higher, top $10 closed with advance lost late trade dull and week on heavy butchers and pigs, bulk 17* pounds and up 1*750**5 good 140 to 1«* pound kinds $4 750* 75. 16* to Impound rigs $•600*75, packer sows $« *60 I 25 Sheep and I .am be- Receipts 1,*** head; fat lambs mostly 5 *r lower top fit. bulk sales 913 75011 *0. cull*. un changed largely $7. few ateadv to 5*r lower, hulk light killing ewes |5 60fr 5 5*. heavy kinds. $3 5604 06. good breeding ewes. $ft. >cw York Dry Goods New York Aug 25. •—Totton roods buying wss held hark today hv th* »ha*-p though fully eKpected decline »n cotton, following tha gnvernmen report giving promise of a *uh*tantla! rigid Yams also were unsettled Merchants look for a resumption of larger buy ng in fhe near future Woe! goods were bought for spot delivery a 1 ttla mote freely especially flannel* and velours Spring trade t. wt 111 of a conservative character Hurlapa were quiet for the dar Silk goods continued in very f*ir demand 'rene# and Bengalloes shower gains Improvement in cloak a; d tut remand for the fall waa reported New York 6>i|ar New- York Aug 35 — Raw sugar con tjnu.d un harced today at 5 53c for mihan duty paid Hale, of 5***6 bats Cuban from store and 7.666 bags for Sep tern her shipment to local reflnsr# we-* made at f> 5*c. T ate last week Cuban was *n|d to an OUtport* tefmar at I 65< Fear* of heavy notices tomorrow lead to active liquidation In raw augar future, with closing prices 3 to 16 points ne; lower Heptember showing tha magtmum loss September cloeed .Vile, December. Hti . January. I.He. March. 131c. Refined sugar waa firmer and un changed to 5 polnta higher , fine granu lated now ranging from 4 45c to 7c. Refined future# were nominal bow York Coffee Futures. New York. Aug 25 — Toffee future., wer* higher today on continued covering and trade buying stimulated bv retter ated complaints that <Vou|ht was dam aging crop prospects In it! salt and re porta of firm markets The opening here was 5 to 24 points higher Decemhe* advanced to 15 36c and March 14 M The market cloeed at net advance* of \ to 35 polnta Hales ware estimated a1 33 666 bags Closing quotations Heptem her. 15 16c; October 15 46c; Decembei 15c March. 14*5c. Mav. 14.41. Jutv ! 1 4 35c Spot coffea f.rm; Rio 7a. 14 S* Ran to. 4s. IlV*lJ'e<* Turpentine and Rosin Savannah. Ha Aug 15—Turpentine Firm, *4‘.c. sales 566 harrsls receipts 511 barrets shipments 4*63 barrel, stock. 11 4.5 batrela Rosin Firm «atea 1 757 reeks re oeipta fi* casks shipments, l.lfi ca%V« stock. 165 57* casks Quote It $4 *' D $4 56. F F O II 1. I« 47 U K M $4 •* . N 15 15; Wti $4 I \\ \\ V 54 40 Boston Bool Boston. Am# 1 he wool make opened today on a very flim baa s Trice, are continuing 'o show an upward i*t dency Domeettc fleece wools have • eached s ne »r high point Deletnea and the better .-las. have sold for 5Tc pet pound in the gteaee r---> Omaha Produce -j Omaha, Aug 16. - BUTTER Creamery—Local jobbing price* to re tailer*. Extras. 36c; extras In 60-lb. tlbs, 38c; standards. 38c, firsts. 37c. Dairy—Buyers sre paying 10c for best table butter in rolls or tubs; 27©24c t°r packing stock. For best sweat, unsalt ed butter. 31c. BUTTER FAT. For No. 1 cream Omaha buyers are paying 26c per lb. at country stations, lie dsllverod at Omuht FRESH MILK. 12 00 per cwt for fresh milk tasting 3 6 delivered on dairy platform. Omaha. EOOft. For eggs delivered Omaha, on loss-off basis. |8.40® 8.76 per case. For No. 1 fresh eggs, graded basis. 80©32c par dos en; seconds, 24® 26c . cracks. 21 ©22c. Prices above are for eggs received In new or No. 1 white wood cases, a deduc tion of 2oc will be made for second-hand cases. No 1 eggs must be good average Hire. 44 lbs. net No. 2 eggs, seconds, consist of small slightly dirty, stained or washed eggs. Irregular shaped, shrunken or weakened eggs. In some quarters a fair premium is being paid for selected eggs, which must not be more than 48 nours old, uniform in size and color (meaning all solid colors— all chalky white or all brown, and of the name shade). The shell must be clean and sound and the eggs weigh 26 ounces per dozen or over Producers must necessari ly deliver their own eggs to benefit by this latter classification. Jobbing prices to retailers: U. 8 spe cials, 34®35c; U. 8 extras commonly known as selects. 31© 32c; No. 1 small. 27® 28c checks. 24® 26c. POULTRY. Prices quotablf lor No 1 stock alive: Broilers 14 Ui lbs . 26® 30c. 3© 2 4 lbs.r 26©'27c, Leghorn broilers 20©23- . springs. 24 lbs and over. 28®30c; hens over 4 lbs 18 © L'Oc; hens undtr 4 lbs., lD©17c: leghorn hens. 12© 14c; roosters. 10© 12c; ducks, f.f.f young 12c; old ducks, f.f.f., 10® 12c; g*ese. f.f.f., 10©12c; pigeons. 91.00 per dozen Under grade poultry paid for at market value. Sick or crippled poultry not want ed and will not be paid for. Jobbing prices of dressed poultry (to retailers): Springs soft. 36® 38c; broilers, 35©38c: hens 21©26c. roosters. 18©19c: ducks 22©25c geese. 15®20c. FRESH FISH. Jobbing prices quotable as follows: Fancy white fish. 24c; lake trout. 10c; halibut, 25c; northern bullheads, large, 20®22c; catfish. 28©32c; filet of haddock. 27c, black rod sabla fish, l*c; red snap per, 27c; flounders. 20c, crapples 26c; black baas. 22c; Spanish mackerel, 14 to 2 lbs., 26c. yellow pike, 22c; striped bans. 22c- white perch, 14c; pickerel. ISe; Chinook salmon, 30c; silver salmon 22c, frozen fish. 2©4c less than prices above: ling cod 12c. CHEESE American cheese fancy grade, Jobbing price quotable at follows: Single dalsiea, 23c; double daisies. 23c; square prints, -4n• young America, 24c; longhorns, 234c ; brick. 23c; limburger, 1-lb style. 13 25 per dozen; Swiss, domestic. 22c; Imported Roquefort 62c; New York whits, 32c. BEEF CUTS Prices unchanged. Swift * Co. sales of fresh beef in Omaha w**ek ending August 23 averaged 11 86c per lb. Wholesale price quotable' No. 1 ribs, 25c; No. 2, 23c; No. 3. 14c; No 1 loins, 35c; No. 2 32-'; No. 3 18c; No. 1, rounds. 20c: No. 2. 194c; No. 3. 124c: No 1 chucks. IS4c; No. 2, 15c- No 3 0 4c; No. 1. plates 5 4o No 2. 4c; No. 2. 6 4c FRUITS. Jobbing prices. Grapes—Concords steady; basket, 40r; Tokay a. crate. S3 00. mslagan. crate, Apples—Early Harvest, per bushel bas ket. $1.76; CsJifornla Oravenateins box, 12 25 © 3 50, Wealthy, banket, $! 60 Pears—Western Bartlett, per box. S4 00; Colorado. do. bushel basket, S8?0; Pear-hea—Klberta. bushel basket. 12 76 © 3.00. Plums—California. par crate. 32.26© 3 00. Italian prunes, 15-lb case. 1130 Banana a—Per lb 74c. Umoni—Faiifo/nls, extra fancy. per box. IT 00. fancy, per box. 14 00; choice, per box, 35.60; limes. 100 count, carton 12 00. Grapefruit—Florida, extra fancy. |4.50© ® 5 60. Oranges—Valencias, extra fancy, per box. $4 00 © 5.00 VErfix/fABLES. Jobbing prices. Cantaloupe—Oate standards or Jumbo. 14 Of., ponies 13 76; flats. |1 Cauliflower—Per crate. 12.60. ‘ ucumbers—Home grown fancy. 60c; per market baaket; hothouse. basket. 11 00. Honey Dew Melons—# to II in crate, 12.50. Celery—Oregon dos. stalks. lt.2S©l.?6; Michigan, doz . 76c. Pepper a—Green, market banket. *1 50. Parsle>—Per dozen bunches, ^©"ic Radishes—30c per dosen bunchea. Beans—Greea or wax. market basket. 1125. ^Potatoes-— Home grown. In sacks, 14c Sweet Com—20 ©2*e p*r dosen. Watermelons—Crated. 4 melons I© 2 4c per lb. Tomatoes—Climax baakst, about 16 lbs 11.00 Lettuce—Head per crate, M 00; per dozen 11.76; leaf p«r dosen. 40c. Cabbage—-4c per lb.; crate#. 2c per lb. Root#—Beet*, carrots and turnips, mar ker basket. 69c On-.ona—Spanish crate. 6% lbs, 12.59; Washington, yellow, in sacks. 4c rer ib.. heme grown dozen bunches. 21c. Swe#’ Potatoes—Southern 69-lb. ham per, |3 25. FLOUR Price* quotable round lots Hess than carload lots. f. 0 b Omaha follow I First patent, in 01-lb bags 16.ft©? 09 j per bb! : fancy clear? in 4»-’b bags. |6 76 ©5 45 per bb! ; whit# or ysllew corntr.eal. S3 70 per 190 pounds FE5D. Markat quotable per ten. carload lots, f. n b C-rr.aha Mill Feed#—Bran around 824 00; brown shorts. 626 69© 27 00 gray shorts, 110 90; j Four middlings 129 09. redder 837 69® 34 00 llomlny Feed—White or yellow 840 90 Digester Feeding Tankage—60 per cent protein 869 00 I.tr«ee.i Meal—84 per cent protein fu ture delivery. 869 *0 Alfalfa Me*;—Choice September and October. 870 60. No. 1 September and Oc tober. 82*60 No. 2, August and Septem ber. 822 50. Egg Shells—Dried and ground, 100-lb. bass ton lots, 925.99 per ton. Buttermlk--Condensed, for feeding ♦« bbl. lota. 3 41c per lb.; flake buttermilk. 599 to 1 509 lbs 0c !h. Cottonseed Meal—48 per cent protein. 861.00. HAY Nominal quotations, csriosd lot# Upland Frame—No 1. 812 50018.59. No. 2 8l9 00©i:u»0: Na I 8:?0©(99 Midland Prairie—No. 1, 811 000 17 00. No. 2 89.00© 10 00; No. S. 94 60©8 60 Lowland Prairie—No. 1. 14 0000 00; Ns :. 96.00©9 00 Packing Hay—96 50©" 50. Sttaw—Oats. 85 00 ©0.90; wheat, 87 00© ICO AIfalfa—Choir# old 818 00019 (0 new 81 7 00© 1 * 90; No 1. old 815 00 * 17 CO: new 815.09©1490; standard old. 813 90# 14 00; new fl2O9©14.09: Vo 7 old. 8110 ©17 *9 rew. 919.00© 12 09; No. *. old 89.09*11.«0. new 8* 00019 00 HIDES, WOOL TALLOW Prices are quotable as follow * delivered Omaha, dealer's weights and selections Hides—Reasonable No l 54c, No 2. 74c green 74044r. bulla 74# brand ed 7 4c due hides 64c; calf. 110114c. k1p. 110 0 4c glue skins. 4c; dry hides, lie. dry salted. 0c: dry glue. 44c dea cone. 81 09 each, horse hides 84 90*5 0' ponies and glue# 81 69 each colts 26c each hog skins 15c each Wool — Pelts 11 75©2 00 each depending on site and length of wool lambs 69c© } II 26 each depending on *:ge end length r-f wool, shearling* 70039c each clips no value wool. 37© 40c Tallow and Ore#** No 1 tallow 7c H tallow «4«*. No J tallow. *c A grease I 7c. B g*-*as*. 44c yellow grease fc, hrown grease 6c pork cracklings 840 00 j 1 ton b*»f crackling* 830 00 per ton beeswax. 820 90 per ten rtilrags Potato*#. Fh'cago Aug 25 —Potato##—Trading moderate market shout steady; receipti* 14? care, total United State* shipment* Saturday 327 cats Rundav 46 car* Kansas sacked Irish cobblers 81 15©’. It' few 81 35 Missouri sacked Ir’ah cobbler* • ! 90*1 75 Kentucky sacked !r<#h cob , Me** |1 45 ftl New Jereev sacked rob ! • 01 v* hulk tl Minn** • . DONT TRY TO RAISE your family without it. For stomach aches and pains; sudden cramps, severe intestinal colic and indiscretions of eating and drinking, changes in watai, diet ot climate, take CHAMBERLAIN'S COLIC and DIARRHOEA REMEDY Never fail to hare it on hand. Updike Grain Corporation (Print* Win Dtpwtwt) fOn<*t« B**r4 •( TrW* MFMHFW5 x| and i AH Othar 1 fartini Emrhanraa Order* for grain for future delivery in the prin cipal markets given careful and prompt attention. OMAHA OFFICE. LINCOLN OFFICEi ^ Phone AT lantic dSIS 724-2S Terminal Building MR-2F Omaha Grain Phone B-12SS Exchange Long Distance ItO bulk early Ohio*. 81 At01.lt: sacked. II lft tyl 2A; few. II 25. Nebraska early Chios. II 2001.16: few. 1140. Com and Wheal Region Bulletin For the 48 hours ending st 8 a m Monday. High Low Rain. Ashland, clear .*1 62 0.9§ Auburn, clear ......92 69 11“ Broken Bow, clear 92 52 0.00 Columbus, clear ........ 93 61 0.00 Culbertson Hear .97 56 0 0“ Fairbury, clear .9H 6“ " 0“ Fairmont, clear ........-95 6“ 0-0'' Crand Island, clear 92 62 0.0“ Hartlnglon, clear .99 57 m 00 Hastings, clear .94 62 0.00 Holdrege, clear .....97 60 0.0“ Lincoln, clear .9S 64 0.01 j North Loup. Hear .94 56 0.0' North Platt*. Hear . 94 56 0.0 Oakdale, clear .89 68 0.0_ Omaha, clear .86 *3 0.0“ O’Neill, pt. cloudy . 9’» 60 0.fl Red Cloud Hear .99 61 0.0“ Tekamah, Hear .*7 60 0 fl Valentine, clear .96 61 O.C f hicugo fttock*. Furnished t<> J R BhHi* A Co. 22< Omaha National Bank building Phon J A. 5127-88-89 Bid Ask#*! Armour A On T!I pfd . H 4 *1' Armour <'o Del pfd . 904 90*. Albert Plrk .114 11 k Alrmi'e ... Sf4 Carbide . 6 “ 4 61 Edison Com .131 1314 H'onUneta! Motors . 7 >4 7 4 I Hudahv . 644 f 5 Daniel Boone . 14*4 15 , F»lamond Match .117 117 4 ! Deere pfd . 73 *« T6 4 Eddy Paper . . 15 P1d Libby . rn, »4 National T.eather . 34 3 \ Quaker Oats .285 ?9' Rio Motora . 164 1*4 Swift A Co .I 06 10*’t Swift Inti . 4 2 3 4 Thompson . 4' \ 4* Wahl . 25 25 ** Wrlgley . 41 41 l* Yellow Mfg Cr» . 52 53 4 Yellow Cab 46% 47 4 New York Prod nee. New York. Aug 25—Butter—Market easy: rerelpt* 7.674 pkgs creamery, higher than extra '*«r394r‘ creamer' extras <92 score), 3*4r \ creamery, firsts 468 to 91 score> 360?Rr- racking sto'k. current make No 2, 270 274c Eggs—Market firm rec* p»s 7 057 eases; fresh gathered extra firsts. ’« 040c; firsts. 35 4? 37r; seconds and poorer 29 0 24c; nearby hennery white, Hoselv selected extras 54'3 53*' nearby and nearby west ern hennery whites firsts to average ex tras 40 0 53; nearby hennery browna ex tras. 44 ft 4*o Pacific coast whites extras, 494 05ft4r'. flrsta to extra first# 40*1 49e refrigerator extra firsts, 344 035c, flrs*s. 324*3 *4^ Cheese—Market unsettled: receipt# 15 - 941 pounds state whole milk flats, fresh fancy to fancy apecials 20 021c. average run, 19c; other unquoted. New York Metals. New York, Aug 25 —Copper—Fas >. electrolytic spot and nearby. 134 013 S futures 134 0 124c Tin—Easy spot and futures. 52 ti«r Iren—Steady: No 1 northern 120 50 47 21.50c; No 2 northern, 20.000 20 50c. No 2 southern. 18.00018 60c T.ead—Steady; spot, t.0008.3?e. Zinc—Pteady; East Rt. Louis spot. * 22 • 6 25c : futures g 25c. Antimony—Spot. 10 25c. New York Cotton Quotations. New York Cotton exchange quotations furnished by J P Bache a Co, 224 Omaha National Bank building, phones Jackson 5187, 5!6f, 5159. Art. Open High. < Lew, i Cioae. i Sat. Oct. 25 40 26 50 24 06 24 42 26 *2 Pec. 25 1“ 24 30 23 75 24 02 25.15 Jan. 24 72 24 22 23 74 24 00' 26 !« Mar. 1 25 60 24 50 24 08 24 35 15 |0 May 24 50 24 65 ’ 24 73 24 53 > If 6“ New York Rograr Quotations. Furnished by J 5 Bache a Co 224 Omaha National Bank building Jackson 513?-86-19,__ Art , Open High. I Low | Cl os a. i Sat. Sep. 36* I 73 2 *3 3 73 3 73 Dec 3 73 3 74 ! «« 9 *1 1.78 Mar 3 31 3 32 2 30 3 31 I 3 34 Kansas City Prod ore. Kansas City, Aug 25 —Egg#—1 cent higher, firsts, 31c; selected. 36c. Butter—Creamery, ir higher, 3! 0 40c. packing, unchanged 244c Poultry—Hens. 4c lower, 19c; other poultry, unchanged, rooster*, lie; broil ers 2*>; spring*. 25c Potatoes—Unchanged. Kaw valley cob blers. |1 0001.10. New York Cotton Futures. New York, Aug 26—Cotton future. ■ opened e*sy; October. 24 60c Dec* mb* 24.160 24 36c; January. 24 22024 05c: March. 24 50. May. 24.60 034 40c. New York. Aug 25 —Cotton futures closed steady Octobsr. 24 42024 44- De cember. 24 020 24 04c; January. 24.094s 24 02c. March. 24 31 024 3«c; May. 24 5-r Dnloth Flax. Duluth. Minn Auf 2b—Cloee: Flax— September, 12 If: October. 12 2« Nevem r, II2C. Decomh*»r, 12 134 : May. I: - Pimples BLOOD Imparities are pumped by the heart into the {ace. That ii what cause* that grainy appearance, that muddiness, sal lowness, pimples, blackheads, acne, red spots, and that impos sible “some thing" which no face cream, mas sage, or face powder can cover up or Beautify! The foundation for a beautiful skin simply is not there, and no face treatment can give it to you. But increase your red blood-cells,—and quickly the ruby tint of purity begins to glow ia the cheeks, the complexion be comes venus-like and immaculate I Try it. It will do it every time. S. S. S. builds the red-blood-cella you need for a beautiful complex ion. Begin using S. S. S. at once, and give yourself what you have been working for, for years. I S. 8. It told «t ah toad “'** »tor*a is rm> i>i,l Tfca lifftr tut U sort ecoaosu ca^ C C Worlds Best 4 olood Medicine AnVKKT1.*EMK*T. American Telephone t Telegraph Co 140th Dividend. The regular quarterly dividend of T*n Oollar* and Twenty Five Cents r*r altar* • ill be paid cn Wednesday. October 11 114, to stockholders of record at th* lose of business on Saturdaky, September :t> 1124 _H PI.A1R SMITH Treasurer