The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, January 20, 1923, Page 14, Image 14

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    _MARKET, FINANCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL NEWS OF THE DAY _
Omaha Grain
Omaha, Jan. 19, 1923.
Total receipts at Omaha were 172
ears being principally corn as com
pared with 101 cars last year. Total
shipments were 177 ears against 224
ears a year ago.
There was a good demand for cash
wheat on ths Omaha market with
prices generally 1-2 cent higher. Corn
was in fair demand selling 1-4 cent
higher to 1-2 cent lower the market
l.eing generally 1-2 cent lower. Oats
were in good demand at unchanged
1o 1-4 cent up. Rye was steady 3-4
cent higher, and bailey was quoted
unchanged.
A lower range of values was wit
nessed In the early part of the ses
sion with commission houses buying
on the break. The cold weather pre
dicted for this morning did not ma
terialize to the extent that any dam
age would result and the forecast for
tomorrow was for lair weather with
little change in temperature. How
ever. a good many reports were re
ceived from the Southwest claiming
deterioration of the winter wheat.
These reports caused shorts to cover
and the market secured a good ad
vance. AVar news was disquieting
and the Farm Loan measure was up
nt AVashington with a good prospect
of passing. Coarse grains did show
as much advance as wheat owing to
heavy profit taking on the bulge.
There was also selling of wheat
sround outside prices and the ad
vance was lost, final prices being
around the lowest of the day.
WHEAT.
No. 8 dark ha id. 1 car. $1.24
No. 2 hard winter. 1 car, $1.16, 71 per.
rant dark; cars, I1.1IH! i car, $1.12,*
smutty; 2 tars. $1 12.
No 3 hard winter. I «nr. $1 IS, 78 per
• *nt dark; 2 cars. $1.11*4; 1 far, $1 to1,-,
U.4 per cent h»at damage: 7 car $1 17.
No 4 hard winter, l car, $1.09, 0.8 per
c*nf heat damage
No. 2 yellow hard, 1 car. $1 11*4.
No. 1 spring, l < Hr. $1 $3, dark north
• in; 1 tar, $1.28. special hilling
No. 2 spring. 1 car, $1.28, dark north
e n. special billing.
No. 2 durum, 3 rare. $1.02.
i ■ IRK.
No 2 whit*. 1 • ar, 68*ic. special bill- I
ing; 1 car, 68e; 2 cars, G7**c; 1 car, j
• 7 *4c
No. * white. 1 car. 67c; 3 cars. 66 *4c.
No. 2 yellow, 1 car, 68*Ac, special bill - j
Ing; 2 cars, 67Vac; 1 car, 67c, shippers' j
weight*: ft cam, 67c.
No. 3 y ellow, 4 cars, 67c; 4 care, 66*4c; «
1 car, 66c.
No. 4 yellow. 1 car, 66c
No. 2 mixed. I car. 6 7 *4c. special bill
ing. 1 car. 67c; l car, 67c, near white;
6 -are. 6fl**c. *
No. 3 mixed. 1 car. 66*4c. dry; 1 car.
«HV4c, special billing; 1 car, 66*ic; 5 cars.
60c.
OAT 5*.
No. ? white. 1 car, 4:lc.
No. 3 white. 1 car. 42 Ur. special bill
ing; 1 car. 4 2 Uc: 9 car*. 4 2*\
No. * wh te. 1 ear, 41^-; 1 car.
2 per rent heat damage 1 car. 40**o, ;* 8
per cent heat damage; 1 tar, 40*sc, ship,
pecs’ weights.
TtTE.
No. 2. 3 cars. 82c
No. 3, 5 car*. 81x4 c.
R ARRET.
No. 4, 1 car, 7.9 *4e.
OMAHA RECEIPTS AND SHIPMENTS.
(Carlots.) /
W’eek Tear
Receipts— Today. Ago. Ago.
WhM! . 7* 6 A
1 ‘orn .II® "A
Cat* . IA 17
P.y? . * ♦ 1
P«rl* . 3 J ..
Shipments—
Whrat . 71 «! SI
Corn . 70 «l 3 36
Oats .. 33 48 17
Ry» . I 6
PRIMARY RECEIPTS AND SHIPMENTS.
Raralpt,— Today Wk. Ago. Tr Ago.
M hoa* _1,181.000 l.!:ln.000 HI,00(1
Corn ......1.354,000 1.4.17.000 :.:i'8.oon
C>»|» . 830.000 770.000 664.000
Shipment*— ..
V’hoa' ... . 653.000 670,000 4 .0 O0A
,nrn . 745.000 765.000 1 477.000
<la-8 ' 7*5,000 817.000 466,000
EXPORT CLEARANCES,
Ruahela— Today. Year Ago.
\l>tit and floor . '3,000 773.000
ror- . 4 1 4.000 877,000
. 30.000 13.000
.CHICAGO RECEIPTS.
Wrok Year
CarloU— Today. Ago. At".
YVheat . 31 '2 121
»-orn .... 243 401 603
^nata . O' 92 199
KANSAS CITY RECEIPTS.
SAhaat .212 11« 1»4
Corn .. 48
Cat.2? 2,8 10
ST. I.Ol’lH RECEIPTS
TV heat ... . 87 85 50
**prn , 67 66 1oft
4kt, . M 45 57
NORTHWESTERN WHEAT RECEIPTS.
Minneapolis .28? 4J?
r>uluth .173 154 29
Winnipeg .£50 150 41
Kansas City t.rain.
Kansas City, Mo. Jan. 1?—Wheat—1
Nor. 3 bard, 31.1C® 1.21; No. 2 red. 11.24® |
2.31.
Corn—No. t whits, 70c; No. 2 yellow, j
71 o.
Hay—Unchanged.
Kansas City. Mo. Jan. 10—Wheat
May, 11.10%. bid; July. $1.03%; Septem
ber. $1.03, bid.
Corn—May. 70 %c; July. 70 %c asked;
September, 70c. split asked.
Minneapolis Cirain.
Minneapolis. Minn. Jan. 10—Wheat—
Cash No. 1 northern. $1.18% ©1.27%;
May, $1.10%; July. $117%.
CornNo. 8 yellow. 64%®«Sr
Oats—No 3 white, 39%© 41c./
Barley—50 ® 60c.
Rye—No. 2. 81c.
Flax—NO. 1. >2.93% ©2.94%.
St. I>>uls Cirain.
Sr. T,ouis. Mo.. Jar^ 19.—Wheat—May,
$1 17; July. $1.10%.
Corn—May. 72%; July, 72%c.
Oats—May. 46 %c.
Minneapolia flour.
Minneapolis, Minn. Jan. 19.—Flour—
Unchanged to 10c lower, famMy patents,
$6.75,
Bran—$26.00® 27.00.
Bouton Wool.
Ronston. Jan. IP—The Commercial Bui.,
latln Saturday will any:
■ Strength of the wool market ha* been
growing ateadlly since the flrat of the
year and prices have shown a further
itrengthening tendency this week which,
while not pronounced arid not applied to |
all grades equally, has Been evident Nev- :
. rthelese the demand seems to have fa
vored tha finer and the coarser wools,
with only moderate trading In medium j
grades Manufacturers evidently hare
been anticipating their heavy weight sea
son requlrment*. The good* market is
firm and healthy, but waiting the Amerl
can woolen openings on Monday.
"Foreign markets are all strong with
upward tendency and advanc-s noted in
soma market* of 1 or ? cents In the greasy
J.lverpool Thursday was par to lo per cent
un over last tondon sales and I.ondon
la expected to rule fully as high next
Tuesday. Reports of contracting In No.
vada .u>ta week, are denied by tha al
leged*#lnelpal.
•Mohair is alow, but firm.
"The rail and water aliipmenta of wool
from Boston from January 1. I***; *®
January IS. 1923. Included, were # 001,000
pound# against 5,617.000 pounds for the
same parlod last year. The receipts from
January 1. 1*33. to January IS. 1923. in
cluded were 20,372,000 pounds, against
11,711,400 pounds for the same period last
Tha Commercial Bulletin will publish
wool quotations as follows:
Domestic:—Wisconsin. Missouri and av
•race N#nr Knirland:
Half-blood. 48950c; H-blood. &l©o®c;
34-blood, 48949c.
Scoured baais: Texai fin# l.-month*.
S1.3S91.40: fine 8-monthp.
^'California' no*hern. 51.30*1.35: Middle
county. *1.1501.30; southern. »6cO»1.00
Oregon eastern No. 1 atap.e. $1.30®
3.40: fine and fine medium combing. |l-»
01.50; eastern clothing, $1.2601.50; cal
ls* No. 1. $1.20*1.35. ..
Territory: Fine etapla choice. $1.4.®
1.45: half-blood combing 11.2591.30: S
h'.ood combing. 95c©»1.03; quarter.blood
combing. IOc*»1.00.
Pulled: Delaine. 11.3001.2$; AA. *1 -0
#1.30; A supers. $1.16®1.20: Mohair, best
combing. 7$®«"r; best combing, 70©7oc.
Flaxseed.
Duluth. Minn.. Jan. 19.—Closing cash
prices:
Flaxseed—January. $2 91 bid: Febru
ary, 2I.S4 asked; May. $2 67 asked; July.
92.55 asked
Chicago Grain
Chicago, Jan. 19 —Despite firmness,
j in foreign exchange, a betterment in
j the export demand and a more en*
! oouraging \iew of the European situ*
j ation taken by the east, the grain
markets showed a relatively heavy
undertone. Local sentiment inclines
only to the bear side, and while there
was a fair upturn at one time on
.short covering, it was lost at the last,
the finish being about the bottom on
all grains.
Wheat had a range of 1 •?£ © 1 c
and closed 1 a © lower, the latter
on May, which touched $1.181* for
the third time this week and finished
at that figure to l*c over. Corn was
U©V*c lower. May going to a dis
count under July at one time. Oats
were off U<8Uc and rye was
higher.
Wheat • bulls received encourage
ment in an upturn of *4U in Liverpool
early, but the latter market finished
unchanged to J4d lower, shipments of
2.272.000 bushels from Australia hav
ing a depressing effect toward the
last. Houses with eastern connec
tions were fair sellers of May on the
rallies, which were made mostly by
short covering.
Good Export Trade.
The continent was u buyer of cash
«h'*at both In North America, and afloat,
and the seaboard reported sales of arour.d
1.250.000 bushels, mainly Manitoba*. Dry
weather reports from a much wider terri
tory thin of lute induced considerable
buying of th** new crop futures. Grow
ing wearher prevailed In parts of Kansas.
Many of the local longs went out of
their holdings of May corn toward the
last. causing .» sharp break, which carried
the early delivery io V under July at
one time, although it finished at .the
rajne as the bitter. Aside from some sup
port on resting orders, the market is i -
tclvlng dttlo help from the outside. Cash
demand was slow, despite arrivals of only
cars.
Oats showed fair strength early on
commission house buying, but cased off
later with corn and closed easy. Receipts
ere not large anil stocks ar» decreasing,
but up--dilative trad* Is too light to ad
vance prices materially. Arrivals. 77 cars.
R> e showed independent strength, due
to fric buying by hou.es with seaboard
connections, presumably removing hedges,
against export sales. Russia v as report
ed to have taken rye. as did Germany, and
known bh!*»u exceeded 200.000 bushels, al
though thrt seaboard claimed only 150,000
bushels after the close.
Pit Notes.
A heavy undertone pervaded the wheat
and corn markets at live close, with noth
in* in sight except extreme bearishnesj ,
anil the passage of the Capper farm
credit bill by the senate to Rive holders
any courage. It suggested that the
, n i ihouid anything
happen to start a covering movement a
tally might remit towards the last, aa
traders generally even up for the week
end.
H was sc* id eastern longs were the
largest sellers of May wheat late In the
day, and that some of them have been un- j
loading for several days. Good buying
orders fo~ May wheat were in hands of
commission house* at $1.18V?. which stop
ped the dev line. Should they be wlth
diawn overnight, a break Is looked for
A • Mlnneapol's man w ired that out of
eight market opinions received there to-1
day, only one was bullish, the latter be
ing from Bartiett-Krazier. This house
was a good buyer of May and July wheat
a good part of the day. July was bought
on dry weather conditions.
James A. Patton is bullish on rorn and
is buying on all weak spots. A bullish
statement on hogs issued by B. W. Snow
v as the bast* of his buying
All reports from the southwest on the
corn and oats demand were bearish. The
light exports of the week, coupled with
the poor demand, led to free selling at
the last and assisted In making the
break.
Winnipeg May wheat closed Uc higher
at |1.13H> or over He over July, tho
smallest premium so far. The Chicago
Winnipeg spread at the last was 5c, the
narrowest so far on the crop. Traders
here predict that Winnipeg May will sell
over Chicago. Their July was \c pre
mium today.
Canadian Pacific railroad has nol| em
bargoed shipments of grain to* the United
States, but almost ah of the American
railroads arc refusing to accept Canadian
grain on account of the congested condi
tion of the roads and terminals.
CHICAGO CLOSING PRICES.
By Updike Grain Co. AT. 6312. JA. 284 7.
Art. I Opan. | High. | Low. | Cloat. | Y*a.
Wht. I ~j ' j ' i i
May ! 1.18* 1.20%; 1.18*1 1.18V,; 1.18*
| 1.1* |.I.I 1.18*1 1.18*
July 1 l.lSVii 1.14Vi I 1.12%| 1.1* 1.13%
I 1.13 % | I 1.13% 1.13*
Kept. I 1.09%; l.HVi | 1.09% 109% 1.0934
Rye j |
May I .88 ' .89 % | .88 ,S»% -88
I .88'4 1
July | .86 i .85%! .85 .85 .84%
Corn |
May . .7:'.% .73% .7 2 34 .72*1 -73%
I .73%! .73 .73%
July i .73% .73%| .73 I ] ,i3%
slept. I .73 .73%; ,723.r .723a! .7334
Oats I ! I I I
May ! .45%! .45%! .45 i .43 .453*
III .45341
July .42% I .42%' .42% .42%! .42%
111 | .45*
Sept. I .40V4I ,40841 .40* .40 Vi I .40*
l-ard ! I I I
Mav 111.65 |11.80 111.65 11.77 111,62
July 111.82 111.90 111.82 11.87 111.72
Ribs j ! I I
May It AS 11.05 110 97 11.03 111.00
Hrwdttlreel’s Trade Review.
New York. Jan. 19.—Bradstreet's Satur
day w ill nay:
"The trade, price and Industrial situa
tion varies greatly accordingly as domes
tic or foreign happenings or conditions arc
considered. The first mentioned with in
dustry busily engaged, unemployment neg
ligible, trade for the first three to six
months of the year apparently secure,
building, favored by mild weather in wide
areas, unprecedentedly active, and the
chief subjects of complaint scarcity
cars, coal, or materials for manufacturer
are almost uniformly favorable. On the
othet haml, with punitive military mea
sures being enforced against the world's
greatest debtor, the conference with the
representatives of Britain adjourned, prices
cf cotton and the grains diversely affected
by war talk, foreign security markets
v eakened. the exchange situation, one of
the most important keys to foreign trade
unsettled beyond description, anil our ex
port trade mediocre, the foreign side of
the picture is hardly one to wax enthusi
astic about."
Weekly bank'clearlngs $7,989,046,000.
New York Cotton.
New York, Jan. 19.—Increased realizing !
had scant effect on cotton future price# j
today and the list, after making new |
high for the season at the opening and j
encountering a reaction, moved upward
again, closing near the top. 12 to 21 points f
net higher. The market moved up 2 to !
to points from the previous dose at I
the outset but slumped 5 to 15 points |
net under long selling and commission [
houses pressure. Renewed demand from f
the trad* ami a scarcity of offerings were j
reflected later in the day by another up
ward movement, which at the peak had
prices 20 to 25 points net better.
Spot was steady, 15 points advance;
28.30c for middling upland.
Southern markets: Galveston, 28.25c, 20
points advance; New Orleans. 27.88c. 25
points advance: Augusta. 28.35c, 19 points
advance; Memphis. 28.00c, 25 points ad
vance; Houston. 28.25c, 20 points advance; !
Little Rock, 27.73c, unchanged.
New York Coffee.
New York, Jan. 19.—The market fori
; coffee futures showed increasing activity j
nnd strength today, owing to reports of
a firmer cost and freight situation and n
stronger tone in the local spot market. '
Trade shorts were credited with buying
near months, while there seemed to be
a scattering commission house demand
| for later deliveries, and after opening 5
to 16 points net higher, active months
sold 9 to 17 points above Thursday’s
figures, making new high records for
the season March sold at 10.90c ami
May 10.44c. The close was only a few
points off from the best, showing net ad
vances $«• 17 points. Sales were estimated
at about 76.000 bags. January and March,
10.89c: May, 10.37c; July. 9.84c; Septem
ber, 9 22c; December, 8.92c.
New York General.
New York Jan. 19.—Wheat—Spot, ir
regular; No. 1 dark northern spring c. i.
f track. New York domestic. 81*82; No. 2
I red winter e. 1. f. track New York, export.
I $1.33; No. 2 hard wtnter. $1.31 v,; No. 1
1 Manitoba. $1.33**. and No. 2 mixed durum,
i 8L20V*. a
Corn—Spot, eas} : No. 2 yellow and No
2 white c. i. f. New York tail, to^c, and
No. 2 mixed. 90<
oats—Spot, quist: No. 2 white. 56c.
Land—Strong; middlewest. $12.20® 12.30.
Omaha Live Stock
Omaha Jan 19, 1923.
Receipts Mere: Cattle Hogs. Sheep.
Official Monday. 11,734 13.961 12.181
Official Tuesday. 7,471 14.53# 12.956
official Wednesday.. 7.975 13.413 6.706 '
j official Thursday.. 6.427 17.986 9.828
I Katlrm te Friday ... 2..100 1 1.000 6.900
Five days this w eek .. 35.545 70,896 4S.571
I Same days last weak.33.428 73,533 60.2uj
Same two w'lis ago,. 27,835 64.*03 45,9 3 8
; Same three w'k* ago. 19,568 53.904 24 976
Same days year ago.. 28.687 59,417 44.899
Cattle—Receipts. 2.300 head. All classes
of cattle were iu fair demand, and. as the
supply was the smallest for a Friday In
.-e\era! weeks, the market proved fairly
' active at generally steady prices Quality
was only fair and no steers sold above
$9 40. For the M-eek best steers arc about
steady, with others unevenly lower, aver
age decline* amounting to about 25c. She
stock is unevenly 25©40c lower, M*hile j
stockera and feeders have held mostly
steady.
Quota! ;on“ on cattle: Good to choice i
I beeves, $9 10© 10.25; fair to good beeves.
$8.1009.00; common to fair beeves. $7.00
*9 8.00; good to choice yearlings. $9.00©
10.60; fair to good yearlings. $7.2508.75; j
common to fair jcarllngs, $6.0007.25;'
good to choice heifers, $7.00 ©8.35; fair
tn good heifers. $5.3607.00; good to choice!
towo $5.5006.50: fair to good cows. $4.00
0 5.40; comomn to fair cows. $2.60 04.00; !
good to choice feeders. $7.40©8.1O; fair,
to good feeders. $6.500 7.36; common to
fair feeder*. $6.26 0 6 60: good to choice,
atochara. 57.60® 8.25; fair to good Stock
ers. $6.2•' v7. SO ; common to fair Stocker*.
$5.00©6.25; stock cows. $3.2504.35; stock
heifer*. 54 25© 5.60; stock calves. $4.00©
7.75; veal calves. $4.56011.00; bulls, stags,
etc.. $5.75 © 6.00.
BEEF STiERS.
Xo. Av. Pr. No. Av. Pr.
15 . 9H0 $ 7 25 6. 955 $ 7 40
19 .1 020 7 50 13. 615 7 70
16 .1201 7 75 S. 1022 8 00
10 . 908 8 25 14 939 8 50
4. 887 S 60 6.1045 8 Ho
1 7 . 905 9 00 39.1291 9 26
20 .1 330 9 35 IS. 1333 9 40
STEERS AND HEIFERS.
No. Av. Pr. - No. Av. Pr.
17 . 697 7 35 3. 540 7 50
8. 892 7 60 1 2. 810 7 75
COW 9.
No. Av. Pr. No. Av. Pr.
17 . 930 3 25 16. 960 4 36
7 . 897 4 60 5.1 122 4 86
6 . 930 4 90 * 5.1160 5 00
f». 1020 5 05 10.1202 5 26
6. 97 1 5 40 4 .1 242 5 65
18 .1097 5 85 6.1 400 6 25
11 . 960 6 50 £. 1345 6 bll
HEIFERS.
No. Av. Pr. No. Av. Pr.
4 . 612 4 23 1. 070 4 75
17. 692 5 00 11 . 979 5 7b
•l. 607 6 00 4 882 b 25
5 . 726 7 00 22. 922 • 7 65
STOCKERS AND FEEDERS.
No. Av. Pr. No. Av. Pr.
5. 940 6 33 20. 806 ft 75
27 . 767 b 40 35. 91 1 6 bO
5. CIO 6 80 15. C30 7 2b
28 . 628 7 50
BULLS.
No. Av. Pr. No. Av. Pr.
1 . 860 3 50 I. 1 410 4 40
No. Av. Sh. Pr. No. Av. Sh. Pr.
1.1<60 4 50 1 . 1 850 4 7b
1 . 1 180 5 00 J.1120 5 2b
1...... 660 5 50 ].1250 5 7b
1 . 250 5 00
CALVES.
No. Av. Pr. No. Av. P-.
4. 480 6 75 1 250 9 7b
1. 1 HO 10 00 .;. 123 10 60
1 . 180 10 75
Ilog«;—Receipts. 1 1.000 head. Trading i
was slow again today, but, with a fair
shipper demand again, the market got un
der way at prices ruling mostly 6<910c
higher Good quality light hogs and butch
era sold largely at 17.95(98.10. with a top
price of $8.15. Mixed loads sold at $7,509
7 DO, and packing grades largely at $7.00(9
7.25. Bulk of sales was $7.90(98.10.
HOG?.
65.. 237 40 7 00 60..306 ... 7 95
65.. 279 ... S 00 78..218 ... 8 05
8‘J. .208 ... R 10 84. .200 ... 8 15
Sheep—Receipts, 6.900 head. Fat lambs
were in good demand and the market was
fairly active at prices generally steady,
with movement largely at $14.00(6)14.60
and best light lambs quoted at $14.70.
Feeders were a quarter higher, two loads
going out at $14.65. Sheep were generally '
steady, best eves here today selling at
$7.25.
Quotations on sheep: Fat lambs, good
to choice. $14.15(6*14.70: fat lambs, fair
to good. $13.00(614.00; feeder lambs. $13.50
<9 14 65; yearlings, $10.50^12.00; wethers.
$7.50(98.25: fat ewea, light. $7.00<S>7.50;
fat ewes, heavy, $5.00(3*7.00.
Chicago Livestock.
Chicago. Jan. 19—Cattle—Receipts, 4. -
500 bead; slow, uneven: beef steers and
she-stock. steady to weak with week's de
cline; top yearlings 19.85; best matured
stores. $9.50; bulk beef steers. $8.25 ® 9.00;
with odd lots below $3.f>0: bulls and veal
calves, steady to 25c lower; beef bulls and
medium light calves showing most de
cline: bulk seal calves. $10.00® 10.75;
sto^kers and feeders steady; selected
heavy fleshy feeders. $8.25.
TIogs—Receipts, 24.000 head, 10 to 15c
higher; lighter weights up most; bulk 140
to 180-pound averages. $R.65®8.75; top,
$8.80; bulk 200 to 225-pound butchers,
$8.45 ®‘ H.tlO : hulk 240 to 300-pound butch
er k. $8.20®R.30; mostly $8 25 ; packing
sows, mostly $7.00® 7.40; desirable pigs.
$8.00 ®> 8.60; estimated holdover. 9,000
head.
Sheep and Lambs—Receipts. 1 1.000 head;
fat lamb*. steady to strong; top. $15.00 to
packers and shippers: bulk fat wooled
lambs. $14.50® 14,90; clipped lambs, most
ly $12.35® 12.90; other dosses steady; fed
90-pound yearling v ethers. $12.65; good
60-pound feeding lambs, 114.50; fat sheep
scarce; heavy fat ewes, $6.00®6.60; light
er weight* quotable up to $9.00.
St. IrfMlis Livestock.
East St. Louis. II!., Jan. 19.—Cattle—
Receipts. 1.500; beef steers, weak; light
yearlings tending lower; camera, bulls
and stockers. steady; light vealers steady.
$11.2511.50; few steers. $7.6008.60; cows
largely $4.2506.60; ranners, $2.6002.70;
butcher bulls, $4.0005.00; stocker steers,
$5.7r>07.oo.
Hogs—Receipts. 17.000; steady on light
hogs: medium weights and heavies. 6 ®
10c higher; .spots, up more; top, $8 90;
hulk 140 to 1R0 pounds, $8.7508 85; 190 to
220 pounds. $8 4008.66; 230 to 250 pounds.
$8:2508.45; 250 pounds and up. $8.10®
8.35; pigs, about steady; bulk 100 to 120
pounds, $8.0008.25; lighter kinds and
powers down to $6.50; packer lows, $7.00
07.25.
Sheep and Lambs—Receipts. 700; nomi
nally steady; no strictly good or choice
lamb* for sale; few medium to good.
$14.00014.25; quote choice. $14.50014.75;
few fat light ewes. $7.50; heavies, $5,000
6.00.
Kansan City Livestock.
Kansas City, Mo.. Jan. 19.—(United
States Department of Agriculture.)—Cat
tle-—Receipts. 2,200 head: market, all
classes around steady; quality plain;
steers. $*.75'3 $.45 : most cow s, $4.0005.00;
few $ 5.5 0 0 fi 0 0 ; fed heifers $7.00; most
ennners, $1.75; bologna bulls largely $4.30
<h 4.00; bulk cutters. $3.2505.75; better
grade vealers. $9.50^10.00.
Hogs—-Receipts, R.000 head; shipper
market steady to Rc higher; top. $8.35;
packer market 6010c higher: packer top.
$8.20: 150 to 210-lb. averages mostly
38.20 0 8.25: bulk desirable 220 to I’RO-Jb.
butchers. $8,1508.20; bulk of sales, $?.9.'>0
8.20: packing sows strong, mostly $7.35;
stock pigs steady; bulk of sales, $7.75
®' 8.00.
Sheep—Receipts. 3.000 head: market.]
killing classes steady to strong: wooled j
lambs, $14.00: clippers. $12.10; wethers. |
$8.25.
9iouk City I.imlock.
Sioux City. Ta . Jan. 19.—Cattle—Re
celpts. 2.500 head; market steady to weak;
good fed steers and yearlings. $9.00#
10.75; warmed up steers and yearling®.
$6.60#8.50: fat cows an*] heifers, $5.00#
7.75: oanners. $2.00# 3.00; voala. $4.00#
10.00; feeders, $5.00#7.75; calves, $4.60#
7.50; feeding cows and heifers. $".00#
5.60; stockets. $5.00#7.50.
Hogs—Receipts, 8.000 head: market
steady to strong: butchers. $8.05: top.
*8.05; mixed. $7.75#8.00: packers. $7.40#
7.75: pigs and light lights. $8.0008.25; |
bulk of sales. $8.Oft#fi.06.
Sheep—Receipts. 500 head: market1
(steady: good lambs, $14.00# 14.50; light
I ewes, $7.00#7.50.
St. Joseph Livestock.
■ St. Joseph Mo.. Jan. 19—(United States
I D'*p*vrtment of Agriculture.)—Uattle—Re
ceipts. COD head; market steady; few’
beef steers and yearlings, $7 00 <& 8.15; a
! few* canner rows. $?.3O'0>3.0O; odd head
; beef cows. 84.504$ 5.30: veal calf top,
i S1Q.0O; practically no atocker* and feed
ers here.
Hogs—Receipts. 4,000 head: a few
| sales mixed grades. $7.95®8.0Q; market
I looks around Be higher.
New York Dry tioods.
New York. Jan. 19.—Unfinished cotton
goods, print cloths, sheetings and combed
1 convertibles were more active and slight
] ]v higher today. Finished goods moved
i slowly Yarns were higher. Jute goods
i were steady. Jobbers reported an ex
1 pending business with retailers. Woo
goods opening scheduled for Monday and
| Tuesday w ill show advances.
New York Dried Fruits.
\*ew York. Jnn. 19.—Evaporated Apples
! —Dull.
* Prunes—Eavy.
| Apricots—Firm but quiet.
j T’eachea—Quiet
J Raisin*—Easy
Financial
New York, Jan. 1!>.—The movement
on all of today's financial markets
was of the kind which usually lndi
cates not So much a positive change!
of sentiment as a precautionary re <
treat by speculators who are not ;
sure of that position. This was as i
evident in the foreign exchange
market as in the market for stocks ]
and bonds. In both the trend of 1
prices was toward recovery from the
week's earlier (reclines, but in both
the recovery was irregular and the
movement not entirely uniform.
In the foreign exchange market, for
instance, sterling advanced rapidly,
the day's best price of S4.66 3-4 being1
the highest since Monday, and 3 l-4c 1
above Thursday morning's low figure. I
This particular movement was nscrib- :
ed by Wall street to assurance re
garding the negotiations with the1
debt commission. In view of the facts'
that the matter has not been settled;
and that the recent rise in sterling
did not appear to be in sight, the I
explanation might seem strained. It ’
applies, however, to the extent that
sterling was depressed earlier in the
weak by "bear selling,” based not
only on the Ruhr situation, but on
supposition that the debt conference
had broken up in complete disagree
ment—which is not at all the case.
Murks Rerovrr.
The German mark aiso recovered sub
stantially today reaching .0083 as against
Thursday’s low point of .0042. Here alao
thn machinery of speculative “covering”
was plainly enough in evidence and per
haps also the passing of the acute stage
of panic by the German markets—con
cerning whose condition, however, Wall
Street has been singularly ill informed
this week. But the franc tlld not recover,
except momentarily; the final rate was be
low Thursday’s closing. This is exactly
what happened after'the violent decline
in European exchanges last November af
ter the market had turned. Sterling and
Use and even marks scor'd considerable
recovery while frani s were hanging back.
It was only when the change in the mar
ket was unmistakable that buying of
French exchange became active. At Paris,
however, sterling moved sharply in favor
of the French market.
On the Stock Exchange, today’s some
v hat. irregular recovery occurred on the
basis of a largely Increased business, which
approached a million shares. The upward
tendency of prices was manifest from the ’
opening and a considerable number of I
stocks rose a point or more. The
majority of net changes were fractional,
however. There were numerous declines
arid few stocks ended at the day’s best
prices. The approach of the weekend cre
ated a curious position because of the
numerous and entirely opposite possibili
ties. which will exist over Sunday in the
controversy with Germany. In the French
republic bonds there was no further de
cline, but they did nothing more than i
bold their ground.
Wall Street Topics.
One of the outstanding phases of the
bond market was the activity of the ad- j
Juitrnent 6 per cent bonds of the Kansas i
& Texas railroad. The bonds opened I
at 69 Vi. the closing price of the preceding
day. and after spirited trading during
practically the entire day, closed at blU,
a het advance of 1% points. Bankers!
for the road explained that the report 1
for 1922 would show that interest re. ,
ciulrements on the adjustments had b.»e» ,
earned more than twice over, and that
full interest would be paid.
It has been many a long day since
Wall street has heard anythin* about
the Russian government bonds until an
nouncement was made today for an ex
tension of deposit time for aether 18
months. The committee of bankers la
keeping in touch with the Russian bitua
tion through the State department and
it was considered very likely by most of
the commttee that no recognition of any
government in Russia can take place
without taking into consideration aecurl
tim which were sold in this eontry and
which were purchased by investors in good
faith.
Stocks in the railway group, particu
larly the low priced share*, showed a
reversal of the recent sluggish manner in
which they have been behaving and had
an Inning of considerable activity today.
Southern railway attracted the most at
tention. the stock cloying at 30, a net.
advance of 1'■* points, on a turn-o\er of
more than 73,Ono shares. According to
rumors in the financial district, the heavy
trading In this stock was due to pool
operation? T.ehigh Valley, Reading. New
York Ventral. Rock Inland and Seaboard
Air Idne, preferred. were among the
others of the railway group that showed
activity.
New York Quotations
Range of prices of the lending fur
ntnhed by I^igan Sc Bryan, IMS Peter*
Trust binding.
RAILROADS.
Thura.
High. Low, Close. Close.
A T & S F ....101 100 »i 100’i 100*4
Ball Sc Ohio .4214 40'» 41 *4 <9*.
Can I’ao .142 Hll'i H2*» 142*4
N T Central .... 94*4 OS** 94«4 94
Cllea & Ohio _ 72 *4 72 72 72 ’4
Grt North . 7314 7214 73*4 721*
III Cent .Ill lit lit in
K C Southern ... 20 19 ‘20 19
Lehigh Valley ... 70 89 89*4 88T4
Mo Pae . 18*4 18 18*4 18
N T * N H .18*4 17 74 18 4s 18
North Pac . 73*4 72*4 73*4 73
Chi ft N W . 78*4 78 U 78S 78
Penn R B . 48 *4 48 14 48*, 46 >4
Reading . 78*4 77 14 78*4 77'*
C R I & P . 32*4 32 321* 31 74
South Pac . 89 88 '4 89 88'*
South Ry . 30<4 29 30 28*.
0 M ft St P. 21*. 91 2114 21
Un raclfic .137'4 13614 137 136*4
stkkls
Am. Car Found.. 18 T 180 180 179
AUis-Chalir.ers 46% 46% 46% 46
Am. Loeomothe .124% 125 124% 124
Bald. .Locomot-1.15 132% 133% 134
Feth. Steel. 62% 62 62 62%
Colo. Fuel A- Iron 26 26 26 25 %
Crucible . 73% 72% 72% 72
Am. Steel Foundry 36% 36 36% 36
Gulf States Steel.. 84% 83 83% 83%
Midvale Steel ... 28% 27% 27 % 28%
Pressed Steel Car 70 70 70
Rep. Steel A* Iron 50% 49% 50 61%
Sloaa-Scheffield.. . 50% 48 49 % 47
U. S. Steel.107 105% 106% 106%
Vanadium . 27% 26% 36% 36%
Mex. Seaboard.... 17 17 17 16%
COPPERS.
Anaconda . 48 46% 47% 47%
Am. S. & Ref. Co 64% 54% 54% 53%
Cerro De Pasco.. 41 43% 43% 43%
Chlii . 28% 28% 28% 28%
Chino . 26 26 26 25% f
Green Cananea.... 24 24 24 .
Inspiration . 35% 33 25 33% I
Kennecott . 55% 35% 35% 55% !
Miami . 27% 27% 27% 27% j
New Consol. 15% 15% 15% 16% I
Ray Consol. 14 13% 13% 13%
Seneca . 7 % 7% 7% 7% :
Utah . 64% 63% 63% 63 l
OILS.
General Asphalt... 46 45% 45% 43% j
Coidan . 56% 65% 65% 65%
Cal. Peferol. 80% 78% 78% 78% '
Invincible on. 15% 15% 15% 15
Middle States ... 11% 11% 11% 11 %
Pacific Oil . 46 % 46 46% 46
Pan-American .... 89% 87% 87% 88%
Phillips . 51% 50% 50% 61% 1
Pierce OH . 4% |
Pure Oil . 28% 28% 28% 27%
Royal Duteh . 51 % 51% 51 % 51 %
Sinclair Oil . 33% 32 32 23% '
Std. Oil. N. J. 42% 40Vi 4 1 4 :
Texas Co. 48% 48% 48% 48% |
Shell Union Oil... 15% 13% 15% 13%
White Oil . 3% 3% 3% 3%
MOTORS.
Chandler . 67% 67% K7% 68 1
General Motors 14% 13% 14% 14%
Willys-Overland. .. 7% 7% 7% 7% 1
Pierce-Arrow . 13% 13% 13% 13% j
White Motor .... 50% 50% 50% 60% j
Studebakor .116% 114% 111% 116
RUBBER AND TIRES.
j Fisk . 16% 14 % 15 15 I
Goodrich . 59% 38% 38% CH
' Kellev-Spring ... 60% 49% 49% 50
I Keystone Tire ... 9 9 9 9 %
Ajax . 13% 13% .15 % 15% j
U. S. Rubber . 61 60 60 59%
INDUSTRIALS.
A.m. Beet Sugar.. 37% 27% 3 7 % r.8>.,
A . O A W. 1. 22%
Am. Int. Corp.... 26% 25% 26 25 %
Am. Sumatra ... 27% 27% 27% . ...
Am Telephone ...1 23 122% 122% 123%
Amer Can . 83 81 % 81 % 83
Cen Leather . 35% 34% 34% 35
Cuba Cane . 13
Oen Electric .183% 131% 181% 181
Gt North Ore ... 30% 30% 30% 30
j A M Tf A L pfd. .,7%
U S I Aim . 66 64% 65 65 %
; Inter Paper . 52% 51 % 51% 51 %
• Inter M .M pfd . 42% 40% 41% 40%
Am Bug Ref .... 76% 76% 76%. 77
.Sears Roe .... . 86 85% 86% 65
| Stroinsburg .... 67 66 66 66%
*\d. Prod . 52% 51% 52% ..2
1 '-th Pump .... 31 3i 31
jWllaoa Co .. .... 36%
West Union .Ill 109% no lin%
Westing Bier .... 59*4 59% 59% 59
Amer Woolen ... 95s, 95 95 94%
MISCELLANEOUS.
Amer Cot nil ... 18% is 18 18%
Am Ag Chm . S0% 30% 30 % 30 %
Amer Linseed . 32
Bosch Mag . S9% 39% 89*4 39
Brook R T . 12*4 12*, 12% 12
Cont Can . 126 124 % 126 1:4
Calif Pack . 8 2 8 2 8 2 81 %
Col G & Ei .. ..107 108% 106% 106%
Colunib Graph . -’% 2% 2% 2%
Nat Enamel . 69 68 68% 68%
United Fruit ....157 1 37 157 156
Lorillard Tub . ..166% 164 % 166% ..
Nat Lead . . . . . 126
Philadelphia Co. . 12 42 42 4 1 %
Pullman .129% 129 ** 129% 128**
Punta A leg Sug... 44 43'* 4 1** 43%
Retail Stores . 70% 69*, 69% 70%
Superior Steel . 31
St L & S F .. . . 22 21 ** 22 21 *4
Va Car Chm. . .... 14*3 24 % 24 % 24%
•''Close” is the last recorded pale.
Total sales, 970.700 shares.
Thursday
Close. Close.
Money .04 .04
Marks .000055 .000044
Francs .. .0667 .0658
Sterling .$1.66% $4 64 %
New York Bonds
New York, Jan. 19—Cessation of the
liquidation in French and Belgian bonds,
which held steady around Thursday's
closing levels, and a brisk upward move
ment In some of the speculative railroad
mortgages, imparted a much stronger tone
to prices in today's bond market.
Rome good recoveries were made in
the foreign list, particularly by the South
American Issues. Serbian 8s and Norwe
gian 8s each gained 2% points; Republic
of Colombia 6 Vis. 2; State of Rio Grande
«1e Sul 8s, 1%. and Rio de Janeiro 8s. Bo
livian 8r. Zurich 8s. Belgian 6s and Ital
ian bs, 1 to 1 4
Among the railroad Issues gains of 14
to 3 points were registered by Chicago.
Burlington A- Quincy. Illinois division,
3 4s. International and Great Northern ad
justment fie. Seaboard Air Line adjust
ment 6s, "Katy" 5s. Erie convertible 4s,
series A and B, and Rock Island general
4s. A number of others closed at least
a point higher.
Cerro de Pasco 8s. Chile Copper 7s anti
Midvale Steel fis each up 2 points, led the
advance in industrial mortgages, other
strong spots in which were Eastern Cuba
Sugar 74s. Goodyear 8s. of 1931. Otis
Steel 74s and Virginia-* Carolina Chemical
7 4s. when Issued. Interborough Metro
politan 4 4s. stamped, gained 3 points
United States government bonds were
irregular. The first, second and fourth
4 4s gained 2 to 8c on $100, and the other
active issues lost 2 to 6c.
Total osles were $11,651,900.
United Mates Bonds.
Sales in $1,000 High Low Close
J90 1,1b 3%s .• 301.34 101.26 101.34
16 Lib 1st 4 4s .... 98.68 .
139 Lib 2d 4 4 9 ... 98.20 98.12 98.20
206 Lib 3d 44* .... 98.90 98.84 98,86
634 Lib 4th 4 4s ••• 9*50 98.42 98.46
68 Vic 4%s un _ 100.24 100.22 .j
282 New 44s . 99.94 99.84 99.90 1
Foreign.
13 Argentine 7s ....101% 1014 101%
1 City Bergen Ss.108 .1
3 City Berne 8s ....112 111% 112 i
47 City Bord 6s . 73% 72% . ... 1
b City Christiania 8s. 1094 .
% City Cppen 5%s... 91 90% 91
31 City Gt Prag 7%s. 68% 68 . ..
16 City Lyons fin. 73 4 73 73 4 :
10 City Marseilles 6s.. 734 72% ....
4 City R 1> Jan 8s. . . 94% 94
22 City Toklo 6s. 724 72 72 %
2 City Zurich 8s ....112% .1
9 Czech Rep 8s ct.... 86 85% . ;
20 T>ept Seine 7s. 82 81 % .... 1
49 Dom Can 5%s n 29.102 % 102 ....
84 Dom Can 5s 52.. 984 98% 98%
41 Dtch E Ind 6 s 47.. 92% 92% 92%
31 Dtch E Ind 6s 62.. 92 % 99% 92%
78 French Rep 8s ... 94% 93% 94%
153 French Rep 7%s... 914 90% 91%
4 Holl-Am Line 6s. . 89%
25 Japanese 1st 4%s. . 93
56 Japanese 4s . 8J 80% 81
89 Belgium 7%s . 97 % 96% 97
51 Belgium 6s . 9fi 95% 96
31 Denmark fis . 98 • ?% ,,
10 Italy 6%s .,.93%
143 Netherlands bs ... 98% 98
44 Norway 8s .112 110 112
75 Sweden 6s .106%
74 Paris-Ly-Med 6s ..70 69 70
67 Rep Bolivia 8s ... 91% 90 90%
6 Rep Chile 8s 46 .1 02% 102% 102%
8 Rep Uruguay 8s...104V* 104% 1044 1
3 Queensland 7s ....108% 108%
8 Queensland tls _101% 101% 101% i
5 San Paulo af 8s... 97% 97
19 Swiss Con 8s .II 8 %
277 K G R A I 5%s 29.114% 114% 114% I
80 K G R A T 5 % a 37.103 % 103% 103% !
46 V S Brazil 8s. 9« 95% .. 1
16 U R Rrazll 7%s ... 97% 97%
20 U 8 Rraz C R El 7s 82 81 % 82
6 U S Mexico 4s ... 34%. 34%
Railway and Miscellaneous.
ft Amor AgCh7%s..l04 .
6 Am Smelt 6s . ftl ftn% 90%
21 Am Sug fis .103 102% ....
4 Am T A T cv 6s... 116 ... ^ . ..
36 Am T A T c. t 6s. . ftft 9* %
24 Am T A T c 4s_ 92 91 % 92
7 Am Writ Pap 6s... 85% .
1 Am W W A E 5s. . . 83 % .
7 A J M W 6s. 79% 79 . . .
16 Arm A Co 4 %».... 8,«% 88 88%
28 A T A S F g 4s_ 89% 88% ...
1 A T A S F a 4s_ 81 .
1 At C I# 1st c 4s. ... 87% .
21 Balt A Ohio 6s.... 1 Oft % 100% 100%
44 Balt A Ohio cv 4%s 79% 79 _
13 B T of Ta 7s.107% .
11 Reth Steel ref 5s.. 96 95 96
3ft Beth Steel p m 6s. 93% 92% 93
5 Bk Ed I g 7s .108% 108’ , 108%
63 Bk R T 7s ct . 88 87% 88
1 Can North 7s .113% ..
4 5 Can Pac deb 4s.... 78% 78 78%
59 On Georgia fis.100% 100% 100%
3 Cen Heather 5s _ 99 98% 99
10 Cer 1>« T'as 8s . ...134 132 133
22 Chew A Ohio cv 5s. 9 5 94% 95
81 Ches A Ohio cv 4V*s 87% 87% 57%
1« Chi A Alton 3%s.. 25% 25%
26 Chi A Alton 3s . 52 51% 63
8 C B A Q ref 5s A. 100 99% ..
7 Chi A F 111 5s. 79 \ 79 % 79%
8 Chi tit. West 4s.... r,0% 50%
100 C M A S P cv 6s B 66% 64% 65
98 C M A S P cv 4%s. 64% 63 64 %
45 C M A S P ref 4%S 68% 57% 6.8%
ft Chi Rys Gfl . 76% 76% 76%
5 C R A P gen 4s. . 82 81
181 C R I A P ref 4s.. 81% 80s; 81%
15 C A W nd 4s.. 74% 73% 74%
67 Chile Copper 7s 116% 114% 116’.,
45 Chile Copper 6s .. 97% 97% 97%
3 Colo A Co ref 4%t 83%
4 Cons Coal Md 6s.. 87% 87% 87%
12 Cuba Cane Sg d 5s. 91% 91 91%
6 Cub Am Sug.107%
37 H* A R G ref 5s... 65% 64% 55%
l> A R O con 4s... 74%
a Pet F.d ref 6s.103% 102%
1 Pet Utd Rys 4%s. 82% ..
3 Pis Sec 5s . 64
1 Ponner St ref Ts... 88%
12 Ppnt em 7%s.108
4 Puquesne Ht 6a ..103% 10;j% 103%
6 F.m G A F 7%s .. 94% 94 ....
20 Erie p 1 4s . 56 65% ....
60 Erie gen 1 4s. 45 44 % 44%
13 Fram T D 7%s_ 87% 87% 87%
3 Gen Elec deb 5s.. 102% 102% 102%
?0 Goodrich 6%s _101% 101% mi% ,
120 Good Tire 8s 21_102 100% 102
21 Good Tire 8* 41....115% 114% 115
7 Grd Trk Can 7s.... 113% 113% ...
17 Grd Trk Can 6s_103% 102% 103%
31 Gt North 7s .109% 109% ....
10 Gt North 6%k ...10i% ioo% 101%
4 Hud A Man r 5s . . 83% 83% 83%
26 Hud*- Man a 1 os.. 03% 63 ....
22 Bum O A Ref 6%s 98% 98% ...
4 1111 Cen 5%s .102 101 % 102
16 Ind ,St eel 5s .101 100% ....
10 In Met 9 7 8% |
2 Into R T 7s. ft2 91% |
23 Tut R T 5s . 70 69 %
12 Inter M M 6s. 90 89% 90
7 Inter Pap r 5s_ 87% 87% ...
21 Iowa C>n r 4s.... :’.«% 36 36%
2 K C F S & M 4s... 97 % .
8 K C South 6s. 86% 86 86%
34 K C Term 4s . 82 81 % _
4 Kelley -Spring T 6s. 109 108% 109
1 Harka St os 60. . . 90%
2 I .arid G St L 1st 5s 95
2 Hehigh VhI 6s ...103
4 H A N ref 3%s...l04% 10 4% 104%
3 Manati Sugar 7%s. 96%
23 Mkt St Rv con 5s. 92 91%
$97 Mid Steel cv 5s_ 91 89% 9ft
8 M A St I. ref 5s.., 36% 35% 36%
36 M S P ASSM 6 %s. 105 101% 104%
109 M Iv A T p In 6s C 96% 95% ..
24 M K A T n p 1 5s A 81% 80% 81%
1207 M K A T n ad 5s A 61% 69% 61
16 Mo Pac con 6s ... 9 7% 97%
58 Mo Par gen 4s. 67% 60% 61%
6 Mont Pow 6s A. . . . 97% 96%
30 N Eng TAT 1st 5s c 99% 99 99 %
75 N OTA M Inc 6s. 79% ..
117 N Y Cen d 6s.103% 102% 103%
150 N Y C rAi 6s. 97 96% 96%
6 N Y Cent con 4s.. 80%
1. X Y C A St L d 4s. 86%
32 N Y Ed ref 6%s.ll0% 110% ..
18 N Y N H A II 6s 48 68% 68 68%
22 N N T r 6s 41,... 105% 106% ...
11 N T T g 4%s- 93% 91 93%
5 N Y W A B 4%s. . 47% .
1 Nor A Sou 5s .... 66% .
23 Nor Am Ed 6s.... 04% 93% 94
78 Nor Pac 6s .108% 107% 108%
41 N P r A 1 5s . 99% 99%
ft Nor Pac p 1 4s.... 85% .
10 N 8 P ref 5s . 91 % ....
68 N W B T 7s.107% 107% ....
1 Ore A Cal 5s _ 99% .
20 Ore S H 4s . 91% 91 91%
36 O W R R A X 4s.. 80% 79% 80% j
6 Otis Steel 7 % s. . . 92% 92 92 %'
10 Pac G A E 6s . .. 92% 91% 92%
29 Pac T * T k 82... ftl % 91 91% j
1 Pack Mot Chr 8s. .108 ..
3 Pan-Am P A T 7s 102 .
55 Pa 11 R 6 4s .109 4 109'; 109.4
15 Pa U R gen 5s .100 4 100V» 100**
€1 Pa R R gen 4 914 91 914
7 Pere Marq ref 6a. 964 96 90S
40 Phil Co e t 6a. .1004 loO 1004
22 Port R 1. A: 1* 5a 84 4 *4 *4'-a
P A- R Ss w w 125 4 125 125 4
23 Pub Serv 6s ....85 844 $•’>
26 Reading gen 4» . So3* 85 4 $5 4
3 Rern Arms a f 6a.. 94 4 .
5 Repub 1 A; S col 5s 95 4 • • .
20 R I A A- I .a 4 4a 794 79 79*4
13 S L I M S 4s R 4 d $4 8* 84 4 $44
34 s 1. A a F p 1 Is A 6*4 68 4
63 S 1. A S F adj 6.* 76 4 7*5
80 S P A S F I no 6a 59 4 69 4 79 4
60 S l. S eon 4s . 7*
5 SPA K C S li 44a 80 79 4
6 S A A A P 1st 4a 7«4 7 4 4 74*,
S3 S Air I* con 6s 59 4 69 4 69 4
165 Sea A 4 adj 5a 2 6 24 4 *7 4
IS Sea A I. ref 4s .. 414 40 41 *4
1 Shar S Hoop 8s A 984 *.
45 Stu C O col 7 a ...100 4 100 4 .
11 Sin <’rude O 64* • 984 9*4
14 South R T 6s . . . 95 94 4 95
17 South Pa cv 4s ....914 914
26 South Pa ref 4a 174 67
2 South Pa col tr 4s 82 4
31 South R gen 64s 1014 1°' 1°14
::7 South Kail con 5a 96 95 4 9t»
4 9 South Rail gen 6 8 *7 4 98
100 S P R Sug 7a ...100 9? 4 100
11 Stan O of C deb 7a 105 4 10.4 1»‘5 4
Third Ave ref 4s 69 4 69 4 69 4
1 ! • tvs tdj 69 ' » • - • •
9 Tobao Products 7s 103** 103 4 . ....
3 To S L A W 4a 7 4 73 4 7 4
2 IT B A P f.a A Ctfs 97 4 97 4 9*4
1 Un Pro 1st 4s. 914
2 Un Pae cv 4s.. . 914 ••
6 Un Par ref 4*. 84 4
2’ Union Tank Car T»104
4 Utd Drug 8a .1134 113
12 Utd Fuel Gas 6a... 914 91
1 U S Hub 7 49 ... .107 4
9:.’ U ii Rubber 6a. 884 *7 4 $8
11 U S Steel af 5s_103»a 103’* ..
10 Utah P A U r»s- 914 914 • •
2 Va-Car Ohm ww .. 93 9:4
39 Va-Car Ohm 7a et. 974 97
3 Va Ry £*» . 96 4
2 "Wabash 1st 5s. 9$ 4
6 West Mr 1st 48.... 624 02*4
1 West Pac 6a 82 4
4 West Un 64a .110
4 West Uler 7a .108
15 Wick-Speneo St 7a 98 974
2*0 Wilson A Co cv 6a.. 93 924 92 *
21 Wife Cent gen 4a. 7 9 s*
Total sales of bonds today were $11
651,000 compered with $1 1,536,000 previ
ous day and $13,824,000 a year ago.
N. Y. Curb Bonds
New York. Jan. 19.—Transactions on
the New York curb bond market today
were an follow*:
Domestic.
2 Allied Packer 8s . 83% 83% 83%
.. Aluminum 7s, *25.103% 103% 103%
4 Alum 7s '23 .102 101 \ 101%
1 Am G & E 6 9 96%
10 Am L A T 6s WW.100% 10"% 100%
7 Am Rep Coup 6s 89 89 \9
3 Am Sum Tob 7%s. 9'- 95% 96
4 Am T A T 6s *24.1 tt 1 »i. 1"1 % 1"1%
42 Ana Copper 6s ...10:% 10|% |"i%
13 Ana Cop 7s *29 ..103% 10:;% 103%
20 Armour A Co 7s..105% 105% 105%
2 Heaver Board 8s.. 68 68 68
1 Heav Prod 7%s ..100% 1"0% 1%
7 Beth .«■ 7s *23 ...104 % 104% 1"4%
1 Beth i 7s '35... 103 103 10;{
6 tan Nat Ry c4 7s.110% 110 110%
1 Cent Steel 8s .1"7% 107% 1"7%
1 Cities Serv 7s R .125 125 125
2 Cities Serv 7s C.. 93 93 93
1 Colum Grap 8s .. 30 30
6 Con Gas Halt 6s .102% 102% 102%
11 Con Textile Ss .. 99% 99% 99%
3 Cop K.\ An 88 *. 4. 1 "1 % 1"1 1"1
4 Petr.- A Co 7%s .103 10‘ % i"2%
5 lJet r Edison 63 wi.103% 10.’% ]0;i%
10 Gulf ' Ml 5s .. 97
10 Hood Rubber 7s ..102 I'M * 102
1 Inter It T Km '2?.. 96% 96% 96%
4 Inter R *1* 8s ctf . 95 95 95
9 K C PA. 1. 5s ... 8 9 % *9% 89%
10 Kenn topper 7s. 104 1"4 l"4
13 Laclede Gas 7e ...101 101 l"l
23 Louis G A E 5s 90% 9"'~ '•"%
1 Morris A Co. 7%s.ino% 106% 106%
12 Nat. Acme 7 % m . . 96% 96 96 %
1 «»hio Pcwr 6« FI.. 9" % 90% 9"%
1 F'enn P. A L. 5s.. 90 9" 90
1 Pill. Et. 5 %H.10"% 10"% 100%
B I’. P. 7 % s w w.,103 1 on 103
9 P S. C. N. J 7s. ..1 "4 103% 103%
1 Robert Gair 7 s... 98% 95 % 98%
8 H. R. 7s, 1923.... 101 % l"i% 1"1 %
1 Shawsheen 7> ....104% 1" 4 % 104%
6 Shef. Farm* 6%»..100% 10" 1""
1 Solvay A Cie gs..l0B% 106% 105%
9 8. Cal. Edison 5s. 92% 92% 92%
5 S. Bell Tel 7s. 102% 10:’% 102%
*1 8.O.N Y. 7s. 1 925.104 % 1"4% 104%
10 8.0. N. Y. 7s. 1 9 30.108 108 108
1 SO. N. Y 7s. 1 931.109 1 "9 1 "9
X S. O. N. Y 6 % v. .1"7% 107 107 %
3 8ft.. A « ✓ 7s. 1 931.102 % 1«2% 1"2%
2 Swift A Co. 5s... . 92% 92 92
3 Tidal Osage 7 ... 103 1"3 1"3
22 In. Oil Prod. 8s.. 101% 101 l"l%
2 U. R of H. 7 %s. 106 % 106% 106 %
14 Vacuum Oil 7a ...107%. 1"7% 107 %
2 Valvollne 7s .102% lo.% 102%
Foreign.
1* Argon. 7s. 1923 . . . 10" % 100% 1""%
57 King Neth. 6« . . . . 98% 9*% 98%
10 Mexico Gov. 6s... 62% 5 2% 52%
5 Mexico Gov. 5a.... 15 1* 15
11 Rep. Peru Rs. 98% 9 8 98 %
3 Rus. 6%s ctfs-10% 10% 1"%
1 Rus. 5%s ctfs.... 10% 10% 10%
11 Swiss 6%s .103% 103% 103%
KaiiNHi City Produce.
Kansas City, Mo.. Jan. 19.— Butter—Un
changed.
Eggs—Unchanged.
Poultry—Heavy hens 1c higher. 21c;
light hens 3< higher. 16c; broilers, light
spring*, heavy springs, roosters, turkeys,
ducks unchanged; geese 3c lower. 13c.
liar silver.
New Y’ork, Jan. 19.—Foreign Bar Silver
—66 % c.
Mexican Dollars—49%c.
Omaha Produce
(By State Department of Agriculture
Bureau of .Markets kiui .Marketing.)
BUTTER
Creamery—Local jobbing price to retali
ate Extras, 53c; extras in 60-lb, tuba. 62c;
standards. 60c; firsts. 48c.
Dairy—Buyers are paying 35c for
best table butter (wrapped roll): 30c for
common and 27c tor clean packing stock.
BUTTE It F AT
Local buyers paying 44c at country sta
tions; 60c de.ivered * »mah«t.
LOGS.
The warm weather is having a bad ef
f *«• t on the market, with weakness In
prices noticeable.
Local buyers *re paying around 32c for
selected lots of extra quality* No 2 held
eggs and small eggs. 23c. cracks. 20c. On
the basis of cas' count most buyers an
paying about $9 00 per case for fresh
eggs, deliver'd Omaha.
Jobbing price to retailers: Fresh: Spe
cials. 3''.. selects, 33c; No 1 small. 30c.
Storagv Selects, 31c; trade, 26c; cracks,
23c.
POULTRY.
Live—Heavy hens and pullets. 18c: light
hens and pullets, 14c, spring roosters,
smooth l*-g 16. ; stags, all sizes. 12c; leg
horn poultry about 3c lees; old cocks, i"c;
ducks, f>'. full feathered 16c; geese. fat.
full feathered. 15c; turkeys, fat. nine
pounds and up. 25c; no culls, sick or crip
pled poultry wanted
Jobbing price of dressed poultry to re
tailers Hroi!»-rs, 40e. springs, 24c; heavy
hens. 24. ; light hens. 23c; rooaters, lsc,
ducks, 24c; gee»c. 24c; turkeys, 45c.
CHEESE
Local Jobbers are selling American
cheese, fancy grade, at about the follow
ing priors; Twins, 30c; single daisies,
31c; double daisies, 20. ; Young Americas,
31c; longhorn, .Me. square prints. 31’*c:
brick, 29 Vie.
BEEF CUTS.
The wholesale prices of beef cuts In ef
fect today are as lollows
Ribs—No, 1, 20c; No. 2. 25c; No. 3, 10c.
Loins—No. 1, 32a; No. 2. 30y; No. 3. 18c.
Rounds—No. i, 155<3c; No. 2, 15c;No. 3.
12 c.
Chucks—No. 1, 12c; No. 2, lllgc; No. 3.
gr.r
Plates—No. 1. 8c; No. 2, me; No. 3.
«^c.
FRUITS.
Strawberries—Florida, per quart, C0c\
Bar anas—Baaed ol aid I ins price ol 9
per It $4 O'i07.66.
Oranges—Ext? a fancy California navels
per bo\. bh ordlnif to o/.c, $3.2505.25.
Lemonn—Extra California. duu. *tt*
per box, 1
siz> s, $7.6(*; Lhne.s, 100. $3 00.
Grapefruit —Florida fancy, all sizes, per
box, $3.7.'<f'V4*50; California, all sizes, per
box, $4.5005.25,
Cranberries— Bbl., 100 lbs. 113.60017 03
box. L0 lbs. $8.50; Jersey Howes, 117 00.
Apples—Delicious according to size and
qualitv, pe r box. $2.00'd 4.no; Washington
Jonathans, per box. $1.5002.25; Iowa
fancy, p r bbl., $5.50; Northern Spy,
$1 85. fancy Grimes Gn'dej. •*«•? bb! 96 60.
choice, per bb!., $3.50; Missouri Pippin,
fancy, per bbl . $4.50; Northern Spy,
per box, $1.75 hi 2.00; choice Hood River
Winter Banana, per box, $2.00; fancy,
$2.75; Spltzenberger. fancy, per box, $2.76;
Gann, fancy, per bbl., $4.50.
Quinces—California, fancy, per box. II.oo
Pears—Winter Nells, fancy. ,>er box.
$2.00; Hood River Dutchess, per box, $4.on.
Grapes—Red Emperor, per keg, $6.60;
Almeria (while), per keg. $9 00.
Figs—California. 24 x-oz. carton box.
$2.75; 50-carton box, $3.75.
Dates — Holiowi, 70-lb. butts, 10c;
Dromedary, case. 36-oz.. If-75.
Avocados—Alligator pears, per dozen,
$12.00.
VEGETABLES. *
Potatoes -Minnesota Iter River Ohlne
No. J, $1.2501 50 per cwt.; Nebraska Early
Ohios. No. 1. $1.25 per cwt.; No. 2. 73c to
$1.«>0 per cwt ; Idaho Russets. $1.60 per
cwt.; Netted Gems, $2.00 per cwt.
JSweet Potatoes—Bushel basket, $1.75;
obi.. $3.00.
Old Beets. Carrots. Turnips, Parsnips,
Rutabagas—Per lb.. _8*c; in sacks, per
lb . 2 ’yc
Artichokes—Dozen, $2.50.
Lettuce—Imperial Valley head. 4 dozen
crate. $4.76; per dozen, $1.25; hothouse
leaf, per dozen bunches. 4 5c.
Peppers—Green, market basket, per lb.,
25c.
Egg Plant—Selected, dozen. $2.7503 50
Tomatoes—Florida. 6-basket crate, $9.00.
Beans—Southern, wax. hamper. $5 000
7.06
Onions—Southern, per dozen bunches.
90c; Ohio Whites $3 00 per cwt.; Imported
Spanish, crate. $2 5i); Red Globes, per lb
2Hc; yellow, per lb., 2^c.
(’abbage—Crutes, per lb. 2*-fcc: 23-50 lbs.,
" '* * . red. per lb., celery cabbage, per
lb . 13c; Brussel! sprouts, per lb., 2(»c.
Celery—Michigan. t*«»r dozen. 60076*
Idaho, per dozen. $1.3501.6001 *3: Cali
fornia (nut trimmed), per crate. $7.00.
Parsley—Dozen bunches. 90a
Splnaeh—Per bushel. $1.60.
Cauliflower—California, crates, $2.00.
Garlic—Per lb.. 26c.
Cucumbers—‘Hot house, per dozen, $3 50.
HAY
Prices at which Omaha dealers sre
selling In carload lots follow
I pland Prairie—No. 1, $15.00013.50; No.
2. $12.00014.00.
Midland Prairie—No, ], $14.00015.00;
No. 2, $12.4)0 013.00; No. 3. $8,00010.00.
Lowland Prairie—No. 1, $10.00012 00;
No. 2. $8.00 09.00.
A Haifa—i.’hslce, $22.000 24.oo ; No. 1,
$20,000 21.50. standard, $18.00020 00; No.
2 $ 1 5.00 017.00. No. 2. $1 2.000 14.00.
Straw—Oat. $8.00010.00; wheat. $7,000
9.00.
FEED.
Omaha mills and lubbers are selling
th* ir products In round bits at the follow
Ing prices, f o. b. omsha:
Bran, $26.00; brown short®. $27.00. gray ■
short.®, $2-8.50; middlings. $30.00; reddog, !
$:*.3.00; alfalfa meal, choice. $2? 50. No. 1.
126.60; No. 1*. |23 '*0: linseed meal. #6 7 1
cottonseed meal. 43 per cent. 132 00; hoi"
tny feed, white, $29.50; yellow. $29 1
buttermilk, condeneed, 6 to t barrels, f.lo
per lb.. flake buttermilk, 600 to l.kOo lbs.,
•He per lb.; egg sheila, dried and ground.
100-ib. bags$25 00 per ton.
FI.orR
First patent, *,s $7.13; fancy cDar
$6.00. White or yellow cornmeal. per cwt .
$1.75. (Quotations are for round lota f. o b.
Omaha.
SEED.
Omaha buyers are paying the following
prices for field seed, thresher run. de
livered Omaha. Quotatona are on the
basis of hundredweight measure:
Seed—Alfalfa $12 00 to $18 00; red
clover. $9,00017.00. alsylte. $9 00 to
$15.00. tlmothv $4 00 to *6 25: Sudan
gru>*. $9 5Off 11 00. white blossom sweet
(lover. $6.00 to $11.00; millet. high
grade German. $2.25 to $2 75; common
millet $1 5" to $2 00; amber aorghum
cane, $2.0002 73.
HIDES. Ft* P.S. WOOL.
Prices punted below are on the basis of
buyers- weight* ami selections, for goods
delivered at Omaha:
Wool pelts. It 25 to $? 60 for full wooled
skins; spring iambs, 76c to *1 00 for late
take off; clips, rm value W(*ni |0c to 95c
Tallow—No. V 7V ; B tallow. 7c; No 2
tallow, 6c. A grease, 7 Sc; n grease, 7e;
yellow, grease. 6'*ac, brown grease. Cc.
Current receipt hides, 11c and iMc: green
hides. Pc and 9c; bulls. 8c and 7c; brand
ed. 8c; glue hides kip
calf. 1201Otyc: deacons. 1<V egoh;
glue calf and kip, 5c. hm«e hides. $( i>u
and $3.59 each; ponies. $1.76 each; colts.
25c each; hog skins. 15c **arh; dry hides.
No. 1. 15c per lb.; dry salted. 12c lb.; dry
glue. Gc lb
Furs—Skunk, central states. ns. row
stripe, Vo 1 large. $3 00. No. 1 medi im,
$2 00; N*». 1 small. $1 60; No 2 good un
prime. $1 n<> Muskrat, western, fait ;« ge.
$1 60; medium. $1 00; email. 7 . Raccoon,
central, ordinary, large, $5 00; med I mi,
$3 60: small. $2 25; No. 2. *2 26 Mink,
centra!, ordinary, large. $5 60; medl im,
$3 75; small. SI SB; No •. $160 W ,11.
northwestern, soft, large, $12 "0: medium.
*9 00; amall. f« 50; No 2. $3.50 Fox. cen
tral. grey, large $2 00; medium. 11 6o:
small. 75c; No. 2. 76c Civet, prime. 60
©25c. Lynx cat $9 0001 00 Reaver, le
gally caught $30 0005 00 Fisher. $76 oo
©10.00 House cst. 60010c Lynx. $16.00
06 00 Otter. $30 OO0f.no Weasel white.
II 00025c. wild rat $1 60026c. Badyer,
11.60010c. Marten. $40 0005.00. Btar.
$25 0001.00
( liicHRo Storki*.
Rang'* of prices of the leading Chicago
Mocks furnished hy Logan A Hryan, 2l*t
Peters Trust building;
•t 'lose.
American Radiator. 8f>
Armour A Co. pfd. . . 91 b,
Armour Leather com. 9 7»
l'dlson corn .i;nv>
Continental Motor. HR .
1 Ma inond Match. Ilk
Karl Motor. 1
Hartman . 91
Libby (new ). 7
Montgomery-Ward . 21
Nat. Leather (new).
Figgley Wiggly.
Stewart-Warner . 8 2
Swift A Co .
Swift Int. 20b.
Union Carbide. do’j
Wahl . .. &.* >3
W rig ley ..* . . . . 102
•"Close" is the last recorded sale.
New York Sugar.
New York. .tan. 19—The raw sugar
market was quieter today, hut the under,
tone was firmer. Spot Cuba* were uu
« hanged at 3l*c. < If, equal to 6 o.c
for centrifugal, with no sale* reported,
hut February shipment was 1-I6c higher
at 3 5-Kic. cost p nd freight, equal to
2.09-- for centrifugal, on sales of 10.000
bags to an operator.
The raw sugar futures market opened
unchanged to 2 point* lower under scat
tered liquidation, but firmed up on cover
ing and buying by trade interests, owing
t.« the steadier feeling in the spot mark*'.
Final prices were 3 to 6 point? net higher.
Closing: March, S.35c; May, 3.47c, July,
60< September. 2.67c.
Thu market for refined was easier an1
prices were 10 points lower to the bass
of 6.80c for fine granulated, owing to tlm
recent decline In the price of raws. Tim
demand, however, was still light and
limited to nearby requirements only.
Refined futures nominal.
When in Omaha Stop at
Hotel Rome
Single-Six
We renewed a Single-Six that
has a registered mileage of
11,168 miles. The parts required,
including a fender, show less
than one-fourthtcent a mile,
Richardson Motor Gar Go.
3016 Harney Street
Men! My Dollar - Swapping
Sale Ends Saturday!
Can You Imagine An Offer Like This?
Last week I found myself surrounded by bills galore that I must pay this month.
I announced the greatest .sale of my career to raise badly needed cash to meet my
obligations. To insure quick sale, 1 sold goods below cost—several thousand
dollars worth. Even now I find my goal as yet unreached. So better prices than
ever will prevail here Saturday. My stock-dollars I’ll swap for your cash dollars
—giving you the best of it. Come in and let me prove it. You'll not regret it.
Shirts
In heavy madras materials,
with or without collars. Reg
ular $2.50 and S3 values, on
sale at—
$1.25
Silk Ties
All $1 Ties Now 50c
Hundreds of others, in all
wanted colors; one of our
real typical values. On sale
35c
Collars
The well-known Van Heu
3en collars will go on sale—
3 for $1.00
Aratex Semi-soft Collars,
4 for $1.00
Gloves
Silk, Kid and Moca at a
positive reduction of
33 >4 %
Shoes
Well-known Dunlap and
Stratford Shoes, in black
or brown; 17 and $8
values. Priced—
$3.95 and $4.95
Hosiery Specials
Cotton Hose—7 pairs for $1.00
Eiffel Silk Hose—per pair, 50c
Silk and Wool Hose-—per pair, 75c
Silk Lisle Hose—4 pairs, $1.00
Men’s Wool Hose, 7oc values,
4 pairs for $1.00
Boys’ Shoes
In all sizes at these amazing prices—
$1.95 and $2.45
Underwear
Chalmers and Reis Wor
sted Union Suits, $2.50
values. On sale at $1.25
in all desired shades; $3
value*— $1.25
Other Men’s Wear at Drastic Prices—Hurry for Best Selections
109
North 16th
Street
JOHN FELDMAN
Directly
Opposite
Postoffice