The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, June 09, 1923, CITY EDITION, Page 17, Image 17

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    SOUTH OMAHA
BRANCH OFFIC.*?, 24TH AND N STS.
__ MA. 2688
Keeper and Four Men Fined
on Disorderly Charges
Paul Kuta, 4628 South 'Twenty
seventh street, was fined $15 In South
Omaha municipal court yesterday
morning on a charge of maintaining
a disorderly house. Kuta and five
r other men were arrested in a raid on
the place Thursday night.
J. Romping, 4007 South Twenty
eighth street, one of the Inmates, de
fied the judge to get any money from
him. He was fined $50. Tom Zager,
4427 South Twenty-seventh street,
was discharged. Andrew Plevanek,
4636 South Twenty-seventh street, was
fined $10; Earl Matheson, 4418 South
Eighteenth street, $10, and Mack Ber
nard, 4636 South Twenty-seventh
street, $10,
James Bilek, 6321 Monroe street,
held as complaining witness, was dis
charged.
Funeral for Woman River
Victim to Be Held Today
Funeral services for Mrs. Mary
Opocensky, 32. 1322 Polk sireel, who
disappeared from her home a week
ago and whose body was found float
ing the Missouri river Thursday by
fishermen, will he held this aft
ernoon at 2 at the Korlsko under
taking establishment, Twenty-third
arid O streets, and at the Bohemian
Presbyterian church, Twenty-first and
Q streets, at 2:30, Rev. Charles Kou
kol officiating.
Burial will be in Bellevue ceme
tery.
Mrs. Opocensky is survived by her
husband, Fred, t.id (wo sons, Carl,
12, and Fred Jr.. 8.
Probably no inquest will be held.
Man Trying to Bring Home
Bacon Is Caught; Fined $8
Mack McCoy, 3617 Q street, was
only trying to bring home the bacon,
he told the judge in youth Omaha mu
ff nicipal court yesterday morning be
fore he was fined 8 and given a 30
day suspended sentence.
Where he made his big mistake, he
said, was in taking it from the Swift
it Co. plant. That, he observed, takes
a fast man. He was arrested by Spe
cial Officer McCraig on a charge of
theft.
Jetter Beverage Company
Building Razed by Blaze
Fire of unexplained origin which
broke out shortly after 2 yesterday
morning in the story and a half frame
storage building of the .letter Bev
erage coqjpany, Thirtieth and Y
streets, virtually destroyed the struc
ture.
The loss is estimated at $25,000,
partly covered by insurance. The
blaze, at its height, lighted up the
sky for miles.
^ illiam Springer, Omaha
Resident 33 Years, Dies
William Springer, 64. resident of
South Omaha for 33 years, died
Thursday night at the home of his
sister, Mrs. Caroline Ahelein, 1509 Z
street. He also is survived by an
other sister in Germany.
Funeral services will he held Sat
urday afternoon at 3 at Karisko's
chapel. Rev. M. Adam will officiate.
• Burial will be in Laurel Hill ceme
tery.
Detectives Arrest Man
for Deserting Family
W. E. Simpson of Lincoln was ar
rested yesterday afternoon iri South
Omaha by Detectives Kean and Car
ter on the advices of the sheriff of
Lancaster county and is being held as
a fugitive from justice. It ia al
leged Simpson abandoned his wife and
family at Lincoln. He was taken
1 ack to th*3 state capital last eve
ning by Lincoln ocicers.
It's a Boy!
Desk Sergeant Tom Crawford of
the South Omaha station got out of
bed at midnight Thursday night to
take his wife to the hospital.
He was wreathed in smiles when
he reported for duty this morning,
however, over the arrival of a 12
pound baby boy.
Both mother and child are reported
to be doing well.
Pirnir Postponed.
Sarpy county picnic, scheduled for
today, has been postponed until
June 23.
Soiilh Omaha Brevities.
Modern lot. 52x147. for sale. 13th St
boulevard MA. 13*4 —Adv.
A messae** wa* ir<elved Th»»r*day bv
.Tam** Ansrlin. 4324 South Nineteenth
afreet informing him of the death Thur*
day morning at San Bernardino, Cal , of
hi* brother
The Proereanlve Improvement Hub will
hold a mans meeting In Bohemian Na
tional hall. Twenty-first and U streets,
toniRht at *. The aubjert of overcrowded
condition* In the schools of South Cmaha
will ha taken up.
Many of the locomotives on rail
way* in England are painted green,
while others are In hues of red, pur
ple, brown and yellow.
Mfarriagp Licenses.
The following couple* were ls*ued li
cense* to wed
Willie Taylor. 23, Omaha, and Cutla
Alston. 27. Omaha
Rudolph A Nelson. 21. Omaha, and
Ada \j. Hooker. 20. Omaha
John A Jenkins. 44. Scot tshluff. Neb.,
and Josephine Soudera. 40, Mlflln. Pa.
Karl \V Morion. 24 Omaha. and
Pauline Spear*. IK. Omaha
Arthur O. Neely 37. Omahii, and Bau
lah HtiWer 23. Ojnahe
Albeit Kaiser, 29. Omaha, and Annie
Zimmerman. 2n. Oretns. Neb
Conrad I^vln. 29. Madrid, la., and Edna
F>#lander. 2f». Manteca. Cal
Dorsey E Jones. 31. Omaha, and Hazel
Inman. 21, Omaha
Nell Ryan, over 21, Omaha, and Mar
garet Meyer, over 21. Omaha
Harvev Petersen. 2J. Omaha, and Elvira
Johnson. 24. Omaha
Edward Dlttbemer. 24. Mndlann. Neb.
and Madeline Rarnhard. 21. Madison, N#b
Herarhel V. Airy. 32. Council Bluff* Is.,
and Love Pierson. 21. Council Bluff*. I*.
Births and Deaths.
Birth*.
Tonv and Jennie Travado. 10ft* South
Twentieth street, bov. .
Rudolph and Hilda Efgers. 1*23 Lake
Street, boy.
John and Virginia Hoff/nan. hoapltal.
br/'
f'.ul mid H.l.n Eauahman, ho.plt.l,
hT:dw»r<! and Ann. c»r». Forty-.lirhih
and M .irr.i., alrl.
K.dward and Vara Ehnlnrar. ho.plt.l,
b ii'r.nk and Krl.tlna ro.pl.il, 1110 WII
Hem street, boy
r.ul and My r I la Whlta. 3R I * Vall.y
r V.rbk »nd F.mina Rn..n, IMiO Houth
T'vniy el,hih «tr»ft. b"y.
Kr*d nnd Haian Callow, 1715 Arbir
*' EoiVla "and Ann. llavlry. IISI Aoulh
Tw»nl»-fi«t «lr*»t, bnv
i|»ur*« and Anna .Mf«*ra<hmldt. hoapi
U5Hob0yaBd ElUab.th Bnunalaa. ho.plt.l,
b IlnHtha.
•lull. Cohn. JO. ho.ollal
ll.rtha Morrill. 20, hoapltal.
William Burtia Hluot. 3. hoapltal,
*f
t
Omaha Grain
Omaha, June 8.
Total receipts at Omaha 165 cars,
principally corn, against 83 cars last
year. Total shipments were 76 cars
against 108 cars a year ago.
The demand for cash wheat on the
Omaha market was rather slow most
of the sales being in the late session,
unchanged to l-2c lower, generally un
changed. Corn was in good demand,
1-2 to 3-4c higher. Oats were l-4c low
er. Rye was quoted about unchanged.
Barley was unchanged .
There was rather general selling of
w'heat after the opening of the Chi
cago futures market. Support was
lacking until the market reached
$1.09 1-2 for July, when the decline was
stopped by resting orders in the hands
of commission houses.
Harvesting of wheat will start Mon
day in Oklahoma and the weather in
that state is now favorable. Hxport
demand was said to be poor, however,
it was reported that a Chicago cash
house had bought some cash wheat in
Winnipeg. Corn was also somewhat
depressed in the early trading, but
there was no pressure of consequence,
most of the selling being of a local
character and when the wheat stad
ied corn was turned strong. During
the latter part of the session trade
was generally of an evening up char
acter and the market displayed no de
cided tendency.
Broomhall's Liverpool cahle says:
There is a fair business being tran
sacted in Manitobas in the United
Kingdom. Some parcels of Indian
wheat are also being purchased. Of
ferings of Argentine wheats continue
in fair volume, hut the demand for
this variety has been slow. There is
still a good business going in corn,
mostly in the Plattes. Offerings of
American have been rather limited
and firmly held recently.
Buenos Aires: Weather is cloudy
with rains expected in parts. N'ew
crop wheat preparations have made
satisfactory progress Prices for
wheat were unchanged to lc lower.
Foreign demand was not keen while
country offerings appear in fair vol
ume.
Corn prices closed unchanged to
t-2c higher. There is a continued
fair demand for export. Offerings,
however, nre in good demand and the
supply of this cereal from the interior
to the ports is being maintained.
Rock Island report says: The great
est need is for warm, dry growing
weather. The general outlook is only
for a fair crop with probably no one
crop establishing a record, except pos
sibly flax, which promises to be the
largest in the history of the country
on account of the good prices and the
great campaign being waged through
out the northwest for increased pro
duction of this crop.
Modern Miller crop outlook says:
Excessive moisture is the cause of
much concern in Kansas and Okla
hnma, while some complaints of this
nature also come from Illinois. In
many sections of the southwest rain
has been so frequent that crop prog
ress has not been normal.
Estimates from Kansas show some
reduction and average 100,000,000
bushels. Oklahoma, 35.000,000 bushels.
Missouri prospects fairly well main
tained. Wheat show improvement in
Indiana and to a lesser degree in
Ohio and Illinois.
R. O. Cromwell wires Ramson
Brothers from Grand Forks: Minot to
Devils Rake, 50 miles West of Reeds,
will need rain soon. West of Reeds
stubbled wheat very weedy. All crops
late. Grasshoppers destroying wheat.
Rye limited areas. Other crops except
rye depend on future weather. Mois
ture sufficient for two weeks east of
Reeds. Durum acreage less; hard
wheat little change. Devils Rake east,
wheat good.
WHEAT
No. 3 dark hard 1 tar. Si in
No. 1 hard winter 4 • ar* $1 94
No 2 hard winter. 4 cara, $1 04, 2 cara.
$1 "6.
No 3 hard winter: 2 cara. II 93; i ear,
$1 . t < ar. II 05
No 5 him! winter: 1 car. 11.49. 18 per
cent heat da mag**
•No. yellow h.rd 1 *ar, $1.94.
No. 2 mixed: 1 car 97 4 c.
CORN.
No 2 white 2 tarn. 81 *r. apeclal bill
ing. 1 car. 81c. ape. ial billing. 8 cara.
8(1c.
No 2 yellow: 2 car". 83*c apeclal bill
InK 2 car*. *!«• special billing. 8 cara.
80 4c; 1 mr. 80 * e
No | ye'low. 1 nr, 79 *c.
No 2 mixed: 1 car. 8l< special billing
1 « tr, so.- special billing 4 cara. 794c.
No 4 mixed. 1 car, 7 9 * c
Sample mixed: 1 car, 77c, heating.
OATS
No 2 white: 1 car. 43*-*«i
No 3 white: 9 car*. 42‘4c
N»> ♦ white 1 rat. 42 ’ * ■ . 1 car. 42c
, Sample white; i . ar. 4i*c. apeclal bill
ing. 1 < ar 41 *c 4.5 per cent heat dam
age. l car. 41c, 13 5 per cent heat dam
age
RYE
No 3: 1 car. 66',r
BARLEY.
No. i B- H car. 61c,
1 tar. not oau. 39 per cent barley,
41 V
Oil A HA RECEIPTS AND SHIPMENTS
(Carlota.)
Week Year
Receipts— Today Ago Ago
Wheat . 31 J9 11
Corn 88 81 64
<>n»s 38 14 14
Rye . 1 1
Barley . 1 . . ...
Shipment*—
Wheat 5 12 17
Corn ........ 44 52
Oats . . 26 89 20
R> e . . 1
Barley 1 „ •
PRIMARY RECEIPTS AND SHIPMENTS.
i Bushel*)
Today Wk Ago Yr Ago.
Receipts—
Wheat ... 642.909 7«2.090 718,900
Corn . 8R9.OO0 412.909 1.283.990
Oats . . 541.00 429.000 697.000
Shipmenta—
Wheat . 247.999 819 000 531 009
Corn 456.009 596.009 549.000
Ota 509.000 428.00ft 922.009
EXPORT CLEARANCES
Bushela- Today Yr Ago
Wheat an-1 flour . 822.000 J71.*oo
Com .. 11
Oa»» . 33.0>O 159.000
CHICAGO RECEIPTS
Week Year
Carlota— Today. Ago Aim
W hear. 1 3 29 1 3
Com . 78 61 30 j
Oat* 84 105 195
KANSAS « ITY RECEIPTS
Meek Year
c*arb>ta— Today. Ago Ai"
Wheat 99 97 124
1 'orn . 43 87 74
Out* . 13 4 14
ST. LOUIS RECEIPTS
Week Year
Carlota— Today. Ago Ago
Wheat .9 37 42
Corn 41 63 109
'at* <4 21 42
NORTHWESTERN WHEAT RECEIPTS
Week Year
Carlota - Today. Ago. Ago
Minneapolis .... m& 162 208
Duluth 101 inn 54
Winnipeg ?I4 124 14 J
WlnneatHdla (train.
Minneapolis. Minn , .Tune 8 Wheat —
Cash No I northern. $1 12*01.31* No
l dark northern anting. <holca to fumy,
$1 '**0 1.34* . good to choice, |1 14*0
1 20*; ordinary to good. 1112* 0 1,21*.
Julv. $1 13*. Reptember. $1 13*.
Corn—No. 3 yellow, 77c
Oats—No 3 white. 39%04O*c.
Bariev— 620 60c
Ft ye—No 2. 67 * 0 67 88 0.
Flax—No. 1, $3.8 5.
linn*** City Crnln.
Kanea* city. Mo . June * Wheat No
1 hard, ft n 4 1 1h. No 2 rad. no trad
Ing. July. $1 f>2%; Heptember. 91 02; !>e
ccm bar, 91 02%
Corn -No .7 whit". 17r, No 2 yallnw
M4fc«rlfte No 3 yallnw. fllVfcOMr; No 2
mixed, *i%r. July. 7*%r; Heptembar,
Haptaifi bar. 77 %» ; peratnner, tl2 4*r
hi. I .mil* f*raln.
Pt T.ouia. Mr» . .Inna * -Wheat -Cloae,
July., 41 oh»4 ; Heptembar, 9107%
t orn—July, 1.1%c to M,l%r, September,
7 *«
Oil#—July. 44‘io.
MliMionpolia Flour,
Minnaapoll*. Juna K Flour- Market un
'•banned
Hran*—937 00422* 00.
4 hlt'Nffo Foultry.
Chlrairo. Juna k Poultry Alive: Mar
ket lower, fowl*, 21c; brullera, 39*8 44c;
100a ter*. 12 %t
Chicago Grain
By CHARLES LEYDEN.
Chicago, June 8.—Wheat ^merged
from a tamo session with moderate
losses today, but. a good recovery
from the low point. The swings
were narrow, pending the posting of
the government’s report after the
close. Locals at the outset were in
ci bearish frame of mind, but absorp
tion by commission houses and
spreaders led to a covering move
ment later on.
Wheat closed 1-4 to 3 4c lower; corn
was 5-8c higher to l-8c lower; oats
were unchanged to 1 4c off; rye ruled
3 8 to l-2c advanced, and barley
steady.
Complaints of excessive rains over the
winter wheat belt were more numerous
find induced considerable support In the
July traders, who sold the September
against it. The Winnipeg market con
tinued to manifest a relatively stronger
tone tnan Chicago and closed Independ
ently higher for the second consecutive
day.
Commission House* Buy.
Commission house buying of corn wan
more aggressive today, and with liquida
tion on the wane, tfie yellow * ereal gave
a better account of itself There were
conflicting advices from the southwest
which denied the probability of any ma
terial increase in the country movement
of corn.
There was a less active demand for
oats, especially the July delivery, while
commission houses sold more freely
There was buying of rye by seaboard
houses in removing hedges, while north
west interests continued to hedge. Pres
sure on the whole was less in evidence,
however, and this grain did better than
wheat.
Provisions worked lower under scat
tered commission house selling in the wav
nf realizing. bard was 15 t<> 20c lower
and ribs were 27 1-2 to ,10c down.
Pit Noth.
John H Mauff, executive vice president
of the t'hicngo Board of Trade. an
nounced tonight that futures and spot
trading in cotton seed meal will he r<%.
■timed by the Memphis merchants clear
ing Association on July 1 The estab
lishment of this market is a result of the
demoralization in the cotton seed meal
trao. and it will act as a stabilizer and
bf'ca Indicator for all grades of meal.
All reports emanating out of the win
ter wheat belt continued to dwell on the
fact that too much rain has fallen for
the good of the crop, t Tempera lures have
been unseasonably low for this time of
year, and there has been too little sun
shine to mature the crop Harvesting
will be delayed jn Oklahoma ami also iu
the southern counties of Kansas
‘ ash news from different parts of the
country was a little healthier. In the
northwest, premiums wer«- steady to one
cent higher In the southwest the de
mand was active enough while in Win
nipeg big sales of cash wheat were con
firmed during the past few aavs.
Millers have ben taking huge quanti.
ties of wheat during the past few
dn\s The old crop situation, like last,
year, seems to ho strengthening after the
May nption has passed out Weekly
clearances of wheat and flour from North
America totalled in.6fi2.000 bushels or al
most double the amount shipped out a
year ago.
Corn and Wheat Bulletin.
For the 24 hours ending at 8 a. m.
Friday: Precipitation
Station and State Inches and
W eather Today: !High. xLow. lOOths
Ashland, clear ... 68 57 0 no .
Auburn, clear 76 55 r on
Broken Bow. cloudy. 74 56 n 27
Columbus, cloudy . 71 57 0 on
Culbertson, cloudy.. 75 49 <V40
•Fairbury. cloudy... 7.9 57 nan
•Fairmont, cloudy . 76 57 ft no
Brand Island, cloudy. M 58 n no
Hartington, cloudy.. 75 56 n no
•Hastings, raining 72 58 non
Holdregp. raining 72 58 ft 09
Lincoln, cloudy. . 71 59 o no
•North Loup. raining 75 5 5 ft
North Platte raining 72 ft M
Oakdale, raining. . ... 71 57 <» ft»»
Omaha. cloud> 68 r 4 n fto
O'Neill, raining .. 56 n 03
Red Cloud, raining. 75 59 ftft.',
Tekamah. cl«»U'Fy 71 4 ft ft.’
Valentine, raining 72 6ft non
JHIghest yesterday. xLowe.Mt during 12
hours ending at 8 a m 76th meridian
time, except marked thus*
Rainfall at Iowa station*.
Alta . ft nft'ppw Moines .... ft ftft
Atlantic . ft 00 Kstherville . ft ftft
Carroll . ft ftft In wood . ft ftft
Clarinda . ft on Sioux City. ft 00
Creaton . O.ftftj
Summary of Nebraska Weather C ondition-.
Temperature changes were unimportant
Showers fell at a number of stations in
the central portion
CHICAGO MARKET.
e V T * '
Art. I Open I High. | Low.- J Close. f Ypa.
WhT i i i i
July J 1 IftV 1 1 09 % I 1 1ft V 1 1*%
T 1 1ft V I 1 1ft % 1 10%
Sept 1 09 1 ftf % ’ 1 08%l 1 08% i ft9%
i 1 ft9% • 1 06 % 1 ft9%
Dec 111 1 11 % llft% 1 1 I % 1 11S
1111%! ! 1.11 %
Rye I t |
July I 71% 72% 71 % 72 71 %
Sept ! 72 % 72% 72 71% 79%
Per- I 75 I 75% 75 l 75% 75
Corn !
July I *1 I 82 % I 80S 61 % 81
4ft % «l% »ft%
Rept 77%' 78%' 76% 77% 77%
i f ' 77%;
Dec. 66 % 47% 66% 66% 66%
! 66 % I I I 66 %
Oat* '
July I 42V 42V 41 ' 42% 42%
42V I f
Sept | 18% I :«% 58% 14% *%
Per 4ft % 4ft% 39% 4ft% 4"%
Lard !
July 11 55 I It.15 11 27 | 11 27 11 47
Sept 1 1 55 1 1 62 1 1.62 11 52 11 63
Itiha ' | | 1
July I 9 1ft! 9 9ft ' 9 07 9 10 9 37
Sept 9 55 | 9 55 I 9 ,3ft j 9 3i | 9 63
New York Nilgiir Market.
New York. June « —The raw sugar mar
k et wa* unsettled *nday owing to th*
sharp decline In future* Pri ■ •**■ were
easier with t'uhaa declining to 6!4r « *. t
an<l freight, equal to 9.03c for <en»rifuga!,
with *al**e of 16 non hags at that level
.More was offered at the same price, but
buyers withdrew
Haw sugar futures suffered a severs d*
rllne today under rather general liquida
tion. prompted by the Inactivity In the
spot market-, and the unsettled f*"lmg i><
refmd Commission houses and broker
with both European and Cuban '*on
nerfions were among the principal sellers,
which carried active position" 39 to 41
points below the previous night Stop
loss orders were encountered on the break
but covering checked the de«line and
brought about a rally of 4 to 1*4 points
In th** late trading The close whs iin
Mettled 20 to 30 points net lower Closing
July. 6 94c. September 6 05c. December.
5 50r. March. 4 2 Or
The market for refined sugar was un
settled but there were no changes In quo
tatlona whb'h were at 9 75 0 9 90.- f.*r floe
granulated, hut business was restricted by
the sharp decline in futures One refiner
was offering for account of whom it ntav
roncern. at 9 50c for fine granulated and
reported a fair business at that level.
Refined future* nominal
New York l.enernl.
New York, Jun* * —Wheat *sdo‘ *r
regular. No S red winter •• I f track
New York domestic, $1.43*4 No. 1 dark
Northern spring *■ i f track New York
export $1.39 *-* No I hai.1 wlnttf I»<>
$1.26'4 No 1 Manitoba Do $1 31 and No.
2 mixed durufn T>o, $119'*
Corn-—-Spot firm: No yellow and No 2
white c. I f New York all rail, $1 62 *4
and No mixed Do, $1 018%
Oat*—Spot steadv No ; white 66c
J,frd—Easy; middle west $11.4601190
'"Other articles unchanged
New York Produce.
N9ty York, June 6 Mutter — Firm
creamer?, higher than extras, 99*4 040**.
creamery extras. 39039’4c; cregmerv
firsts. 37 *4 0 34 N*’, pgcktng Stock current
make No 2. 31c
Eggs--Irregular fresh gathered extra
firsts. 26 •* #f 26 >^c, do firsts 24 025c; do
seconds 23 0 23 *4f’. Pacific coast whites,
extrss. 370.19c. do firsts to extra firsts.
32 0 36c
rheese- Firm
Turpentine mid ftosln
Savannah, Da . June s Turpentine
Firm, 96. sale*. 46 barrels; receipts, 606,
shipments. 646 barrels, stock, 4,399 bar
rets
Hosln—Fltm; sales 639 casks receipts.
1 419 casks, shipments. 746 casks, stork.
66.103 casks
Quote n, f), E. $4 66; F. O. H. $ I 6 6,
1. K. M. $4 70. N $ 4 96. \V(J. $8 1*1. \5 \5
$6 70.
New York Metals.
New York June 9—(‘Upper Quiet elec
fro|ytjc. spot and futures. 16c
Tin Quiet spot and nearby, 42 37c.
futures. 42 1 2c
Iron - Htesdv. prices unchanged.
Lead 8teadv: spot, 7 38*
7,1 n* -Quiet East 8* Louis. spot and
nearby, 6 26c
Antimony- 8pot. 9 71c
4 hlcago I'otatoea.
Phlcago, June x Potatoes 8teadv . re
celptp. 66 cars, total I'nlted Ft*tea ship
merits. 917 cars; Wisconsin and Michigan
sacked round whites. 764196, cwf new
stock weak 8outh Carolina barreled <‘ob
biers, N«> 1. $18 .36; Alabama and Louis
lana sacked Triumphs, too few sales to
establish market
4 hint go Mutter.
Chicago, June x After the advance of
this morning. |h* butter market became
ouleler and more unsettled Mora of the
dealers were free seller* and buyet ft hold
off m much as possible The medium
grade* were particularly quiet Th* *st
market, was also quiet
New York lotion.
New York. Juno 9 The gencial col I on
market < losed very steady at net dr
•’line* of 16 t«» 69 points
New York Poultry
New York. June x Live Poultry -Mar
kei stead) broil* i. by express 3b'
Dressed Poultry —Market alasU> . pints
unchanged
Omaha Live Stock
Receipts were: Tattle. Hogs Sheep
Official Monday. 8.733 13,524 9,137
Official Tuesday_11.314 17.5<>7 7.118
Official Wednesday. . 8.803 16.596 5.213
Official Thursday... 4.695 13.499 7.315
Estimate Friday.... 1.900 20.000 2.700
Five days this week. 35.445 8 1.026 31.483
Same last week. 31.364 53,813 37.875
Same two weeks ago. 37.40.6 58,634 46.149
Same three w’ks ago. 29.327 57,738 42.049
Same days year ago. 32,920 51,799 35,468
Tattle—Receipts. 1.900 head. Demand
for fat cattle was slack and even on a
very moderate Friday suppy steers sold
slowly at prices that were weak at the
weeks decline. Nothing strictly prime
was here Choice grades sold around
$10.00# 10.36. She stock was also slow
at the week's break of 25#50c or more.
Stockers and feeders were slow and un
changed
Quotations on cattle; Choice to prime
beeves, $10.15® 10.65; good to choice
beeves, $9.60® 10.10; fair to good beeves,
19 00# 9 50; common to fair beeves, $8.80#
9.00: choice to prime yearlings, $9.35#
10 00; good to choice yearlings, $8.50®
9.2D, fair In good yearlings, $8.00®8.50;
common to fair yearlings. $7.00®7.85;
good to choice heifers. $7.76® 8.75; fair
to good heifers. $6.00® 7.50; choice to
prime cows, $7 25'?/ 8.00; good to choice
cows. $6.00® 7 2 5; fair to good cows. $4 25
®$5.75; common to fair cows. $2 50®4.O0;
good to choice feeders, $7.85 #8.50; fair
to good feeders. $7.00®7.75; common to
fair feeders, $6.25®7.©0; good to choice
stockers $7.50®g.2o; fair to good stock
ers. $6.50®7.50; common to fair stockers.
$4.50®6.25: stock cows, $300® 4.25; stock
heifers. $4.00#6.00. stock calves. $4 60®
8 50; veal calves. $7 00®9.50; bulls, stags,
etc. $4.25 #8.00
BEEF STEERS.
Vo. Av IT No. A v Pr.
21 . 587 7 80 6 743 7 *6
3 . 650 K.10 ><. 930 8.60
16 . 821 8.85 19. 814 9 00
23 . 1042 9 30 25.1070 9 40
4 . 1 332 9 50 6 . 996 9 60
9.1 321 9 65 43.1 1 28 9.80
25 . 9 10 10.00 16.1325 10 20
26 .1 523 10.25 6.1318 10.35
21.1144 10 40 4 . 1 322 10.50
STEERS AND HEIFERS
6. 721 7 75 5 533 8.00
1 5. 708 8 25 13 820 8 *0
1 4 . 877 9 25
TOWS.
6 . 950 3 25 4 957 3 25
5 . 87 4 4 50 3 990 6 50
3 .1063 6 75 R.1027 7.25
H EIFERS.
38.454 4 00 9 687 7.25
4 . 800 8 00 4 687 8.35
HULLS
1 . 710 5.25 1 1820 5 50
2 . 725 6 00 2 610 6 25
2.1100 7 00
TALVES
R. 402 6.75 M....... 310 8 00
1.180 fc 50 1 . 1 50 8.75
1. 1 *;o 9 50 8 ...... . 156 10 00
Hogs—Receipts, 20.000 head With the
heaviest run nf the week as s bearish
influence the market opened 15c lower
and closed fully 25c under yesterday.
Hulk nf fhe sales was $6.30 ® 6.40, with
a top of $6 50,
HOGS
No. Av Sh Pr No. Av 8h Pr
64. .280 1 10 6.30 95... 180 40 6.35
66...195 40 640 61. .206 80 650
Sheep—Receipts. 2.70o head Demand
was good for f.it Iambs and the supply
cleared eariy at fully steady prices.
Nothing real choice was here, a few
t'allfornias on sale going at $14.75® 15.00.
Feeders are steady and aged stuff weak.
Quotation* on sheep Fat lambs, good
to choice. $13 IT.® 1 4 00; fat lambs fair
in good 912.SO® 12.25; spring lambs,
$ 13.On # 15. ;<o. feeding Iambs $ll.f>o®
1 2 75; fat ewes light, $4 00®5 00; fat
eweg. heavy, $3.00# 4 oo
SPRING LAM HP
No Aver. Price
36 Nat.6f $16 00
"5 Nat.64 15 00
Receipts and disposition of livestock at
4h* Union storkyaids. Omaha. Neb.* for
24 hours, ending at ’ p tn . June 8, 1923.
R KC E1PT8—C A R Lt »T
«'altle Hogs Sheep Horses
A- Mules
r, M A St r Ry. . . 1 4
Wabash R. R.3 . •
Mo Par Ry.1 3
V. P. R. R.19 6 4 10
4- A N w east . . 1 6 .. 2
C A N W. weft ....30 94
»\ St P M A O. .10 30
<* , R A- Q.. east . . 3 7 .. ••
«’ . R A* < i . west . ... 7 43 . . . .
<# . R. T A- P . east . . 4 7
4*. R I. A- P. west ..2 7 . • ..
T r R R . 1
C. Q. W. R. R. 3
T4)tal recsints *3 27! 10 2
DISPOSITION—H KAP
Cattle Hogs Sheep
Armour A Oo . 4 7 4 4 '.64 150 4
Cuclahv Pack Co ....... 279 5561 1075
Dole! Parking Co ...... 47 1413 ....
Morris Packing «*o.3*6 2792 . .
Swift A- Co. . . 6>9 52*9 16
Hoffman Bros. . 19 .
Omaha Parking Co. . .. ....
John Roth A- Ren* .... 35 ....
5 f»mnha Pa« k. Co., * •...
Murphy. .1 W _ I., a -
Lincoln Packing ( o .... 32 . ....
Anderson A Son . l2 .... ....
Harvey John . 179 .
Ingrham. T. .1 2 .
Kirkpatrick Bros. 13 .
Longman Bros . 20 .
Luberger H«*nrv S .114 ... ....
Root. J B A Co. 39 .... ....
Rosenstock Bros. 79 .... ....
Sargent A Finnegan .... 19 .
Smiley Bros . in .
Wertheimer A- Degen .... 165 .... ....
oth*r buyers .... 74 19 4*
Total .. 2620 20724 4543
4 hicugo Livestock.
Chi' ago. June * < .itt |e — Receipt*
•I-,, beef - * *•« • <4 and y«.irllngs moderate
ly active, steady to strong, nractlrglly
n* '"ho|c • kind here; pa*-f load heavies.
Hose, few to.,d- 110 0. 4>!ft ?n. shipping
de and falrlv active >. • pt for hes v,
steer*: some heavy Nebraska's ht 1 ovor;
be«f vearltne*. II0 1; bulk h. < f steers
and ' egrlfngv f . : < 9 7 few plain light
grassy natives below 17*0 some south
western rraeaerx of interior quality down
to I on f,»,d below bulls weak other
classes generally steady, hulk bologna
bulls |4 '-o 9. 4 6 .. bulk \ea1ers to packers.
$< r.ftsr? ?:*»; bulk desirable beef heifers.
#7 '-of?h :.o »
Hogs—Receipt). 3«,60n very uneven.
.10 (Vi 25c lower mostly ^*9 to Zk<‘ lower
'hen yesterday's av-rage and the lowest
here In June since 1911. top. $ 7 05 one
triad! hulk, 16n to 3,27.- pound average.
*6.75#7.00: parking sows mostlv $5 85ft
4* 15 desirable 110 to 150 pound nig*.
$’ ?5#4 25; estimated holdover ir.nnn
Sh"-p—Receipts. 7,000; fairly active
most!) stead) balk desirable native
springers. 11 "Ofj 1 ' chop • 70 pound
average t(. * t«\ butchers. /II 5 71 cull*
mostlv $10 5011 no. hand/ weight ewea
to packers mostlv 15 06# 8.80; heavies.
17 TSff J 50 few ■ hoi* « young ewes to
bree4jer*. $6 6nfr4 7r>
Kansas 4 itv Livestock
Kansas '’itv. Mo. dune • -*'xttl*—Re
•*il»fs, 1 non head , ralves ‘nt> bead; most
rbixses around steady with tr«*|e dull on
most offering*’ best s»e«»r* fin v. few
cows. 15 50 ft 4 26. hulk others. $4 00 f) 5 ?5 ,
rgnners largely |2 4 #2 5»». best vealers.
19 6 n f) f 50; yparljng-. Texas stoi-kers.
17 00 horned Te*xs feeder* $4(9 a
Huge -Receipt*. r. non head. market
mostly 10 tn 15 cents lower- pucker top
I 70. hulk of rales $4 4•a * *' bulk 1*6
d'3*5 pound averages *6604)66?:. "r'klng
sows, steady; bulk. 15 45; stock pigs,
steady; mostly f’» 75674.00
Sheep and Lambs Re c-pt*. 9 066 head
lambs strong. r, to in* lower, better
itt.*dea largely 114 76#II ■ VHrons*.
*14 *. light weight ewex sroqnd Steady .
heavy lots lower. o«ld hunches natives
f; on # 4 00,
St. I Mills I iveetork
Fast JR. f.ouis III , June « - Cattle -
Receipt*. 2,006 head. receipts. largely
western*; few *nlr» Texas ►tears 95c low
er, f’• 7557f* .1^7 native raffle steady for
fa* rows. #6f0. mmic manners, I1 IS.
bologna bull* |4?f>*)5 26: llrht vealers.
1)00 5^9.80; practical top |9 28
Hog* Receipts, 14.500 head; slow
mostly 26c lower; fop, $686 bulk sates
gnnd snd cbm-e hogs $6 65 ft 6 75 few
he-, vy and medium lualltv mixed. M.66#
6 60; pig < 15c to |nw e 1 , bulk good
1?n t „ J90 pound S vey agep. $5 75 47 4 15;
inker sows, weak, 104)1 to lower, bulk.
$5 60 *
Rhcep Sfid TJtmbs Re-*e|pts 1 500 head:
all rliisees lib. If *t<ad' fop spring
l*mbiy$lf. Oo Mutu sales good snd choice
springer* f 1 4 79 «M f. <"> medium to good
117 •n (I 14 '<n pulls 19 60, fat light ewe*,
f5 f»o. hsavle* Rid
M. .Insepli I Ire* fort.
«» V n * e p h Ml. t tins * ir R pe
pertinent t»P Agriculture) Hog* -Receipts.
7.if'n(» bead. rood snd choice lights
and metlRttnw'ehrfit butchers, mostlv 16c
lower. at $■- 5nfi i, oo top. fx 65 nothing
•if kinds; pgi k mg •->-.* *.
Rtesdv . mostlv $’ 6" sing* f I 7 5 *r 5 no
fettle Receipt* 4°0 heed, nominally
stejidv; not enough to mnke a market;
two load* good 1 006 pound *teera $9 25.
odd head beef cows $4 25a/ 6 76; rannere,
• ? ?MJ 9 06. vf a I .elves stegdv with ves
r-rdnvs close nr 60c lower than veeter
ds> ; native spring lamlis, 1 1 4 50 4171600,
with light sorting; nils, mostly liooo;
6S pound |n« ally f« d shorn lamb* $13 76.
good 1IJ pound native ewe*. $6 00. weth
ers. | 4 00# 4 28.
•Until 4 llr l ivestock
Plotig City, Is . June s ''stile Re
relpts 1.660 head mu. kef ,« tlve killers
stes.lv. stneker* sfesdv , fat steerg and
vearling* $7 50 - 16 »0 bulk of f* ,r.
'f? 10 66 f it cow* and h'-ifer* $6 60# 9 OO
1 i .
>• »nd heifer*. $4 :>o*i .. on . c»i* i no
4f 1 1 06 feeder*. 16 r.0f/>9 4o siociters.
lAnogfiSS; *tn( k vearling* *n«1 rilvN.
f , | 06, feeding COW* Slid heifer*
$ J 6 0 rtf 8.56
Hog* Receipt*. 1) 666 head; market
mostly 7 5c lower top #4 4-' hulk of
«'•!-« f6 16,7.1 4" lights, |1 46(414 4%
bull berg 14 ,16#6 46 mixed |
henvv pe< ker*. f 2.*.#.'. tin, stag*. It*.
V 4 *.6
Hheep Not quoted
Vew \ tirk Cdffee
••o.«. fork Line * rhi mark I fm
coffee futipe* was even *|Uieter then It
ua* yesferdsv. and price* fluctuated with
in S fMM of f. (>I I'■ (Mini* I'be . n
log was 7 to | points higher on rttvoffh#
promoted bi stendi Rio • ibiei hut iffet
selling at $9 47 July eased . ff tn 19 5 9
■nd Depembef rear ted ( I to i - 19
rtoglag pflofg were xfenyt »♦»c lowest of
lh« dgj With III" m.'het net III" bunged
In 17 points lower Hair* were estn.inted
at about a 666 bugs «'losing 'tuotafloo*
luly 10 58 Hept |4 M fVtnher. $s t,o
Decemhei |» I . Match. $« 69 May. ft 65
gpnt coffee ««.,H quiet St tt 8*4 to 11 £*jj
• ills f«r Rio 7s end 14 1 2 to 16 cents
fur Vsntos 4s
Financial
By RROADAN WALL.
New York, June 8.—The speculative
fraternity today drew a district line
of demarcation between the Industrial
and railroad departments with the re
sult that the recent leaders in the
former closed with net losses, while
the latter recorded substantial gains.
Professional profit taking was
largely responsible for the easier tone
in the industrials, improvement In
the rails represented switching of
speculative accounts from the Indus
trials into the transportation shares,
due to the Increased confidence In the
latter as a result of the good showing
being made by earnings.
California Oil Slumps.
California Petroleum showed pronounced
" "akness throughout the session and de
clined more than 4 point* lta weakness,
however, failed to rau*e any acute weak
ness** In other oil* Petroleum shares a*
a group moved within a narrow price
range and .speculation in them seems to
hive subsided pending more definite de
velopment* on* way or the other In the
industry.
Urgent buying of New York Central
carried it rapidly forward In the late
dealing* to a new high rice for this year.
The weaneas of California Petroleum con
trasted sharply with central’s betterment.
Sugar Share* Weak.
Sugar share* also developed weakneea
In the Inst hour due to a decline of l-8o
a pound In the price of raw sugar. The
failure of brokerage houses outside of
the New York Stock Exchange member
ship i* having a restraining Influence on
the purchase of stock*. The lower ratio
<<f reserve to Ilahllitie* reported in the
weekly federal reserve statement wan also
regarded with disfavor, although the
figures are still high.
A bplief that the common carriers will
for the first half of this year make the
moat favorable showing In net in history
Is stimulating speculation and Investment
in those shares
The bond market was firm, although
profit taking appeared in the foreign gov
ernment issues.
New York Quotations
Range of prices of the leading stock*
furnished by I.ogan & Bryan. 24* Peters
Trust building:
• RAILROADS.
Thursday
High. Low •Close •Close.
A T A S F .102% 101% 102% 101%
Balt A Ohio. 60% 49% 50% 49%
Can Pacific .152% 152 152% 152%
N V Central.loi % ioo ioi % 99%
Chea A- Ohio. 64% 64% 64% 65%
Great Northern ..72% 72% 72% 72
Illinois Cent ral... . 11 o % no 110% ....
K c Southern.... 20% 20% 20% 19%
Lehigh Valley_6.1 62% 62% 6.1%
Mo Pa< ific . 14% 11% 14% 14
X T A N H. 1 * % It % 1 * 1 *
No Pacific . 73 72% 72% 72%
CAN W . 79% 79 79% 79
Penn R R . 44% 44% 44% 44%
Reading . 76% 76 76 % 76
P R I A P. 30% 29% 30% 29%
So Pacific ....... 90 69% 90 H9 %
So Railway . 35 34 % 34% 24%
C M A St P ..... 22 % 21% 22% 21%
Union Pacific .. 136 135% 136 135%
STEELS.
Am Car Fdry,...170% 170% 170% 171%
Allls-Chalmera ... 41% 41% 41% 40%
Am Loco.142% 141 141 144%
Baldwin Loco .. 132% 1U m % 132
B»»h St.53% 62% 63% 53
Colorado Fuel A I 35% 32 % 34% 5 2%
crucible . 72% 71% 71% 72%
Am S Foun . 37% 37% 37% 37%
Gulf State S . 64% 6.3% 64 94%
Mid Ster! . 27 27 27 27%
Pressed S C ...... 66% 6 4 64 66%
Rep F A I . 61% 60% 50% 51
Rail Steel S .112 112 112
Slosa-S . . 60 60 50 60
U S steel . 97% 96% 96% 97%
Vanadium .33% 13 33% 33%
Meg Seaboard 17 16% 17 17
COPPERS
Anaconda . 45% 45% 46% 45%
Am 8 A R Co. 63% 61% 62% 61%
Cerro p* p. 42% 42% 42% 43%
Chili . 27 26% 26% 26%
' hlno . 25% 23 23 % 22%
Inspiration . 32% 32 12% 32%
K* nnecott . >6% 36% 36% 37%
Ray Consol . 13%
Utah . (5 %
OILS.
Stand Oil. Calif . 62% 62% 63% 51%
General Asphalt . 31 12% 31 33%
Cnsder . 46% 47% 47% 4»%
Cal Peterol .111% 106% 107% 112%
Sin Pete . 1«% 10 in 10%
Invincible r>tl .... 1 4 3 3 % 13% 14
Mar and Ref .... 4:% 41 % 42% 42%
Middle Slates ... 9% 6% 9 9%
Pacific Oil . .... 36% 36% 36% '6%
Pan-American ... 73% 74% 74% 76
Phillips .. 49% 49 49% 49%
Pure Oil.20 19% 19% 19%
Royal Dutch 4* 4* 46 41
Sit clalr Oil .. 29 26% 29 29
Stand OH. N J . .3.3% 3S % 33% 33%
Skelly Oil . 24 21 % 23 %
Texas Co 44% 44% 44% 45%
Shell Union . . .. 17% 17% 17% 17%
While OR 2% 2% 2% 2%
MOTORS
Chandler . . 6n% 60% 6*>% 90%
General Motors . . 15 14% 15 16
Willy s Overland 6% 6% *% 6%
Pierce-Arrow 1*»% m 10%
White Motor .. . 63 :.•% 63 63
studehaker 112% 111% 112% 112%
RUBBER AND TIRES
Flak .11% 4l 11 11%
Onodr! h ... 31% 31% 31% 36%
KellevSpring ... 45% 45% 45% 45%
Keystone Tire 7 6% 6% t, %
Ajax 1n % 10 % 10%
U. F Rubber 52% St % 61% 61%
INDUSTRIALS
Am*r Beet Sugar . .37
\* Gulf AWI.1I 1 7 % 11 1: %
Am In? Corp 22% 22% 22% 22%
Arner Sumatra . 26
Amer Tele .!!«% 124% 124%
Ci-- Hr t'an inn% 99% 99% iec%
Central r^ather .. 2 % 25% 25% 25%
Cuba Cane 14 13% 13% 14%
Cuban Am Hugir 33 31% 31% 33%
corn Products 1 .’% 111% 111% H2%
Famous Flavor* .. 79% 79% ?#% 79%
General Electric 177%
Great North Ore. 2l% ’•% 29% 29
Internet Harvest 76% 74% 76% *6%
A M A. Le*th nfd 4 3 4 3 4 7 4 3
V S Ind Alcohol 54% .’ 6 56 66 %
Internet Paper 4 % 43% 43% 44%
Internat M M pfd 29 :«% j*% ;*%
Am Sugar Ref 77% 7.7 7 3 71 x.
S.ars P ehutk 77% 77% 77% 77%
stromaburg .71% 7i«4 71% 74%
Tobacco Prod . . r 4% 54% 64% 64%
W orth Pump .11% 11% ji % ij
"'ll son Co 76 75% 26 2*
Western Union .1*9 10 a l«i |na%
W est Elet *>U| . 66% f.ct $« $6%
American Wool ..92% 91% 91% 9;%
.. MISCELLANEOUS
Allis < halmer* »Wd. 99
Mo Papific rfd 3«% }| % j; u
I F Rubber nfd inn% 99 99
’ H Steel pM ill 1 1 - % 1 19 117%
Sinclair Oil pfd 96% 9.% 96% 94%
Southern R > pfd 67% 67% 67% 67
Ft Peul pfd 19 J?U if J7%
Dupont 126% 1:6 126 1*7
Timken 14 % 34 % 34 % 3 4X4
Lima Locomotive 6 6% 66 66 66%
Replogle 19 if it 19
White Katie 0||. . 27 2*% ?7 *6%
Packard Motor 1 - % i?% i ? % j -
Mother Lode 9 X% 1% 9% J fti *
Pan- AmerfratT B 69?4 69 % 69% 69%
Am Cotton Oil :% 7% 7% s
* m Ar'l Chtmiral 14% i« i • % n
Union B A P f- 4 t, s 6 4
h M a g ttet o 39%. 39 1* 4n%
Cot.' J- tan 4*\ 46 % 46% 46%
•%i Picking 12 92 92 41
' >lumh|» G 4 E.. 192%
Columbia Graph .1% I 1% t%
Dnifed Drug 92% 91% *2i4
N«f<ona| Fnamel 6%
NL»t I .end l?1% 12t% 121%
Philadelphia Co 44% 46 %4 47 % 47%
Pullman 119% 119% 119% IJft
1 unfa Ale Sugar . 60% 66 9 6* % 59%
''outh P n Sugar 61 44 4«
Retail Store* . fj
Superior Ste#f* . 29% ?9% *9ii
F* I. A S F . :**% 2? ;-% jj '
Va Car i h*m ■> % 9% 9% 9%
Davldson CMiem 39% 27% J9 99%
Pierce Arrow pfd 74 73 sj -
Am Tobacrn 147 147 147 144%
' m Toba- on B 1 47 1 47 1 47 1 47
• -nt Leather rfd 13% 63 6 1 U / ■> %
Cu’ tn C Sgf pfd 5 2% 49% M |;i
' 'lied Chemjml . 71% 71% 71% 71%
Trane Pont on -% 7% 7% 7%
Hupp Motor 21% ?1% 21 %
Tex Pac ,* X- O 1 4 1% 14 14% 14%
In* \ ckel 45% 15 16 16%
1 ndl*o»|4 f oh neon 70% dt 69% 7n
V, S ** % 9t% 99%
Pitfebtirg; t>a1 6f. 65 66 ^
* ' ''\*** J* v' recorder! .ale.
Total ***** 631.ibf
Mon»»- il ... p.r c*nt: ThurM,*
rl".., p.r r#ti<
M.ti,. rin.. ntAttt: Thur.i1»v
Onflft 12%.
S' erling — Close. *4*1% Thursday cloae
94 6 ■ %
Franca Close. 0644: Thursday clear
0646 %
I Hiram Produce.
' * 4 go tune 4 Butter Mark**
nirher. - reamerV e*Daa RUdllr «*an.d
"*• 3 9 % r extra firata 37#29r. flrata
3* <f ,9 6.- eeoonda. a 1 % 0 3 4 H c
» eg* Market unchanged, receipt* 2ft
1*7 caaea
New York Bonds
New York. Juno 8.—Interest In today *
trading In bonds on the New York stork
exchange centered largely in the rail
road Issues, wfth foreign government
bonds a close second In volume of deal
ings
Serbian 8s. up 1 1-8. continued to lead
In activity In the foreign group, the de
mand resulting for the most part, from
interest In the forthcoming Austrian loan
Most of the Frenoh issues sold off slight
ly on cable reports that France la ex
pected to reject the latest German
reparations offer. Lyons 6* dropped
1 1-2 and several others were down
fractionally.
United States government bonds were
relatively quiet with little change in
prices. The tax exempt 3 1 -2s moved up
5-32 of a point and the Liberties fluc
tuated within narrow limits.
Although trading in the railroad Issues
was quite active, price changes were
small. "Kulj** new- prior liens 5s
gained g point and Norfolk A Southern
5s lost the same amount Sugar shares
followed the stock downward Punta
Alegre 7s dropping 2 3 8 and several
othera losing large fractions Virglnia
t’arolina Chemical 7 1-2*, with warrants,
dropped 1 1-2. American Telephone and
Telegraph convertible 6s gained a point.
Total sales, per value, were III.279.000.
IT. 8. Bonds.
124 Liberty 3%s.101.31 100 28 101.00
1 Liberty 1st 4s. . . . 98.09 .
1 Liberyt 2nd 4s... 98 09
28 Liberty 1st 4%s.. 98 19 98.13 98 1 5
1583 Lib 2nd 4%*. 98 18 9* 12 98 16
605 Lib 3 4%s. 98 29 98 25 9* 25
981 Lib 4th 4%k.. . 98 24 98 16 , 98 20
640 L' S Gov 4%* .. 99.29 99.24 99.25
Foreign
35 Argentine 7s.102% 101% -
11 Chi Gov Rv 5s ... 47% 47 _
40 City of B 6s. 82% 81% 81%
11 City of C 5%k . . 92% 9J 92%
47 City of G P 7 %s. .82 M % ...
30 City of L 6s . 82% 81% _
49 City of M 6s .... 83 81 % 82
15 City of R d .1 8s 47 94% 94 94 %
5 City of Z 6s.110% .
69 C Rep 8s rtfs. 96% 95% 96%
1 Dan Mun 8* A .... 108%
25 Dep of Heine 7s.... 89% 89 89%
17 D of C 5% n 29_101% 1«'1%
35 D of C 6s 52 . 99% 99 99 %
142 D E 1 6s 62 . 97% 97 97 %
90 I> K I 5%s 53 . 94 % 93% 93%
12 Fram I D 7%s ... 92% 92 92%
65 French Rep 8s ...inn% 100% l<»o%
lit French Rep 7%s .. 96% 96% 96 %
32 Hoi Amer 6s . 90% 90 90%
28 Jap 1st 4 %s . 93% 93
26 King Re|g 7%s ...102% 102% 102%
50 King Be I g 8* -J02% 102 %
6 King Den 6« . 98% 98% 98%
6 King Italy 6%s . . 96% .
18 King Nether 6s ..101% .
16 King Nor 6s.98% 98%
539 K S C S 8s . 78% 77 -77%
64 King Swrd 6s ...105% 105%
69 Pa Lv Med 6» . .. 77% 77 77 %
22 Rep Bolivia Ss .. 92 91%
6 Rep Chile 7s .95% 95% 95%
6 Rep Col 6%a .... 94 .... ....
5 Rep Cuba S%* ... 99% .
15 Rep Halt! 6s 52... 94 93% 94
2 State Queen* 6s... 101% .
3 State R G H 8s . . 97 96% ...
2 State S P 8* ...100 99% 100
.70 Swiss Confer! R* . 115 .
11 CKGBAI 5%s 29 n:;% -
36 I KG BA I 6 % s 37 .104 103% 1M
69 V S Brazil 8s ...98 97 % 97%
8 V S Brazil 7%s . 101 % 101 -
12 U S B r R E 8.3% 83% 8C.
10 U F Mexico 6s ... 56% .
1 U 8 Mexico 4s ... 37% ..
Kail wav and MlMrllanniui.
35 Am Arg Chem 74* 93*4 9*4
29 Am Smelt 5s .... 9l\ 9r'4
21 Antar Sugar 5s ....1024 1024 10*4
8 A TAT cv *• • 1164
41 A T <v T col tr 6a 97% 97 4 97 4
25 AT&T col 4a.. 92 91 4
1ft Am W W & E 5a *5 85 4 fil
*8 Ana fop 7* '38_101** l'114 1«1S
74 Ana Cop *• '63 97 4 97 4 97 4
24 An Jurg M Wka 5s 84 4 84 4 84 4
2 Armour A Co 4 4* *^4 .
1* A T A S F g*»n 4« 8*4
9 AT&SF ad j 4a .stp ftO% *0 4 804
62 Balt & Ohio 8s 1004 100 4 1004
9 Bait A Ohio rv 4 4* *04 79 4
14 H T cf P 1st Ar fg 5a 97 4 97 4 ....
14 Beth St con 8s & A 99 9'’,
19 Beth Steel 84* .. 92 91 4 92
25 Brier Hill St 5 4* 94 4 94 4 94 4
4 Bklyn Ed gen 7a D.l«9 10*4 109
2 Bk Rap Tj 7 a_ 93 4
6 Camag Sug 7* ..99 9*4 99
5 Can North 7* ....113 4 112 4 . ...
28 Can Par deb 4a ... 794 "9 .
14 C CI a Ohio 5a 974 97 97 4
12 <>n of ija > f lftft\ l'*-4 1004
2ft r#n I>*»th 5a .... 9“% .
20 Cen Par gtd 4s. Sf.4 .
1 Cerro do Paaeo 8* 130 4
29 t’he* A Ohio cv 5a 9" *9% 9ft
8 C A Ocv 4 4* ... **4 *7 4 884
71 r a a 3 4« .. 304 29 4 30
3 r B A Q ref 5* A 994 r<9 4
11 r A E 111 5*.*ft 7? 4 79 4
1R r fit w 4* 5ft 4 5,ft
165 C M A St P cv 44* 58 4 r 54 88 4
21 C M A St P rf 4 4m 69 4 94 59 4
147 C M A Ft P 4* '26 *14 * 1 *1 »- I
4 C A N W 7s .1074 jo? 1074
5 Chicago Rya 5a 794 79
1 C R I A T gen 4* S0%
25 C R I & P ref 4.- 7*4 7*4 784 !
21 Chile Copper 8* lft*i 10ft 1004
9 C< « ASH. ref 8» A 1*14 1*14 1«14
%
8 Colorado Jnd 5*.. . 79 78 % 7f
118 Colo A S ref 4 4a *44 R| 4
3 Con C of Md 5* *S
1ft Cuba C 8 deb ft* 944 944 ... {
3 Cuban A S *» .1074 1*74 ..
1 T *e la A H eef 4s “74
21 r» A R G ref 6* :4 62 4 *2 4 ,
8 O A R G «on 4-* '4%
J Detroit Ed ref 8a 1*14 ...
1 Detroit Cti Ry* 4 4* *34 -
2 Donner Steel r**f 7a *7% “74 ....
11 DuPont de N 7 4a. . 107 4 107 4 _
1 T M|t| l ight 7 4* I "7 .
4ft East Cuba Sr 7 4* 1*3 10:4
25 F! G A F 7 4" ctfa 93 4 9-4
2 Erie pr Hen 4* . 57
:i Erie gen 1 etl 4- 4«4 «8 |
2 Flak Rubber «* 1084 1*8 4 108 4
8 Goodrich 8 4* .1004 1004
4 Goodyear T «» *21 . 1*4 4 .
13 Goodyear T 8# *41.117 4 117 ....
1 G Tk Rv of Can 7s 11 - 4 ...
« G Tk Rv of Can 8a 1*44 1*4
8 Gt North Ta A 1*9 1M% 109
5 Gt North *4* B I t'*'* l"*'
12 Hershey Choc 8# 9ft 97 4 *8
« Hud A M raf * A * 4 “ft 4
71 H A Man ad I in* Sa 59 4 69 4
12 If nil a Ref 4" *** 974
S Illinois Cen 64* . .1014
7 Indiana Steel 5* 1*04 1** 1004
2 Int K*r Tran.* 7a 904
"4 Tnt Ran Trana 8a »'% ♦ 4 534
11 Int ft T ref 5s gtpd «I4 85
46 I A G N *d 1 8a rtf 47% 414 42
34 Tnt Merc M a f <« M% ft 4 ft’4
« Int r» ref 5* B «' 4 * 5 4
2 K C F S A M 4* 78',
2 Ka* City South *a 93 4 ... ....
1 Ka« Pitv Ter 4- 9*4
1 Kellav-F Tire ft* lft«4
9 T. S A M db 4a 31 *14 93 91 4
1* T.ehigh Vallay ** . 1«2
2 l.irgett a Mvera !•* 98
t7 1, A N r*f 54* 1014
"TAN unified 4* 9*4
9 Manati Sugar 7ft%*/9‘% o«%
7 Market Ft R' cn 5g 93 \ 914 93
ft Ms* o ft* S A w w 14 4
3 Midvale Steel rv *• «7 %
7ft Mil E R A 1. f# 81 « 4 ft 4 4 ‘54
2 M A St T. rrf 4* 37 4 37 %
:* M K A T p In «s c 954 ft %
1» MEAT nw at 5- A 53 4 *’4 *2 4
I1MKAT nw p In Sa A 7« ’ % 7ft
4 Mo Par ron 8* 94
1R 'to Tar gen 4* ’4 ft: 4 '-74
5 Mont Pow 6* A •7 »«S *7
1 “font real T\ • o| 'a “9%
7 Vorrll A C fat 4 4" sn 794
1? N 1 TAT let 5* f 9ft a-% ftft
19 N O T A M Inc 5a T«
I 4 N V Cen deb .* to* % 1 * 4 ft. 10'4
.10 N* T c rg A In 6* 9C% MS 9*> 4
I N’ ▼ C»n -'on 4* *1
15 N T Ed ref • 4* 109 4 1*9%
4 NYG El.II A I* 5* 4 9“ 4
• N V \ HA H F 7 p 84% 84 4
17 N YNH A If < ' 8 4“ 85% 85% 8ft 4
15 N V Tel ref 8* 41 105 1"4V,
7 N Y Te! gen 4 4- * 4 1 . %
2 7 N V W A B 4 4- ■ «: 41% 42
« Nor A South 6* ft 8 5 7, 8 5
3 Nor & Writ < v (a . Ill
7 N Am Ed a f .914 91 9.14
18 N Par ref 8a B .1084 1*4
5 N P rr lien 4* “ 4 4 ....
11 N S P ref f.a ft 914 91 _
13 N 3V Bell Te! 7a.. 10ft 107% . ...
1 nr# A • «! lat 6a 9ft %
7 Ora S 1. gtd 5a. .103 10:4
7 Ora S I, ref 4* 97 4 92 92 4
3 t'ra M R R A V 4a 79 4
4 Par G A Hie 5*. . 9 •
7 Pac T A T 5a 6" c 91 4 914 914
ft Pan ftm TAT 7a. i n
11 Penna R R 84* 10*4 107% 108
11 f'enna R R gen 5* 100 >9%
.9 Penn n R gen 44a 91 90% »1
10 Phils Co col tr 8a D'OU ICS 1004
T Plarca ftrr> w *• '"4 784
4 Per* Mar ref 5a . ft 4
3 Public Farv ft* 94% ....
147 Pun's A’eg Fug 7a tn 1114
8 Reading gen 4« MU 88 ....
2 H t ft A f> 4 4* 78%
? F 1 1 M A * «ef 4* ‘b%
30 si ASK nr in 4s A «’f% 87 4 87 %
91 S 1, A » > adj 8* 7 4 4 T'% 744
247 F 1. A S r iho 9a 87 % 884 87 4
10 S Tj S \V con 4* 8%
8ft Sea Air I r-n ta 88% 8*4 a. %
4ft Sea Air |. *1* 9a 30%
79 sea Air ! trf 4* 1 4*4
23 Sin Con <V •'•it 7* 99 4 ft ft % ftftft,
: sit, rru4« o :,**« "s «*» !i<s
*ft "tn P l.ma ft* '* ft*:u u\
22 So Pa 4- fti% ft-% ftiv,
?* So parlflc r»f 4™ *8% v*%
ft so r., >| *r 4a ft! 4
13 Sou»h Rv aen 8U* to^% mm 1(H%
91 So U\ con 5* .98 9S%
88 So Rv gen 4* 88% 8ft% 8«\
3 S Porto !< Su« 7* 1 10*4 100%
Irt S Oil of Cal deb 7a »c.,% to % 10*14
5 Steel Tuba 7a 103 1024 I**
Updike Grain Corporation
(Friviti Wire Department)
( Chiraco Board of Trade
MFMBFRft and
' AH Other Leading Farhangea
Orders for irrain for future delivery in the prin
cipal markets Riven careful and prompt attention.
OMAHA OFFICE:
71fi 21 Omaha Grain
Exchange
Phone AT Untie 0312.
LINCOLN OFFICE:
724-25 Terminal HuilHing
Phono R-1233
Long Distant-* 120.
3 Third Ave r*f 4* 57% .
10 Third Ave adj 5s 64 53 % ....
4 Tob Prod 7b .104% ....
2 Un B Sr T 6s . . 97 96% ....
3 Union O C 6s _101 .
5 U P 1st 4s . 91% .
12 U P cv 4s . 96% .
2 Union Tk Car 7s.. 104 ..
1 United Drug 8s. ,.112% .. ••••
5 U R I 'a . 94 93% -
7 U 8 Rubber 7%» .107 106% 106%
28 IT 8 Rubber 5b . . . 87% 87% *7 %
35 U 8 Steel 5s ....102% 102 102%
7 U 8 Realty 6s 99% .
11 u P fir L in . 89% 89 ....
5 Ver Sugar 7s .... 97% . .. ....;
12 V C <J 7 %s w w. , 67% 66% ....
4 7 Va fa Ch 7fl _ 82% 81% ....
4 Virg Ry 5m _ 96% 96% ....
1 Wabash 1st 5m 95% ... ....
3 Warn Suit Ref 7s .102% ....
11 West Mary 1st 4s. 62 61 % ....
13 West F'ac 5s . 79% 79% ....
7 West Union *.%s ..101% .
13 West Klee 7s . .107% 107 107 %
1 Wjr 8pen Steel 7s 94% .... . ..
36 Wils .v Co 7 % s .. 97% 96% 97 %
2 Wils & Co 6n _ 91
Total sales of bonds today were $11,
279.000 compared with $9,506,000 previous ,
day and $17,617,000 a year ago.
N. Y. Curb Bonds
New York. June *—Following !■ the
official list <tf transaction* on the New
York Curb exchange, giving all bonds
traded in;
Domestic Bond*.
High Low. Close.
12 Allied Packer 6* 61 60 60
6 Aluminum 7*. '25. 103% 103% 103%
18 A Cotton < *i I 6*... 93 92% 92%
6 A O E 6«. ... 94% 94 94
3 A T & T 6a. '24.100% L""% 100%
1 A Thread Co 6s. 101% f"l „ P'1%
2 Anaconda C 6s ..101% 101% 101%
2 Anaconda C 7*. ’29.103 103 103
Anglo A Oil 7%» 102% U'2% 102%
23 Armour & Co 5%s. 90% 90% 9ft%
2 Beaver Board ns. . . .*2 82 82
12 Beth Steel 7.-. ’35.102% 102% 1«2%
C Nat Hy e<p 7s.107% 1"7% 107%
2 Charcoal iron 8* . 94% 9 4 94%
6 Cities .Ser 7s *D". 91% 91 91
3 Cons G B 5 %s- 98% 9*% 95%
4 Con Gas Balt 6s. 103% 103 103
5 Cons Textile 8s 98% 98 98
6 Detroit City G 6* 99% 99% 99%
2 Detroit Edi-on '.*.102% 102% 1«Z%
4 Dunlap T R 7s. 97 96% 97
13 Fed Sugar 6«, '33 98% 98% 98%
5 Fisher B 6s. ’26.. 99 99 99
10 Ftwher B 6*. '28 . 97 % 97% 97 %
3 <Jair. Robert 7s. 96% 9’> % 96%
2 Gd Trunk 6%a...l0f.% 105% 105%
2 Gulf oil 5*.95% 95% 95%
9 Kennecott Con 7*. 103% 103% D'3%
5 I.'svlile G & E! 5s. 88% 88% 88% j
3 Maracaibo 7s. n'w.230 220 222 |
1 Morris Co 7%s.l00% 1*'0% 100%
1 Nat'l Acme 7%*.. 96 96 96
2 Phil'ps P 7%s. ww 99% 99% 99
1- Pb Sv <> N .1 7s 102 % 1 ''2 % 102%
5 Pb Sv G & El 6* . 97% 97% 97%
4 S'rs JVb'k fs. 23.100% 10n% 100% j
1 Shawsheen 7s ....104% 104% 104% j
1 S W Bell Tel 7*.1".'% 1"2% 102% |
3 Std CM 1 NY 7 '25.105% 105% 105%,
3 Std Oil NY 6%s..l07 1«7 107
14 Swift A Co Sb . 9 - % 9*2% 9*2% j
2 Union O C 6*. ’26.100 inn mo
13 Un Gil Prod 8s 101% 100 100% |
Foreign.
8 Argentina 7*. *J3..10O% 100% lfto%
10 K g N her! da 6a..101% 101 % ]0l%
J Mexico Gov 6s... 61% fcl% fel %
2 3 Russian *>%b ... . 13% 12% 12%
30 Russian 6 %*, ctfs. 12 12 12
14 Russian .5'%* ..... 12 11 12
5 Russian 5%s, ctf. . 12 12 12
Boston Wool.
Boston. June 8.—The Commercial Bulle
tin will any tomorrow:
\ aiuggi^h irregular market prevail
ed in wool and pri< eg, except for the finer
staple qualities, are on the easy aide.
Further shipments of low wools are he- j
ing made to Europe, which offers a bet
ter market for some types than does the
home trade At the mills the situation i
has ' hanged little, if any.
“In the west the dealers have lowered
their limits in many sections and are
g**tt:^g some wool at tit lower levels.
Wool is moving rather more briskly in
some of the bright wool states.
“Bradford jeports a de line of a penny
a pound for tops, grading 4G's and above
for the week Prices a:** down fully 16
per cent io trie Liverpool East India sales.
The continental market* are steady, how
ever offerings from tha River Platte I
show no eae ng
“Mohair is in light demand here but !
firm.’
Domestic:
Ohio and Pennsylvania fleeces: delaine. I
unwashed 57« er5»*« . fine unwashed 52c# j
53' , 4 f lood r ombing 57 068c; blood
combing 5fc0 57c.
Mich-gin and New York fleeces; de
laine unwashed 56r#64>r. fme unwash
ed ln' 051c. n, blood unwashed 54c#55c;
blood unw shed c4 -t 55< . 5t b!«od
unwashed 52c 0 53c.
Wisconsin, Missouri and average N*w
England t, blood 52r*e&3r: a* blood 55c
ft j € c ; blood alcfj 5.
Scoured bas.s Texas. fine 12 months
#! 4501.66; fine 8 months 11.36#
1.35
‘"Hliforn.a northern II 4 01 *t; middle
county II.3## 1.39: southern *! l«bJ 15.
Oregon easterb: No - staple 1145#
1 50: fine and fme medium combing 1 36
#1 4*. eastern clothing |! 266 1.96:
valley So J $1 2001.25.
Territory. f no staple thol e II 506
1 55; U h’o^d ci mbmg II 360 1 35 S
blood 'omhim; 61.190112. ** blood
■ •
Pulbd det*i~* *1 4** 1 r ; A A 11-690
1 4° A supers 4! 150 1.25.
Mohairs c-»ral»lng Itr#«2c; Best
e a rain g 7flc Q 7 If.
TlraiUt rr«-t'» Knicu.
"6* y fur»e v Brad'* r-*■•'« fomor.
[•* w 1,1 *W Retail tra S g dil*
' it u1 :or if ch* -uni :n*»r g * *,<1 * • r.
report* have shown betterment th.s week
he nr aided by the arrival of Jong belated
• **aa >nabJe weather Aiding th* growth
of more « heorfu! f-ellng due to this cause,
js *kso the continuance of the ai.ghtiv
more optin sttc sentiment visible In recent
weeks in large primary and industrial
line-. The ch‘ef gama in actual business
have |,e*n largely m the Ight wearing
apparel trade-, wash goods, dresses, fancy
sh<>t « etc . which have hitherto lagged.
That there is a full disposition to taka
• 4%’an' gc f the more favf.yM- trend
«*f weather hi proved hv the pushing of
"sab*" by both jobbers and retailers the
ntent apparently to tak* full advantage
of Inng delayed seasonable weather. In
purely wholesale Itnes there is little new
activity to be note! and collections a« a
whole still tag while th* • he* k to new
building projects first noted in April at
N*w York seems to have spread t0 other
cities in Va\ Weekly hank clearing*
9*.641.241.094
< Mrngo Mocks
Rang* of prices of th* leading Chicago
stocks furnished by I»gan A Bryan. 24*
Peters Trust Bldg :
xClose
Armour A- Co pfd . lit cut.
Armour » C pf i !*-! $1 \
Armour Lout her preferred ... I
Cudahy .. 55
Kdison common .... 12**4
Conttnen la I Motor ... * ?
Diamond Match . licvl
Ubbv f
Montgomery Ward .. ,.... *3 3?
National ! eather . 5
Quaker Oats . 46
Stewart Warner .63*4
Swift A Co .144*?
Swift International . .. ...... *6
Vision Carbide . 57 S
Wahl 45*?
Wrig’ev JAf
Telbiw Cab . 9t\
Hup .*1 **
Ren . . . \%\
Hass*, k Alemite . . 36
gt'lose is the last re otd*d sale.
Foreign KirhasR*.
New York, -tune '—Foreign Fxrhange
— Has' Quotations in cent*
tires* Britain, demand. S4*1K cable*.
14*1*?. 6o dav bdls on bsnks $4 ?6\
France demand. 6.43. cables f 43*?
Belgium, demand. 5 54*? rabies 5 55.
Italy, demand. M *6. cables, 4 6**?
Germany, demand. cable* AM 3
Holland, demand 31 If; cables if.51.
Norway, demand. 16 75.
Sweden demand. 26 *2
Denmark, demand, i * **6
Swi’serlsnd. demand. 1*46,
Spam, demand l ' ■
«»reeve, demand. 2 *56
Poland demand. '*016
«'*echo Slovakia demand 2 31*4
Argentina demand. 3 5 40
Braafl. demand 10,34.
Montreal. 67 13 16
f hlrngo Produce.
• ’hicago, .1 mi** * -B u t t * r -H’gher .
ct earners extras. **W«9S 6c. standard*
3 *? c M’n f 37 034c; first*. 3 5 0 36c.
seconds. SIW 034Hr
Fggs-Vnc hanged. receipts,, 26 167
case s.
K i nan« « ID Poultry
Kansas • ’' M > Juna »> Butter snd
Poultry -d'n hanged
!•'»;** > 1 < ■* * • . firs’s. 14. *e> »a. ?fc
Omaha Produce
Omaha, June I.
BUTTER
Creamery—Lora| jobbing prlc* tr> re'ail
era: Extras. 42c; extra*, in 69-lb. tuba,
lie; standards, 41c; firata. 29c.
Dairy—Buyers are paying -2c for b*st
rtb1e butter in roll* or tubs: 26c for com
mon; 27c for packing *tm k. For feat
sweet, unsalted butter aoms buyera ara
bidding around 2.3«*
BUTTE Rr AT, .
For N. 1 cream local buyer* are pay.
Ing 29c at country stations; the delivered
Omaha; 4c less for No 2 cream.
FR EH MILK.
Local buyers of whole milk are quoting
$2.10 per cwt. for fre.-h milk testing 3.6,
dslivered on dairy platform Omaha.
EGGS.
Moat buyers ar« paying around Ilf 18
per case for fresh eggs (new cases in
eluded) on <a»e count. |o*» off, delivered
Omaha; stale held egg* at market value.
Some buyera are quoting on graded bas;s;
Select*. 22c, small and dirty, 13c, cracks,
17c
Jobbing price to retailor*: U. F spe
cial*. 29c: U. S extraa. -'7c: current re
ceipts. 26c; No. 1 small. 2 4c. checks. 22c.
POULTRY.
Live—Heavy hen . J 9 lieht hens 17c;
leghorn*, about Be less; broilers. lH-!h to
2-lb.. 35c per lb.; leghorn broiler*, about
Be le*s; capons. over 7 lbs.. 25c; old
roosters and stags. 10c; spring ducks. 20c
per lb ; old ducks loc. gee*» , ; du* ks
and our of season; no culls, sick
or ■ rippled poultry V. . r ' -1 •
Jobbing prices of dressed poultry to
retailers: 1923 broilers. 4* hen*. 2 5 3#28c;
roosters, 10c. Storage stock; ducks. 23c;
turkeys. Sic.
CHEESE.
Local Jobbers are »e!li,og American
che*-Kc. fancy grade, at the following
prices: Twins. 27c; single, daisies. 27 He;
double daisies, 27c; Young America*.
2* He; longhorns. 2»Hc; square prints,
29He; brick. 28c.
BEEF CUTS.
The wholesale prices of beef cuts 1A
effect today are as follows:
IP I bM—No, 1, 24'. No. 2. 22c; No. 3.
Lions—No 1. 34c; N<- 2. -He; No. 3 25c.
Round*—No. 1 19'; No 2. 18 Hd No. 3,
15c. Uhu< ks—No 1 14 He; No. 2. 14S
No. 3. lie. Plates—No. 1. 9c; No. 2,
8He; No. 3, 7Hf „ i
FRUITS.
Loganberries—21-pint < rates. $4 00 per
crate.
pineapple*—Cubans, fancy, per crate.
24-30-*«c: 42-4Ke. $3.59. _
«'herriec—California. 6-lb. box, $3.5949
4.88.
Watermelons—Crated, about 8 melons.
per lb . Be
Rhubarb—Home grown, per dozen «nc
.Strawberries—Missouri Aromas. *4 full
quart*, pr-r crate $4.76^5.00.
Bananas—Per lb.. 9c^
Box Apples — Winesap*. extra fancy
Washington. 55.75.
Oranges—California \ alentias or Atd
Sweets, extra fancy, per box. according
to size. $5.2566.00; choice. 2a©60c lesc.
according to nze „ ...
Lemons — California, extra fancy. 800
to 368 size* $8.00; choice. 380 to 360
sizes. $7.50; limes. $3.09 j»er hundred
Grapefruit — Florida. fancy, all si*e«,
S4.M)4f- 5 75 y er box: choice according to
rize. 68c to $1 00 l*ss per box.
Peaches—California. Is-lb. box. ref
box. $ 2.08.
Apricots—California. 4 ba*k_e_*. crates,
about 24 lbs. net. per crafe. $2.75.
Plums—California. 4-baekct crate* ahou
$2.50 ; Ca Ul -
n; ■ h' 4U - v, $: I' _ ,
Barrel Apples—-Fancy Iowa Ben Davis.
Hollnwl 7^ lb. l«r £*r lb :
Dromedary, 36 11-0*. ca,e«. I«.,6 per
ctrr.
K:|C,—California. 7t * do* nnon boj.*
$2.75; 68 9-do*, carton boxes. $2.75;
Smyrna. S-lb. box. r^r lb 35c.
VEGETABLES.
Potatoes—Nebraska No. 1 Russet Ru
ral*. sacked. II 26 p*r cwt : Nebraska
Early Ohio* No. 1 $3 25 per cwt.; «
braska Early Oh'oa. No 2. $118 per cwt ;
Minnesota Red River Ohio*. No. 1 I. 50
per cwt ; Colorado Brov n Beauties*. No.
1. $1.60 per f wt.; Idaho Kusset Burbanks.
$1 7> per cwt.
New Potatoes — California. Mississippi
Alabama, Texas, per IK, Be, sn sack lota
Swe*»t potatoes—Southern. hamper,
$2 6<r
New Root*—Southern turnips. bee's,
carrot*, per doz. bunches, fl.25; carrots,
rer hamper. $2.00. beets, per hamper.
$2
Rsdishe*—Horn# grown. per doz
bunches. 15c. .
Cantaloupes—California* pomes. 14 0;
standard*. $5.89.
Peas—New southern stock, per ham
per ia!*out 25 lb* net). $3.09.
Parsley—Southern. r»er doz. bunches.
7r home grown. r*r doz. bunches
St ft r'
Mushroom*—Per lb . TffMoc
Pepper*—Green, market oa&ket, per lb.,
30c.
Bean*—Sou* cern wax. re- hamper.
$5 50: green ner barope- 13 ' n
Lett . e— • a: * -r h - 1 -d '’ r-f
crate. $5.77; r— dot. #1.50; hot house,
leaf, per doz.. 49c . .
Asparagus—H me grown, dox punches.
75c.
Ere Plant—Selected, per lb.. 28c.
Onion#—New Texas wh.’e* J :-0; new
r -X
dry. 4c per lb home grown, green, per
doz bunches, r,8c.
Celer>—Florida, rer do- bunches. !. 25.
Tomato***—Florid» fancy. 6-basket
era?***, about 35 lb* net $* S8; Texas
4 ■ basket crates. $2.7$ p*r cra'e
Cabbage—New T»xa« feck crated, *e;
rer Jh . 2 5-30 ilm «H' ; • ■. for- a 'rated.
6c per lb ; 25-50 lb*. 6 He per lb
Cucumbers—Fan'-y Texas. 45-lb. ''rite,
P*r crate, $5 09; hot bouse, mkt. basket.
is
Spinach—Per hu . 75r
■ c
Artichokes—Per d^z. $2 5€.
Garlic—Per lb . 26c
FLOUR
First patent - bag? S' 48 -*r
•
hbl White or yeUow cornmesl. per cwt*
fl>3. Qu ns are for round iota,
f. o 9 Omaha.
FEED.
Omaha rr • am obbera are m' ng
their products :n arloa 1 lots at the fol
lowing prices f o. b. Omaha:
Bran — For June delivery. $7 4 8«;
br -vn short* $26 8 '. gray *h..-rts. 86;
middling*. $29 ! r'd b i. $ 3 8°: *’»?*!
fa meal, choice, $26.18. N* 1. $25 88;
No 2 $2? 10. .inseed meal. $48 68.
hominy feed, white or yellow. $L‘ *9:
buttermilk, condensed. 1A-M»? lots. 3 43c
per lb ; flak** buttermUk. 590 to 2 *“8
lt>* 9c iH>r lb . egg shells dried and
ground, 198 ib. bar?* #25 M per ion.
SEED
Drraha buyer* ar* ps* nr *he following
prices for field *• ed. thresher run. de
li\ered Omaha Quotations are on tha
basis of hundred we cht measure;
Seed—Alfalfa. lift « Sudan
gras*. $ o#fr:oa; write blossom clever,
$4‘*8#f«.0«. millet, high crad** German,
$2 90402.69: common rr»diet. $i 5902.99;
amber sorgham cane I2.W02.1S.
"AT
Frtcss at which urnaha dealer* are sell
ing in carlo?* fob Omaha follow:
Upland Prairie—No 1. 15* 29 59;
No : $15 ••;!« 88 No 3. $ 18 #e !$ 1 • 8ft ;
Midland Prairie —No 1. $l*.X>' ?A ft9;
No $14 8^# 17 99. No 5, $$ rt0#12 89.
Lowland Ptain*»-X<» 1. $1-89 016 99;
No 2 $10 <¥12.99.
Ta kmc Hay—$7 - OfT 19 nn
Alfa If No 1.
$: : r ‘\ standard. $ :« ■? j ’ 3 ' . No,
? $16 58^14 ; No. ",
Straw—Oat, S6 $9; wheat. $» #90
9 09.
HIDES. TALLOW. WOOL
rU'-e* j Tinted br w are or* t**# bars
of buyer* w f ghta and se>-rttpna. de’iv
«re«1 Omaha
Woo - Wool pel?* 11 PSMJ for full
woole i »k;r*: jh*vrc§. 25c each; citpa.
no wool. 35 0 48c
K. f69.99 | beef.
$;.-.. Xy^r f >T,
H*de> u-rent hide* No 1. 19c; No S,
#r grtAA hides, 8c and . huM#. 7c and
*c branded hide* 7c glue hide# Sc. V d,
12He and 11 calf. 14c and 12H'. d*a
con*. #8r each: clue calf and kid. 5c;
horaa hide*, fl ftftgj ftft; ponie* and glues,
817 5 each volts. 26* naeh. hog skma,
’ c c» h .dry h-def I*- - and 12' per ib ;
dr' salted, i' c and 9c. drr biue, 6r.
Ta 'W and <?rea*e—No 1 tallow. 9f;
R tallow. |up; No 2 ta w 6c. A grease.
■ B 5Hc; yellow grease. 6c;
brown greaae 4He.
5r# \orh Inv Goods
New Tv** June * 'ottNn g ■> '•ds se>14l
a little more freely t-'-day *? very low
price* | tick
n»;*. khaki dm!!# an 1 working *u t ma
terial* f.'r cutting up ; urp»vse* Generallw
the niarkets nere dull Yams continued
v;u:<*» ap! barely a*ead' Raw *:3k waa
# -*htl> higher, \\ . marketa were
with in ea*fg - *. *r.a
.
ate filling In bualnras on na*h fabr.ca.
\e%% York Dried Bait
v York. Jutt« ?— Evaporated Arplrs
— Dull.
Prune*—Dull #nd weak,
5 ,W
4b
Ra * n# - 4StW,!>
Cheaper than
Staying at Home
Canadian Pacific
IT SPANS THE WORLD
Japan. Our.a and Korea oflcr unupia peatru-e* and eipenatv-ea to
»: avert* Study tha myatenoua Feat thta veai Four lutunou*
■' Finpraaaea'' —larjaat. nr»t« laateat a%4 (meat ahipaon the I'a. tv
— make tha heamir* ot the Orient eawl> avveanh a to you f jftu
aenua Iroin Vancouver B C.tuary iottnicht to Japan and Chin*.
Full mformotum Aaaa local uaom*kct avert, or
K 5 l.t MOITMY’, r.eeeial A*e«t > 5 Trattk Dept.
40 Naith Deaibein Stiaat, Cknaia, 111
T ^ 3 *• i