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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1924)
j Chicago Wheat Moves Higher in Broader Trade Best Levels Shaded Late in Day Because of Abrupt Break in May Corn. - By CHARLES J. LEYDEX, (niven-.nl Service Staff Correspondent. Clilcngo. May 20.—Displaying much bolter “form, ’ wheat /prices moved higher today In *n appreciably broader trade. Best levels were shaded late in the day because of the abrupt break in May corn. Independent strength at Winnipeg, a livelier export call and predictions that the production of wheat in Europe this Itson was to be greatly reduced all -ved to engender an Improved 'feeling, vyheat closed %c to %c higher, corn is %c lower to %c higher, oats were c down to %c higher ami rye ruled un anged to %c higher. Spreading between this market and tnnipeg continued to be a popular trans ition. ♦ There was buying of July here hlnat sales at Winnipeg, also sales of b Chicago September against purchases 'the October in the Canadian market, [sort sales were estimated at 600,000 phels. largely Manitoban, but also some Prospects that considerable corn will i id Us way to this market before the | piratlon of May frightened many of me scattered longs out. May corn sold at a premium of 2c over ttfe July early, which pit observers said culminated stop loss orders. Milwaukee was reported of fering corn here, while there were other /reports that No. 3 yellow corn was bought back from the east at 2c under the May delivery. Oats were Irregular, wtili corn, at the last. The weakness in May corn led to scattered liquidation in May oats. Trade In rye was spiritless Bullish news on this grain counts for little. Re ports of a poor crop In Germany had no effect whatsoever. Provisions were reactionary within a narrow range. Lard was 2%c to 6c lower and ribs were unchanged. Pit Notes. By emphasizing the rapidity with which . the consuming world has eaten into the \ freak record Canadian crop of wheat the 1 last year, the grain trade Is announcing I the fact that the world over-production ! is about a thing of the past. Every re port from wheat growing countries prac tically predicts less production. Ofc'ing to the scarcity of pota’oea abroad, Grteat 1 Britain and Ireland are expected to take 4,600,000 bushels of foreign wheat weekly for the balance of the season. * Crops in Germany are said to be poor at this time, the crop in France is said to have been greatly over estimated and it Is reliably claimed at Winnipeg that the best estimate for this year's Canadian wheat crop is 350,000.000 bushels. Last year Canada raised 476.000.000 bushels. The acreage throughout the prairie prov inces is not only to be less than a year !< ago, but seeding operations are behind schedule, owing to inclement weather. There was little change in the crop news and weather. The forecast for the southwest was for continued cool, with prospects for showers in some sections. The winter wheat crop is badly in need of rain over areas, according' to most re ports, but damage complaints have not been sufficiently numerous to attract any lasting support. The McNary-Haugen bill was slated to come up for discussion In the house late | today. The trade Is closely watching news from the capital regarding this measure. The passage of the bill w-ould greatly unsettle the grain market, and there ia no telling at this time just what effect its passage would have finally. However, it Is questionable whether the bill will ever pass both houses, and more questionable that the president will sign the bill. CHICAGO CASH PRICES. By Updike Grain company. Atlantic 6312. Art- ' Open, i High. ! Low, i Close. I Ye«T~ Wht. • I | 1 May 1.04% 1.05% 104%} 1.04% 1.04% July 1.06 1 1.07 1.06 1.06%l 1.06% 1.00 % I I 1.06% 1.06% Sep. 1.07*41 1.06 1.07%; 1.07% 107% Dec 1.09% 1.10% 1.09 % | 1.10%! 1.10 Rye j J I I May .65 f .66<41 65 I .65%’ .65% July .07 ] .07*41 .66%; .67 | .60% Sep. f .68%! .61%! .68%' -68%' .68% May f .78 j .71%] .77%! .77% l .78 I .78 %l • . .77% July t .76 V41 .77%; .76% -"CV -76% Sep. j .75 % | .76%! .76% .76%' .75% l. 75 % I f Dec. .68 .68% I .68 .68 .67% Oats ! | I \ May .47 % * .47% .47 .47 .47% : . .47 % I July 44% .44% .44 .44 .44 *4 Sep. I . 39 % J .39% 39*2 .39% .19% . 3 9 % i Dec. I .41 ' .41%. .41 ! .41 Lard till July 10 65 10.65 110.65 10.57 10.02 Sep. 10190 >10.90 10.86 10.86 10.90 Ribs ill July 9.93 9.95 9 95 9.95 9 96 8ep. >10.00 i 10.00 110.00 110.00 {10.00 Minneapolis Cash Grain. f Minneapolis, May 20.—Wheat—-Cash No. 1 northern. $1.13% @1.17 %; No. 1 dark northern spring, choice to fancy, $1.25 %@ 132%; good to choice, $1.19 % @ 1.24% ; ordinary to good, $1.15% @ 1.18% ; May, $1.12; July. 31 13%; September. $1.12*4. Corn—No. 3 yellow, 71@72e. Oats.—No. 3 white. 44% @45*4e. Barley—54 @ 71c. Rye—No. 2. 01@61%c. I'Max—No. $2 41 @2.45 sit. Louis Cash Grain. St. Louis. May 20.—Close—Wheat — May $ 1 '>5*- : July. $1.05%. Corn — May. 77%c; July, 77 %c. ' tuts—May. 48 %c. Minneapolis Hour Minneapolis, Minn . May .0.—Flour— Market unchanged. jn.oofc 18.00. WOMEN! DYE ■ OR DRAPERY Waists Kimonos Draperies Skirts Dresses Ginghams Coats Sweaters Stockings Each 16-cent package of "Diamond Dyes" contains directions so simple any women can dyo or tint any oid, worn, faded thing new, even If she haa never dyed before., Drug stores sell all colors. t | Omaha Grain v Omaha, May 20. Caah wheat add at unchanged prices to higher. There was a fairly good demand for cash wheat and tables were well cleared of samples. Outside mills were in the market again today and the better quality of wheat brought the high er prices. Reedpts were 38 cart. Corn sold Vj@1c higher, low moisture corn selling at the extreme advance. Re ceipts continue light and tables were cleared of samples early; 14 cars of corn were reported in. Oats were In better demand today, bulk of the receipts selling higher. Re ceipts were 16 cars. Rye and barley quoted nominally un changed. Omaha Carlo! Sales. WHEAT. No. 1 dark hard: 1 car, smutty, $1.21. No. 3 hard: 3 cars, $1.01; 5 cars, $1.00H. No. 3 hard: 1 car, 99*4c; l oar. 99c. No. 6 hard; 1 car, 92c; 1 car, smutty, 90c. No. 4 durum: 1 car, amber, 98c. No. 2 mixed: 1 car, 99c; 1 car, 96c. No. 3 mixed: 1 car, 95c. 1 No. 4 mixed: 1 car. 94c; 2 cars. 92c. No. 5 mixed: 1 car. 96c. Special: 1 car, smutty, 86c. No. 5 spring: 1 car. 97c. CORN. No. 3 yellow: 1 car, 73%e. No. 4 yellow: 1 car, 72 *4 c. No. 3 mixed: 3 cars, 71c OATS. No. 2 white: 1 car, 47 *kc. No. 3 white: 11 cars, 4vc. No. 2 mixed: l car, 47c. BARLEY No. 4: 1 car, 68c. Daily Inspection of Grain Received. WHEAT.4 Hard: 6 cars No. 1, 11 cars No. 2, 10 cars No. 3, 3 cars No. 4, 2 cars sample. Mixed: 1 car No. 1, 1 car No. 2, 3 cars No. 4. I car sample. Mixed: 1 car No. 1. I car No. 2, 3 cars No. 4, 1 car sample. fipring: l car No. 1. 1 car No. 2, 1 car No. 4. Durum: 2 cars NoT"iT 1 car No. 4. Total. 4 4 cars. CORN. Yellow: 1 car No. 3, 4 cars No. 4, 2 cars No. 5. White: 1 car No. 3. 1 car No. 5. Mixed: 2 cars No. 2. 4 tars No. 2, 2 cars No. 4. I car No. 6. Total. 18 cars. OATS. White: 21 cars No. 3. 3 cars No. 4. 1 car sample. Total, 26 cars. OMAHA RECEIPTS AND SHIPMENTS. (Carlots.) Receipts: Today. W'k Ago. Y r Ago. Wheat . 38 18 10 Corn . 14 13 10, Oats . 15 11 6 Rye . , 1 1 Barley . 1 " Shipments: Wheat . 24 31 6 Corn .:_ 30 69 16 Oats . 26 26 15 Rye . 1 2 Barley . 1 PRIMARY RECEIPTS AND SHIPMENTS (Bushels, i Receipts: Tad ay. W'k Ago. Y*r Ago. Wheat . 586,000 566,000 640,000 Corn . 351 000 527,000 306.000 Oats . 386.0L0 584,000 659,000 Shipments: Wheat . 356,000 985,000 824,000 Corn . 813.000 753,000 393.000 Oats . 488,000 469,000 650,000 EXPORT CLEARINGS. Bushels: Today. Y'r Ago. Wheat and flour. 230.000 7 19,000 Corn . 20.O00 Oats . 20,000 80,000 WORLD'S VISIBLE. Bushels: Today. Week Ago. Year Ago. Wheat ..211.588,000 219.347,000 148,471,000 Corn ... 16,801,000 19,303,000 14.272.000 Data ... 35,844.000 38.886,000 31.319,000 CHICAGO RECEIPTS Week Y ear Carlots— Today Ago. Ago. Wheat . 36 40 50 Corn . 65 130 46 Oats . 8 4 109 63 KANSAS CITY RECEIPTS Wheat . 43 35 46 Com . 7 5 14 Oats . 3 15 ST. LOLLS RECEIPTS Wheat . 5h 38 71 Corn .f. 4 9 52 54 Oats . 57 H" 24 NORTHWESTERN WHEAT RECEIPTS Minneapolis .114 195 128 Duluth . 109 4i 72 Winnipeg .. 940 885 43J Corn and Wheat Bulletin Corn and wheat region bulletin for 24 hours ending at $ a in. Monday. Stations— High. Low. Rain. Ashland . 57 44 0.00 Auburn ... 4 3 0.01 Broken Bow . 56 4 1 0.02 Columbus . 44 o.OO Culbertson . 28 0.00 zFalrbury . 46 0.00 /.Fairmont . 61 43 0.00 Grand Island . fi'J 4*2 0.08 Hartlngton . 62 40 0.00 zHastings . 61 4 4 0.00 Holdredge . fit 41 0.00 Lincoln . 6 2 4 5 0 01 zNorth Loup . 60 44 0 00 North Platte . 54 40 0.01 Oakdale . 5 4 4 3 0.01 Omaha . 57 45 0.00 O'Neill . 4 4 0.00 Red Cloud . . 46 0 00 Tekamah . 58 45 o.no Valentine . 52 46 0.00 Higest and lowest during 12 hours end ing at 8 a m 75th meridian time, ex Cliicagn Cash Prices. Chicago, May 20.—Wheat—No 1 hard. $1.07 *4 fix 1 121 > : No 2 hard. $1.07 Corn—No. 2 mixed, 80c; No. 2 yellow. $ lc. oats—No. 2 white. 49*4 04$4c; No. 8 white, 48\c. Rye—No 3. 65c. Barley—Tic Seed—Timothy, $5.0007.75; clover. $10.60 0 18.60. Provisions—Lard, $10.40; ribs, $10.12; bellies, $10.25. kiinnii City Grain. Kansas City, May 20.—Wheat—No. - hard, $1.0101.16; No. 2 red. $1.0501.06; May. 97**0 bid: July, 97Kc asked; Sep tember, 99**0 bid. Corn—No. 3 white. .6077c; No. 2 yel low*. 76076tic: No 3 yellow. 75076c; No. 2 mixed, 72‘4c: May. 71 asked; July, 7207174c asked: September, 71Hc bid. Hay—Market unchanged. Ka«t St. I*»uU l.ivMfurh. East St. Douis, III., May 12.—Cattle Receipts. 4.000 hcp.tl; native und Texas steers steady; light yearling* and heifers steady to strong; beat cows steady; others slow to 16c lower; lignt vealers 50c to 75c higher; other classes steady; top mixed yearlings. $9.70; native steers. $8.0009.90; Texas. $6.7508.00; lighf’ yearling* and heifers. $H.0009.50: beef cows. $5.2006.70; canners, $2.1602.80; bologna bull*. $4.2000.00; vealers, $10.00, top calves, $ 10.60. Hogs—Receipt*. 19.000 head: market fairly active, mostly 5c lower; bulk good butchers 170 pounds and up. $7.6607.70“, light lights and pig* little ••hanged: de sirable 140 to ken-pound kinds largely. «.1007.80; good 120 to 1$0 pounds pig*. $6.5007.00; lighter kinds downward to $5.50; packer shows mostly $6.00. Sheep and Lamb*—Receipts, 2.500 bead; few heavy ewes lower; otner trade steady, few clipped lambs to butchers, $15.40; top to packers. $15.25; bulk clipped, $15.10; bulk soring larnbs, $16.75017.00; top, $17.00; clipped ewes mostly $7.00; few heavies late. $6.00. Coffee Futures. yew York. May 20.—Coffee futures were generally lower today, owing to reports of an easier tons for low grade Hanto* In the cost and freight market and fchiropean selling and commission house selling. The opening was 3 points lower to 8 points higher, with July easing off to 12.40c and December to 11.26c. The close was net unchanged to 19 points lower. Hale* were estimated at 23.000 bags. Closing quotations: May. 1.1 0;’.< .bib 13.35c: September, 11 66c; October, 11.62c; December, 11.28c; March, 11.06c. Spot coffee, easier; Rio 7s. 14 H 0 14 ** c; Santos 4s, 18 H 019 li r. Chicago flutter. Ohlcago, May 20.»—With h fair amount of trade reported, the butter market to day continued steady on top score* and firm on the medium and under grades. Demands were principally for 89 score and 91 score. Dealers were holding these grsdea firmly and In some quarters were asking premiums. The centralized car market appeared firm, with a fair de mand and limited supplls*. Fresh butter: 92 score, 37He; 91 score, 3«Hc; 9(i score. :'.6c; 89 score, 85Ho; 88 score. 34Ho; 87 score, 33 He. Centralized cm riots: 90 score. 37 Ho; 89 score, 36$tr; *9 score, 84Hc. Cotton Quotations. r Ntw »York Cotton exchange quotations furnished by J. H. Bach* d- Co.. 234 Omaha National Bank building. Rhone Jackson 6187: I \ I I I Close. I Open. 1 High. ! bow. 1 Close. I Hat’y MTy 180.96 131.66 30.96 TITTh 181.10 July >28.65 129.26 '28.60 29 00 128.98 Oct. 126.07 >26.63 !25 07 126.40 (25.35 Dec. 124.45 124.97 124.44 124.63 >24.67 Jan. 124.16 (24.82 24.15 124.38 124.36 Mar. 124.30 (24.67 (34 30 124.63 124 46 fit Joseph livestock. Rt. Joseph, Mo . May 20.—Ifogs Re ceipts. 7.000 head: uneven; generally Ready; top. $7.46; bulk, $7.2607.40 Cattle—Receipts, 2,000 head; setive; Htesdy lo 16c higher; bulk steer*. 88.760 10.60; top. $10.65; cows and heifer*. It 50 010.00; calvp*. $6.0009 50; stocker* anil feeder* $6.6008.50. Hheep—Receipt*. 3.500 head steady to 26c hither lambs, $16 25017.16 flipped ewe*. $7.00 08.25. i llicit go Prod lire. Chicago, May 20—Butter Higher; creamery extra*. 37*4 037H‘‘; standards, :i7 V4ft; extra firsts, 180*6Hc: firsts. 34H 0 35 He; seconds, 3O033Hr Eggs—Hlrher: . receipts. 43.809 firsts, 38% 024Hr. ordinary firsts. XjVaO 23c; a'oDua pack astraa, 26%o; firsts. (iajjk . • _ r""— ■ "> Omaha Livestock L-----—' May 20. Receipts wert: Cattle. Hogs. Sheep Olficial Monday .10,61b 10,047 4,39* E^umate Tuesday .. 9,000 12,500 <,000 i'wo days this week . 19,ij < o 22,647 11,393 Same da>s lest wK. 21,263 23,741 11,222 Same two wka ago. 17,799 30.669 17.740 Same three wks ago.l6.9u3 30,244 21,160 Same year ago.18,255 24,607 25,654 Receipts and disposition of livestock at the Union stock yards. Omaha Neb., for 24 hours ending at 3 p. in.. May 20. 1924. RECEIPTS—CARLOT % Cattle, Hogs. Sheep. Mo Pac Ry . 12 3 U P K R .11.. 5« 21 C & N XV east ..... 6 3 C & N \V west ... 69 54 C St P M A O. 29 13 <J 14 & Q east . 30 . 4 C B At Q west . 63 22 7 C R 1 & I* east. 2" 1 <J ft 1 & P west .... 11 5 1 C R 11 6 1 C G R R . a Total receipts ....350 167 32 DISPOSITION- 11EAD Cattle. Hogs. Sheep. Armour & Co . 1366 3661 12b9 Cudahy l ack Co . 1493 2987 993 Dold Packing Co . 420 1690 - Morris Packing Co ... 701 1565 483 Swift A Co . 1667 2696 2290 Kenneth Ac Murray. 460 .... Hoffman Bros.*. 14 . Midwest Pack Co. 12 . U’Dea P . 4 . Uniahn Pack Co . 24 *. John Roth A Sons. 27 . S Om Pack Co . 36 . Murphy J W . • . 787 .... Lincoln Pack Co ... 181 .... Nagle Pack Co . 109 . Sinclair Pack Co ... 148 . Wilson Pack Co ... 549 . Anderson A; Son . 20 . Bulla J H . 89 . Cheek W H . 56 . Dennis A Francis. _49 . Harvey John . *1 . Inghrum T J . *0 . Kellogg F* G . IS . Kirkpatricfc Bros . ^94 . Longman Bros . 22« . Lubergei* Henry S ... 23 . Mo Kan O * C Co... 49 . Neb Cattle Co . 58 . Root J B A 20 ,. Sargent A Finnegan . • * * .. Smiley Bros . . Sullivan Bros . 1 > £ . Wertheimer A Degen.. 69 .. Other buyers . .A.. .. 349 j— » • _____ Totaj . 8935 13646 5469 Cattle—Receipts, 9.000 head. With an other liberal run of cattle both ship pers and local packers showed more inlet est In the offerings and prices bid and paid were strong to J 0 0*160 higher than .Monday. Quality of the cattle showed improvement, particularly the yearlings, and beat cattle on sale went as high as $11.00011.25. Cow stuff was in broad demand and stronger and the few Stock ers and feeders on sale brought fully steady prices. _ Quotation on Cattle—Choice to prime beeves, $10.35011.25; good to choice beeves. $9.60010.25; fair to good beeves, $.8 8509.60: common to fair beeves, $8.Uir 08.75; choice to prime yearlings. $9.50® 10.35; good to choice yearlings. $8.60® 9 60; fair to good yearlings, $8.00 0 8.60; common to fair yearlings. $7.0008.00; good to choice fed heifers. $8.2509.10; fair tc good heifers, $7.2508.25; common to fair fed heifers. $6.000 7.00: choice to prime cows, $7.650 8.50; good to choice cows. $6.40 0 7.60: fair to fed cows, $5.00 (fj 6.26; cutters. $2 750 4.00; tanners, $1.60 02.60; veal calves, $6.00011.00; heavy and medium calves, $4.5009.00; bologna bulls. $4.0004.75; beef bulls. $4.7505 75; butcher bulls, $5.5007.50; good to choice feeders. $8.2609.26: fair to good feeders, $7.250 8.00; common to fair feeders. $6.50 07 25; good to choice stockers. $7.60® 8.60; fair to good stockers, $6.7507.60; common to fair stockers, $6.0006.75; trashy stcck*rs. $4 0005.60; stock heifers. $4.0004.00; feeding cows. $3.7604 76; stock cows. $3.0004.00; stock calves, $4 00 08.25. BEEF STEERS No. Av. Pr. No. Av. Pr. 22.1063 $10 00 16. 871 $10 00 13.i 16 1 10 10 21.1097 10 la 4.14 7 7 10 23 20. 985 10 25 22 . 1*30 10 ;.o 21.1022 10 60 17 .1 Jbl 10 75 35.1276 10 76 24.1089 10 85 20.1401 11 25 13.688 8 00 15. 79 ' S 60 23 . 7 49 H 60 21 . 842 8 8.* ] 8. 529 9 15 14.1015 9 !0 23.. 1 106 9 60 20.1178 9 65 18 .1053 9 60 28. 815 9 70 27. *_ 111 5 9 70 9.1418 9 75 24 . 980 9 75 28. 865 9 85 18.1266 9 85 20.1136 9 90 BEEF COWS 11.1047 6 90 13.1110 7 00 16 .1096 7 25 22.1196 7 60 7. 1384 8 26 2.1480 6 25 7.1028 8 35 FAT HEIFERS 17 . 638 7 00 12 672 7 90 16. 708 8 25 17 697 8 25 10 . 678 8 25 BEEF STEERS AND HEIFERS 20. 741 8 26 29 775 8 35 23. ... 827 8 65 26 826 9 26 : ST»*CKEKS AND FEEDERS 4. 630 7 00 9. 724 7 40 CALVES 2 . 290 6 00 1 300 8 00 3 . 160 9 60 1 160 10 00 Hogs—Receipts. 12.500 head. Continued supplies of just rair proportions and ratuer favorable reports from other cen ters gave local trade a good tons on the Initial runs this morning and the movement to shippers was under way early at prices fully steady with Mon day. Ths packer market waa a two-sided affair, trade on best butchers being ac tive at steady figures, while mixed and light kinds were a trifle draggy. Bulk of the rales was at $7.0007.36, with top for the day. $7.35. HOGS No. Av. 8h. Pr. No. Av. Sh. Pr. . 21,6 $7 26 b'. .255 ... $< 25 23.. 280 7 30 18. .265 7 30 35.. 292 ... « 3* Sheep and Lambs—Receipts. 7,000 head. A fairly broad demand was apparent for lambs tarrying killer flesh this morning and with supplies not burdensome the 1 market ruled firm to in some rases pos sibly a little higher. Shearers were of limited number and the market quotably steady. Aged sheep also ruled around steady. Quotations on Sheep and Lambs—Fat lambs. good to choice, $16.60 017.00; fat lambs, fair to uond, $16.60016.25; clipped lambs. $16 00016.15; shearing UmbR. $16.26016.10; wethers, $9.60016.00; yearlings. $10.00012.00; fat ewes, $6,000 8 50; clipped ewes. $4.0007.60. Chicago lJlMtork. Chicago. May 20-—Hog*—Receipts 23 - I 000 head: slow: medium and heavyweight mostly unchanged: lightweights steady to ' 10»- lowet ; light light, 10®16c off: sell- • ittg Digs. 15© 16c lower: light shipping • demand bulk good and choice. $2.60 ft .".26-pound butcher*. $7.60© 7.75: top. $7.75: bulk desirable 160 to 210-pound weight. $7.55 0 7.65; better grade* 140 to 150 pound averages $7.1007.40; bulk packing sows, $6 8007.00; good and choice, strong weight slaughter pigs largely. $6 2606 60r heavyweight. $7 5u ©7.75: medium weight. $7.6007.76; light weight. $7 2007.70; light light. $6.35© 7.60; packing sows, smooth. $6 0607 10; packing sows, rough. $6.8006 96. slaugh ter pigs. $5.60©6.75. Cattle—Receipts. 0.000 head: beef steers and yearlings rather slow, uneven: gen erally steady to strong with Mondays decline; receipts moderate: killing duality mostly medium; no strictly choice of ferings here; early top matured steers, $11.25: few loads. $10.76® 10.$0; yearling* in liberal supply; beet youngsters. $11.00; bulk fed steers and yearling*. $8 50© 10 50; fat she stock active, strong; snots higher, hulls steady to esay; veal calves. 25 ©50c higher, mostly 50o up; packers taking good to choice kind at 110.60© 1100; outsiders selecting upward to $12.00; stickers and feeder* scarce, firm: bulk thin fleshed kinds. $$.6008.50; meaty feeders to Wisconsin grazer*. $10.$5; one load averaging 1.176 pounds late yester day. $11.16. . ... t Sheep and Lambs— Receipts. 7.000 bead: falrlv active; fat lambs steady: sheep weak to shade lower; particularly heavy kinds: early bulk fat clipped lambs. $14.76016 25; some held higher: fat clip ped ewes and handvwelght upward to tH 25: no choice light weight on sale; few good wooled ewes, $8. <6; spring lambs, $17 60. _ Kansas City Livestock. Kansas City. Mo . May It.—Department of Agriculture -Cattle—Receipts, 11.000 head; calves, 2,000 hesd; slow; few sale* beef steers barely atendy: yearlings dull; undertone weak, early bulk feeder steers. $8.00010.26; she stock weak to 16c lower; beef cows and heifers $5.00©* 00; bulls weak; bolognas, $4.25 0 4.75; calve* steady; practical top veals, $10.00) in^d luma and heavies, $5.000* 00. better grades Miocker* ind feeders steady; plain er klnda dull; bulk. $H 60 0 8 60. Hogs—Receipts. 10,000 hesd. uneven; mostly steady*, shipper and packer top. $7.45; bulk of sales. $7.2607 45; hulk, 1*0 to 300-pound averages. $7.26 07.45: 130 to 150-pound. $6 6007.00; packing sow* steady to 10c higher at $6 8<%7.00; stork pigs, 10®16c higher; mostly. $5.2506.00. ftheep—Receipts. 6.000 head: lambs un even; steady. generally; beat native sprlngera. $7.00; better grade* mostly,* $1$.60 016.86; top. clippers. 116 00; others, $14.600 1 4 76 ; wooled skins. $17 00; *hetl>. 15025c lower: beat Texas wnthere. $8 6; others, $7.40©8 76. Mntix lily Livestock. Hlout City, In May 20— Cattle Ttr retptt. 4.000 heid: market slow; killers steady. 15c lower; stoclr.ers weak; rat steer* and yearlings, $7.00011.26; bulk. $8.00010.00; fut row* and heifers, $5 00® 9.26; cinotn ">ni cutters, $? 3604.00; vnals, 94.00© i 2.00; bull*- $4.2504 00, feeders. $7.0004,50; Stockers, 16.00#8 00 . stock* yearlings ami calves. $4 760* 00, feeding rows and heifers, $3 600 5.00. Hogs—Receipts, ll.ooo head; marks! fully steady; lop, $7 30; bulk of sales. $7 1607.80, light*. $7 00 0 7 *6: butehsre $7 2607.30 mined. $4 #o©7 30 h*#vy narUsra. $6.$0. stage. $6 14. goad Pig" $8 *0 in ilitlj. I Bonus Passage c # | Causes Decline in Stock Market Shares Dumped Freely, Prices Breaking in ^ay to Un nerve Timid—-New Lows Set. By RICUARI) WIM.ANE. Universal Service Financial Editor. New York. May 20.—A pronounced de cline was to have been expected In stock market prices today a« a result of the passage of the bonus over the president s veto. It wouldn’t have been bo heavy, however, had It not been for the misin formation given out by the news ticker people Monday, which led many persons to buy stocks in the confident expecta tion that the veto was going to be sus tained. . . Shares were dumped rather freely im mediately after the opening today and prices broke in n way to unnerve timid persons. A lot of Issues, some of them market leaders, dropped to new lows. Cast Iron Pipe and Dupont were down 6 points In short order; Baldwin. 3 Vs; American Can, 3%, and General Electric, |ia, while U. S. Steel was down 1% to 96 H. Dess important stocks, pf course, suf fered less for they got less attontlon. The break was too violent to last. Dater in the day the bears launched a drive that stirred the animals up again. This attack continued until near the close. Steel common went up to 95. But for the strength of Chesapeake Ohio the market probably would have gone lower. . , As It was. C. & O. registered a gain of 1 \ points in the face of a crumbling ten dency throughout the list. Transactions aggregated <02.300 shares The loss In the rails averaged H point and In the Industrials 1% points. Ralls still average higher in price than this; time last year, but industrials average nearly 4 V6 points lower. Sugar eased off again, this tims 13 ! points. Copper advanced V4c per pound. Foreign exchange was not particularly active except in the case of francs, which were lower and apparently again under speculative pressure. nn Cotton opened lower and sold off 20 to 30 points from Monday’s closing. | New York Quotations | New Tork etock exchange quotation* furnished by J. S. Bache & Co., H 4 Omaha National Bank building: Mon. High. Low Close. Clone. Ajax Rubber .... 5 4% 4% 4% Allied Chemical .. 71% 70% lofy 71% Allia-Chalmera ... 42% 41% 41% 43 Amer Heet Sugar. 38% 38% 38,* Am?rCB?k 8^" ” »0 SO* Amer “an .100* »»'# 100* 100* Amer far & Kdry.• lj‘* Amer H & f.eath. .. .. •* * Amer II * I. pfd S3* OJ * 42 * 4i Amer lr>t Corp... 21* JO* .0* .1* Amer tcnseed ... 1.* '# 1J* Amer Coco . n 20* .0* 22* Amer S & Com .. 12 ?- >»}* Amer Smell .... *1 «•»". “J* J'x Amer Smelt pfd .. . • #** ’* * Amer St Fdrs .. 34* 33* 33 # ..4 Amer Sugar . 42* 41* 4i 42* Am" T*Tm‘.r.*:.:::i2i 123 ; 3 iSS dolin ':::: «% •>« j S 1 4 Aw!oC°Dry Good.:: Ill M* j I »J* Amhlaon 102* loi* 102 m* At o * w 1 . ■ u* *52 AuSn^fich ::::: u% «* i»* 20 Ba!dwlnU,tter 106* lot* 1«&*» *•*» Baltimore A O .. 2 Bethlehem Steel 4«% 46% 46% J J % Bunch Magneto .. ... Brookly n -M Ry • ' '* 1 * % 1 » l» J ? J* B-Man pfd .. «0 »9 *» J®./ *>f% Cm! Backing ■ . • JJJf !)*£ Cal Petroleum -•>% Cal & Ariz Mining.45% 44% 4o 4..% Can Pacific IJJJj * Central Leather .11 10 % 1®^* \}. Central Lea pf«l .• 19% «j*% 39 40 * Cerro de Pasco 4t% 45% 4 4 44 * Chand Motor* . . 43% 42% 43% 43% Cheea A Ohio ‘8% 48% . •% Chicago A N W .. 55% 53 53 •>} CM A St P . 13% 13% J3% J4, C M A St P pfd -5 24% 24% 24 * C R I A P 34% 24% 24% 25 C St r M A O Ry 34 53% .-% 34% Chile Copper .... 27% 2*% -7% -»% Chino . ••• Cluett - Peabody. b3^ Ciu* tt-Pea pfd.. . 10J Cocoa-Cola . 65 64% M% 66 Colo Fuel A Iron 39% 3s 39% 4U% Columbian Car . . - • • • •• • •«*. Columbia Gua . 56 3*»% .•‘3% 3»*. * Congoleum . 34% 33% 34 *4 • Consolidated Cig *°% *? Continental Can . 46% 45% 4* 49 * Conti Motors .•• •••• Corn Products ... 34% -♦% -4% -*«•» Cosden . 29 27% 2H% 29% CrucibI* . 50% 48 49% 51 % Cuba Can* S . •••• ■ •• Jt* Cuba C s pfd . ■ 5*. % VW% ‘ C-Am Sugar . 30% 30 30 50% Cuvamel Fruit 61% 6°Ji 60% t>3 Daniel Boon* . . 22% 21% 22% *3% Davidson Chem ■ 45% 43% 44% 4i% Delaware AH.. 109% 101% 109% 109% Dome Min ..• •* . • • • • Dup De Nem ...116 L12 113% 118 Eastman Kodak .107% f07 % 107% 107% Erie . 24% 24% 24% 26 Elec Stor Bat ... 53% 52% 5.1 54 Famous Play .... 70% 69% «0% 71 * Fifth Av* B L 10% 10% Flak Rubber . ,5% Fleischiuan'a Y ... 49 48 % 48% 49% Freeport Tex •••• s % 8% General Aaphalt . 34% 33% .13% *•'» Gen Klee .215 212 214% 216% Gen Motor* . .. 12% 12% 12% 12% Gold Dust . 34% 4 3 4 38% UoGdrlch . •• -0% 20% Gt. Nor Or* .27 Z* at Nor Ry pfd ... 57 66 % 56% 67% Gulf State* St! .. «3 % 62 63 66% Hartmann Trunk . 34% 34 34% .15 Hayes Wheel ... 32% 52% *2% 33 Hudson Motor* .... . 22 21% Hornestake M Co.. 49% Houston Oil ..... 64% 61 63% 66% Hupp Motors ..... 11% 11% 11% 11% III Central . 102% 102% Inspiration . 22% 23% Ini K 1 C _ 22% 22 "2% 22% Int harvester. 14 $4% [nt Merc Marina *% h% nt M M pfd _ 34 32% 33% 24% fnt Nickel . 11% n% int Paper . 36% 35% 36% 36 Invincible Oil .. 12% 12 12% 11% Tone* Tea .?._ .. 27 Iordan Motor .... 22 21% 21% 22% K C Southern . ... 18% 1%% Kell-Sprlng .14% 11% 13% 14% Kennecott .... 37% 37% 3i% 38 Keystone Tire ... 1 % 1 % l.ee Rubber . 8% 8% 8% 8% Lehigh Val . 40% 40 40% 41 Lehigh Rite* - 28% 28% 28% 29% Lima IaOCo . 67% #»6% 66% 67% l.oose-Wiiea. 64% Lou A Nash . 9: 92% 92% 93 Mark Truck . 79 77% 78% 79% Mav Dept Stor* ... 8% Maxwell Motor A 41 40 40 41 % Maxwell Motor R. 10% 11 Mrtrland .. ... 32% 31% 32 38 M*»x Seaboard... 19 18% 18% If Miami Copper . .. 20 20 Mid States Oil .. 3% 3% 3% 3% Mid Steel. 26% Mo Pao . 12% Mo Pa. pfd . 19% 39 19% 40% Mont-Ward . 22% 21% 21% 22% Mother Lode .... 6% 4% 6% 6% Nash Motor* .... *** Nat Blarult . 63% 62% 5 3 6: % Nat Enamel .... 21% 18% 20 23 Nat Lead . 128 127% 127% 130 N Y Air Brake 38 "«% 36% 14% N Y C .. .100% lon% 100% l*»|% N Y f A Ht L . . 7 8 76 % 7 8 76% N T N H A 11 .. 1*% 13 18% 19 % Nor Amer .24% 2 4 24 % 24 Northern Pacific.. 52 61 - M 62% N A W Ry.119 117 117% 119% Orpheum . 18% 1*% Owens Bottle . 42% 42% Pacific Oil . 47 46 48% 47% Packard Motor .. 10% 10 10 10% Pan American .... 48 47 % 47% 48 Pan-American B.. 46% 45% 45% 46% Penn R R .. 43% 43% 43% 43% Peoples Gas .... . .. 94% Per* Marquette .. 48% 4* 48% 48% Phillips Petroleum 36 36% 8664 3»% Pierce-Arrow .. 6% 6% Poatum Cereal . .... 60 Pressed HI eel Car. 47% 47% 47% 48 Producers A Ref 26% 24% "4% 26% Pullman . 119% 117% 117% 118% Punta Ale Sugar.. 62% 62 62 63 Pure Oil . . 22 21 % 21% 22% Ry Steel Spring. 109% 110 Huy Consol . •% 9 % 9% 9% Reading .62% 61% 52 62 RcHtllng Rltea .. II Vi O%0 u% 1 *» Meplogle . 8 8 % Rep Iron A Steel.. 44% 45% 43% 43»y Royal Dutch N Y. 64% 64% 54% 34% St I. A S V . 20% 2«% 20% .'1 St T. A S W. 36 33% -8 % Schulte Cigar St.. ... 100% .Soar* nnebuck ... 82 "*% 80% 82% Shell tlnlon Oil... 17 18% If. % 17% Simmons Co . 22% ?2% 22% 22% Sinclair Oil . 19% 19 19 19% Sloes- Sheffield .. 64 62 61 55 Skelly Oil.20% 19% 19% 20% Southern Pacific.. 86% xs s8 % *>9 Southern Railway. 63% 63»i 63% 64 Mtd Oil of Cal 68% 5». 66% a. % Std. Oil of N. .1 33% 88% 31% 31% Stewart-Warner. 68% 54 66 % ■'*% Stromberg Carb. 3ti% 66% 8% .7% Htudshaker .31% 10% 306, 81 % Submarine float.. *% 8', Texas Co lf% 39% «•% 40 Texas A Pac ific 8% ■•;% '7% * % Timken Roller B 32% 3'.’% 1 * % :!*.•% Tob Product*. 66% 36% 5 r.'. 37 % Too Prod \ 16% »3% ff-J Trxm “11. ... 7 % 4 tTnlon Pacific- 132% 132 1 t: i % Doited Fruit...... .190 I on tlnlon I'aelfla ...132% 132 112 lt’% United Fruit 19“ 100 D. H. Cast Iron IV «’% 79 8 -% r^ if p fnd Alcohol. «8% 1 % 6 65 ft s. Rubber ... 2*1% "6% 2« 27% K f nubh.r, pO ij f'. tl* '4 |V S. Steel 96% fl« 95% 97% C! s. aitii, iita...ui* u«* ui* ut Utah Copper...,. 6 7 66% 67 67% Vanadium .21% Vivaudou . 7 6% 7 7% Wabash . 16% 14 % 15 15% Wa bash A. 46 43% 4 4 s# 45% Western Union....107 Wostinghouse A B. ... . 87 West highouso El.. 36 36% 55% 35% White Eagle Oil.. 23% 23 % 23% 23% White Motors. 51% 50% 30% 61% Woolworth (new). 82% 82 81) 83% Wool worth Co. 330% 333% Wlllys-Overlnmi . 7% 7 7% 7% Willys-O. pfd. ... C3% 62% 63% 65 Wilson . .. 6 4% 5 4% Wilson, pfd. 20 Worthington P.. .. • . 25 Wrlgley Co.35% 35% 35% 36% Yellow Mfg. Co... 45% 43 4 5 % 46 Yellow Cab. T. Co. 40% 40% 40% 41 Total sales of stocks Monday, 405,800 shares. Total sales of bonds Monday, $8,016,000. Total stocks, 832,400 shares. Today’s Ex-Plv. Csllfornla Petroleum .$ .43% Consolidated Cigar, pfd. 1.75 Hoinestahe Mining Co. .60 orpheum Circuit .12% Pressed Steel, pfd. 1.75 Yellow Taxi Co.33 1-8 Standard nil of California.50 Standard oil of Nebraska. 5.00 Yellow Cab Mfg B.41 2-3 McCrory Stores, class A (per cent) 1 McCrory Stores, class B (per cent) 1 New York Bonds V/ New York. May 20.—Unsettled by pas sage of the bonus bill ovel* the nresl. dent’s veto bond prices today displayed weakness In the early dealings but later recovered most of their losses. Selling pressure at the outset was concentrated on Liberty bonds, causing recessions of as much ns half a point. Quick rallies, however brought quotations hack to near yesterday’s closing level. Investment bankers were not Inclined to fear that the bonus action would have any serious effect on the bond market. Easy money. It was said, had created a fundamentally sound basis for Investment buying, which would not be seriously im paired even bj tin tetirdlOR Influence of the bonus on business and trade. The fn. » that n(> Immediate financing was contemplated by the government. It was felt, might b*' considered favorable. New financing today was absorbed quickly despite the general uneasiness In trading circles. Bankers disposed of $15, 000,000 Great Northern 5s due In 1973 at a price of 92% to yield 5.45 per cent, with out recourse to a public offering. Pro ceeds will be used to reimburse the road's treasury. A good demand was re ported for the $9,250,000 Czecho Slovakia bonds Preparations have been completed by bankers for offering of the New York Central .equipment Issue, which awaits only the authorization of the road’s offi cials. A $4,000,000 Issue of the Feder. , ated Metals corporation 16-year 7« will be sold tomorrow at par. Price changes generally were of little Importance today. An advance In "Nickel Plate" sixes was believed to re flect preparation for an additional bond offering. Wickw Ire-Spencer 7a declined further following official recommenda tions of a readjustment of the company’s capital structure. ( nlted mates Ronds. fKslea In It.000) High. I.ow. Close. 117 Liberty 3%b _ 99 31 99 29 99 30 1 Liberty 1st 4s ..100.14 100.1 4 100.14 398 Liberty 1st 4%s.. 100.20 100.8 100.17 1096 Liberty 2d 4%s.l00.12 100 4 100.11 601 Liberty 3d 4%s ..1012 100.31 101.1 2097 Liberty 4th 4%s.. 100 25 100 15 £00,25 500 U S Gov 4%» ..102.17 102.9 100.15 Foreign. 2 Anton Jurgen 0a... 77 77 77 16 Argentine Gov 7s . 101% 101 101% 97 Argentine Gov 6s.. 90 89% 90 31 Austrian Gov 7s .. 90% 90 90 9 Hordeauacf 6a - *2% IF 82 21 Copenhagen EUs .. 90% 90% 90% : Great Prague 7%s. 84% >4% *4% 21 Lyons 6s . 82% 52 82 7 Marseilles 6a _ »2% 81% 82% 8 Rio de Janeiro 8s 47 91 % 91 91% 97 Cezcho Rep 8s .... 96% 96% 96% 34 Dept Seine 7s ..... 8774 87% 87% 12 Dom Can 5%s 29 101% 101% 101% 13 Dom Can 6s 62..100% 100 100% 13 Dlch 13 Ind 6a 62. 93% 93% 93% 31 Dlch E Ind 6%s 63 87 86 86% 11 Kramer 7%s . 89 888|5 8* F.7 French Rep 8, . . 99% 99% 99% 83 French Rep 7%a . 95% 95% 958, 19o Japanese 6%a . .. 908* 90% 90% 23 Japanese 4a . 79% 79 79% 19 Belgium 8s .102 101% 102 20 Belgium 7%s . ...-102% 102% 102% 8 Denmark 6s . 95% 95 95% 40 Italy 6%s .100% loo 100 24 Netherlands 6s ...918* 9n»* 9o»* 20 Norway 6s 43. 94 93% 9 4 8 8 Serbs Croats 8a ... 8 1 84 8 1 81% 15 Sweden 6s .103% 102% 102% 7 Oriental Dev d 6s 84% 84% 8 4% 27 Paris-Ly-Med 6s 75 74** 74% 14 Rep Bolivia 8s 59% 89% 89% 26 Rep Chile M 41 ..104% 104 104% 3 Rep Chile 7a . 96 96 96 148 Rep Cuba 5%a ... 94 93% 94 16 Rep Finland 6a . . . 89% 8» 59% 2 Rep Halt! 6a A 62. 89 % 83% *9% 3 Queensland 6s ... 99% 99% 99% 2 Rio Grand# Sul Is 97 96 97 2 San Paulo at 8a... 100 99% 99% 2 Swiss Con 8a .....112% 112 112 11 K C. B A I 5 %■ 29.109 10» 109 9 K G B A 1 5%s 37. 96 95% 96 39 u S Brazil 8s .96 96% 16 4 C S Bras C R B 7s 61% 81% 81% Domestic. 4 Am Arr Chm 7%s. 87 *, 87% 87% 6 Am Chain ef 6s. 92 92»* 1 Am Smelt 6s ....104% 104% D'4% 2.7 Am Smelt 5s . . 93% 9.t% 93-w 19 Am JS'igar 6s ....100 9**4 99** 106 Am tAT 5 %s .101% 1"0% lo 1 % ■4 Am TAT col tr 6s.. 99 98% 99 134 Am TAT col 4s.. 95% 95 95 1 Am WWAK 5s . 56** *f% *«% 64 Anaeon Cop 7s 38. 9t. 95% Vs % 50 Anaeon fop 6s 53. 95% 95% 9-.% 2 Armour Del 6%» .. 87 87 87 1 Assn Oil «a .98% 98% 98% 6 A T ft S F gn 4s 87% *.% 87% 3 A C L I. A N 4s. 83 % 83% 13% 1 At Ref d 6a . 97% 97% 97% 10 Balt A O 6s .102 103 103 44 Balt 4 O tv 4 % s. . 8»% 88% 88% 19 Balt A O gold 4s 86 85% 80% 12 Bell Tel P 5a . 99 98% 99 8 Beth St 6s A. 96% 96 96% 14 Beth St 6 %s . 88 88 88 10 Brier Hill St 5%a. 9:,% 86% 86% 3 Bkln Etl an 7s D.108% 1JJ% IJIH 109 Bkln-Mn Tn 6a-7;% I}% 76** 8 Cal P-t «%a ....97% 97% 97% 5 Can Nor d 6%l .112% l>-% ll;% 6 Can I’hc il 4s ... 80% *9 521* 6 C C A Ohio 6s . 98 91 % 91 % 2 tlent Ga 6s ..1018* 101% *0i ”* 138 Cent Death 5s. 97*, 9k % 9. % 45 Cent Par Sill 4s - *' *« J?,'» 169 Ches A O tv 6a 9 % 94% JeJ* 66 Cher A O rv 4%s 9."* 9?% 9 % 11 Chi A Alton 3 % s 34% -4% 9 Chi A E IB 6» .- 73% 73 |3% 1 Chi at West 49 . 51% 51% 61% 6 C if A St P c 4%s 60% 60s* 60 , 14 c M A St V rf 4%s 54*, 63% 64 69 C M A St P 4s 25 80% *»% So, 63 Chi A N W rf 5# 93% 93% 93% 4 Chi Ry* Sa . ?♦*» 7JJ* 3 c R I A P gn 4a.. *1% !J% *■[< 26 cut* P rf 4s 78% .8% .6% 10 Chi A Ind 4s 14% 14% i4% 61 Chile Cop Sa .1**-* !S2I* !r'‘i‘ 9 CCC A St I. rf 6s .102% 103*. JJ-% 9 Clev Up Tr 6%s. 106 10; 1*5 2 Col A So rf 4%s. . 67% J.% li% 5 Col O A El 6»- »» *’ *» 6 Com Pow 6a ...•*! J! }},, 12 Con Coal Md 5a.... 87% 8,% 87% 4 cubs Cane Sg d Sa 98 99 91 2D* R G rf 5» 26% ’ % ;6% 13 D A RO con 4s 71 70% 71 2 Det Ed rf 6«.1116% 10e% 10e% 8 Del Utd ny» «%#..»»% |lj» -*»■» 68 Dpnt Nero 1 %l-IJJ JJ* 14 fluquesne I.t 6s .104% lu4% 104% i!!:.it Ob sg 7%a 104% 104 104% 24 Kmp O * F 7%». «9% »?% 89% 24 Erie pr In 4s . 66 60% 66 39 Kile gen Hen 4a.. 56 66 8s 15 Fisk Rub Ss . »»Jt •», •*, 6 Gen,Elec 1! 6s.1*1% 1*!'9 '2! * 21 Goodrich S%» . ... 96 9a% 96 112 Goodyear T 8s 31 .103 1*2% ]**.♦ 6 Goodyear Ts 8» 11. 5 116% 1164 4 Ond Tnk Ry t? “•.112*'a 112S 111*1 16 Ond Tnk Ry C 6e 104% 104% 104% 106 Grt North 7s A.._.108% 1** 1***8 22 Grt North 5%s B 99 % 99% »•% 1 Hershey 6a .101% 1*1% 1*1** 9 Hud A M rf 6a A 91 63% 61 11 Hud A K ad Inn 6a 61% 61% *1% 4 Rumhla OU 6%s 98% 98 * 98 , 61 111 Ball T rf 5a- »;% 95 95% 4 111 Cent 6',a .1*3% 1«|% 1*2% 8 111 Cent 4s 68 . 83 82% 83 l Int It T 7s.84% 84 84% 8 lnt R T 6s . 62 61 % 62 17 Int H T rf 6s 60% 60% «*% t l A U N ad «s,... 45% 4r 45 43 lnt AON 1st 6s . 96 '* 96 96% ’ Int MM sf 6S. 84 84 S4 6 lnt l>a rv 6s A . '4% 84 *4% 1 K C Ft SAM 4s 78% 78% 18% 2 K <’ PAL 6s - 91 % 91 % 91 % 7 K C South 6*. 90 89% 90 15 K C Term 4* . 83% 8 % sj% 8 Knn O A El 6».. 96 *i 95', 95% 7 Kill Spring Ts 8. . 94 93 % » 1 lelilil Gns St t, 6s 94% 84% 94% 63 I. S ,1 M S d 4s 31 94% 94 94 >4 4 Llg * Xly 98*» _*•}• **?» 9 Lou A- N 6s 1^ tVS.101** 1U1 :. 2 L & N unlfli-d 4». *2 22 92 7 Louis U * Kl U. »u»4 »"% »0H 2« .Magma Con 7» . I'1**. 19* l1'* :: Man Sugar 7 I,* ... 99 S 99*9 *9', 16 Mid Stool CV 6s .. **"« SS“« 6 Mil KR*L 6s 61. 82% 82 82 2 M A Ht I. r[ li . 1714 17'. 1784 6 MStP&HS.M C4j« .193 192}i 103 19 M K A T pl 6a C.19914 99s. 10984 t! II K 4 T npl 5s A. 8«>4 83 lii 8314 221 M K A T n ail 5l A 54U b3\ 64 7 Mo Pac 1st «». 0614 »* *« IB Mo Pa r gen 4h .... &«% u7 % 61% 3 Mont Pow 6s A . ... 06 90 96 1 N K TAT 1st 5s.. 98% 96% 96% 48 N O TAM inc 5s.. 87% 87% *7% 24 N Y Cent <1 6s ..105 105 305 66 N Y C rAl %. 98% 98 98 % 4 N Y CASt L Hs A. 101% 101% 101% 2 N Y Ed ref «%h. .1 1 I 111 111 19 NY NHAH Fr 7s. 79% 79% 79% 10 NY NHAH c 6s 48 67 % 66% 66% 16 N Y Tel rf 6s 41.105% 104% 105 11 N Y Tel gn 4 %s. . 94% 94% 94% 14 V Y WAfioS 4%s 47% 47% 47& 8 4 Nor A VV cv 6m.. 119 317% 118 3 Nor Am Ed 6s .. 92% 92% 92% 4 Nor <> TAL 6m A. 9*>% 90% 90% 11 Nor Pac rf 6m 11104% 104 104% 10 < Pac new 5s I> 92% 92% 92% 3 0 Nor Pac p 1 4s.. 82% 82% 82% 2 Nor States P 6« B.102% 102 102% 26 N W Hell Tel 7s.108 108% 108 10 Gr-Wash HU AN 4m. 81% 81% 81% 8 Pac «i A Kl 6*.. 92% 92% 92% 6 Pac TAT 5s 52_ 9 2 91% 91% 6 Pan-Am PAT 7s. ..101% 101% 1*1% 10 Penn UR «%s.109% 109% 109% 6 Penn HR gn Bs_101% 101 % 101% 7 Penn HR gn 4%s.. 92 91 % 92 29 Pere Marq rf 5s.. 95% 95% 95% 4 Phil Co rf 6s.101% 101% 1«>1% 8 Phil Co 5 %m _ 92 91 % 92 30 Phil A Rd CAI fis. 95 94% 96 2 Pierce Ar Hu . 7 3 7.1 73 1 Pro A Ref 8s ...109% 109% 109% 4 Pub Herv 5s . 88% 88 88 % 50 Punta A leg Sg 7s.109% 109 109, 1O0 Reading gn 4%s.. 90% 90 90% 13 Reading gn 4- ..91% 91% 91% 1 Rep IA St 6%» .. 89% *9% M9% 17 It I AAL 4 %m _76% 76% 76% 15 Kt L I MAS rf 4h.. 89% 89% 89% 8 8t L I MAS 4s RAO. 81% 81 81% 38 St L SF n ) 4h A. 69% 6»% 69% 32 St L ASF ad 6h. 73% 7 2% 73% 32 Ht L A SF Inc 6m 64 63% 63% 5 St I. S W eon 4s 82% 82 82 i» St Paul Un Dp 5a. 9i% 98% 98% 8 Seaboard A L cn 6h 77% 77% n% 27 Seaboard A L ad 5s 55% 55% 65% 13 Heaboard A L rf 4b. 52% 52% 52% 17 Sinclair Con 7s .. 88% 88 88% 3 Sinclair Con 6%s.. 84% 84% 84% 5 Sinclair Crude 5%a 99% 99% 99% 3 Sinclair Pipe 5s.v. 83% 83% 83% 6 South Pac cv 4«. . . 95% 95% 95% 18 South Pac rf 4s.. 87% 87% 87% 33 South Ry ,gn 6%s..l04% 104% 104 % 30 South Ry gn 6s.. 100% 100% 100% 22 South Ry con 5s.. 99% 99% 99% S3 South Ry gn 4m.. 72% 7 2 i 72% 90 S W Bell Tel rf os 94 95% 9* 2 Steel Tube 7« .103% 103% 103% 1 Hug Km Or 7s .... 95% 95% 95% 4 Tenn Klee rf G?.... 96 95% 96 3 7 Third Av ad 5a . 41% 41% 41% 5 Third Ave rf 4s .. 54% 54% 64% 1 Tldwtr Oil 6%s-103% 1°1%,108%! 5 To I Kdiaon 7s _107% 107% 1«»7% 1 Tol St LAW 4s_ 8 0 SO 80 1 Cn Pac ref 5s ...102% 102% 102% 6 Un Pac 1st 4s - 90% 90% 90% 16 Un Pac cv 4s ... 97% 97% 97% 3 Utd Drug 8s .113% 113% 113% 4 U 8 Rub 7 %s ..101% 101% 101% 17 U S Rub 5s -81% 81 81% 46 U 8 Steel sf Be-103% 103 103% 11 Utah PAL 5s _90% 90 90% 3 Va-Car Chm 7%s . 50% 30 30 9 Va-Car Chm 7a . 5o% 55% 65% 29 Va Ry 5s . 95% 95 95% 17 Wabash 1st 5s - 98% 98% 98% Invest Md 1st 4s . . 62% 62% 62% 6 West Pac 5s . 85% 85 85 4 West Un 6%s ...110% 110% 110% 18 Westing El 7s ,...108% 108% 108% 1 West Shore 4s . .. *1% 81% 81% 24 Wick Spen St Ts. 61% 60 60 1 Wilson Co sf 7%S. 52% 52% 52% 6 Wilson Co 1st 6s.. 82% 82% 82% 12 Wilson Co cv ba.. Lo% 49 49 10 Young SAT 6s .. 95% 95 96% Total bonds. 115,247.000. N. Y. Curb Bonds 9----* New Tork. May 20— Following !• the official llet of transaction* on the Ms York Curb exchange, giving all bonds traded In: Domestic. High. Low. Close. 12 Am G * El 6*. IMS IMS »4% 1 Arn R Mill* 6*. 89% 99% 99% 6‘j Anaconda Cop 9 Asso S Hdwe 0%s. 92% 81% 81% 3 Bethl Stl Ts. 35.. 108 103 l®* « l ands N Rv eq 7*.l"9% 109% 109% 2 Con Gas Balt :.%» 99*i 99% 99% 18 Con Ua" Hall 7*v.1"6*h l®«!e 1#®% 12 Con Textile 8*.... 73% 73 i2 9 Con P A B «%».. 92% 92% 92% 5 Del Clt> Ilia 6*. .101 101. 101 2 Detroit Edison 6a..103 102 % 103 25 Dun Tire A K 7s.. 92 91 % 91% 7 Duq Lt 5%" w I..100% 300% 100% 5 Fish Body 6s. 1925.101 % 101% 101% 6 Gatr, Robert 7s . . . 9 j 94% 94% 1 Gal Signal oil 7r. 1f' 5 % 105% 10»% 2 General Asphalt Ss.104 104 121« 21 General Pet 0*-*« Ji JfS • 5 Gulf Dll 5a. 95% 95% 96% 3 Hood Rubber 7s...101 100% 101. 22 lot Match 6%s ... 94% 94 94% 2 Kennecott Cop 7s .105% 106% 1#5% 7 Lehigh Val liar 5s 98% 98% 98% 1 L McN & L 7*.... 99% 99% 99% 3 Nat’l Leather ss... 96% 94% 96% 3 N O Pub Her 6s... 84% 84% 94% 14 Ohio Pr 5a B. 95 *5 95 4 Park A Tilforit. 6s. 90% 90% 90% 1 Penn Pr A Lt 5s. 106% 105% 10-% 1 Phil Pet 7%s w w. 1 ft l '"t 101 1 Pub Scrv N J 7s..l"6% 1««% 106% 2 Pur# Oil 6%s.94% 94 94 % 6 Ho 47aI Edison 5s 90% 90% 9o% 2 Hi Oli N 1 7a '27.105% 105% 105% 1 do 7s '28.106% 106% 106% 2 do 7a '29.106% 106% 106% 10 do 7s '30.107 106% 107 3 do 7s 'SI.107% 107 107 4 do 6%s.106% 106% 106% 8 Swift Sc Co 6*.. 90 89% 89% 15 I'n El L A P 6 % *. 95% *5% 95% 5 Uld Oil Prod 8a... 57 68 57 1 Uld Ry liar 7%*..106% 106% 106% S Vacuum OH 7s_107% 107% 107% 5 Web Mills 6%s 100% 100% 100% Foreign Bonds. 48 Com Axu Hug 7 %a 97% 95 % 97% 30 K Netherlands 6* 98% 9i% 98% 2 Swiss 5%s . 98% 98% 98 % 17 Swiss 5* 99% 99% 99% ( hirago Hork*. Furniahed by J. F Ba« he A Co.. 22 4 Omaha National bank bunding. Phone, .JA. 51$7-8S-e9. Hid Asked Armour A Co III pfd ..73% .4 Armour C© L»el pfd ... $3% Albert Pick .. 1R lR% Hasmck Alemtta . ?* 28% carbide . 55% Edison ‘"’om .....126% Conti Motors . 6 6’* Cudahy . 65 Daniel Boon* . T: Diamond Match .117 117% I >eera Pfd .- * 1 Eddy Papar . 16 2' Libby . 4% 5 Natl Laather . 4% 5 (Quaker Oats ...560 255 Reo Motors . 16 % T6 * Swift A Co .100% 101 Swift Inti . 1»% Thompson .. 44 44 % Wahl .’.. 35% 35% AVrigley .. 35% 35** Yellow Mfg Co . 45% 45% Yellow Cab . 40% 40% 4111a and Hoeln. Savannah Os., May *0.—Turpentine— Finn. 83%0*4e; sales. 414 bbla.: receipts. 1.187 bbla; shipments, 626 bbla.; stock. 5.965 bbla Roain—Firm; sales, 1 191 casks; re ceipte. 5.146 casks. shipments. 2.633 casks stocks. 6C.0RI casks guote; B. 14.5604 65: D. *4 6004.70; E, *4 $00 4 to. F, $4.500 4 95: tl. t« I50 6.QO; H. $5.00; l and K. $5.0$: M. $5 14* N. IB.!*. W. O I5R205 95; W. W.. |S$:%Q 6 95. X. $6 5504 65. New York Poultry. New York. May 10.—Live Poultry Steady. no freight quotations. Express quotations unchanged. Dressed poultry Irngular. Fresh chick ens, SR 050c. Chicago Potatoes. Chicago. May 2o—Potatoes—Market steady except Idaho Russets, which were weaker; receipts, 39 cars; total United States shipments. 471 cars; Wisconsin sacked round whites, $1.1001 50; few. $1 3ft; bulk. *1 $501 50; Idaho sacked Rus seta. * 1.9002.00; new slock Alabama and Louisiana sacked Bliss Triumphs. 92.7 5 0 3.25, Chicago Poultry. Chicago. May 5’0. — Poultry—Live un changed. _ SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST! Unless you see (lie “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 24 years. Acc°Pt only “Bayer” package /ywhich contains proven directions. { Ifandr "Ua^er'* boxes of 12 tahlrta ^ i ^ W Alan liottlaa of 24 and 100—Oruggiata. Atplrla la lh« lildt airk «J l>tj«« Mtauftclurt ft MtfBeteaUctcldttltr of Btlltrllcatld f-—- X Omaha Produce X_' Omaha, May 20. BUTTER. Creamery'—Local jooWng price to re* tail era: Extras. 40c; extra* In 60-lb. tuba. 39.-; standard*. 39c; first*. 38c. Dairy—Buyers aro paying 30c for best table butter in rolls or tubs. 27©2Hc for common packing stock. Kor best sweet, unsalted butteer. 31c. BUTT ERF AT. Kor No. 1 cream Omaha buyer* are pay ing 29c per ib. at country stations. I5c delivered Omaha. FRESH MILK. $1.90 per cwt. for fresh milk testing 2.5 delivered on dairy platform) Omaha. EGGS. in moat quarters egg* are being bought on graded basis by which No. 1 eggs must be good, average size, weighing not less than 66 pounds gross, or 44 pounds net. No. 2 eggs consist of small, slightly dirty, stained or washed eggs. Irregular shaped, shrunken or weak-bodled eggs. Producers and shippers are urged to grade their eggs closely for dirty eggs and for size, ana ship often. Kor No. 1 fresh egg*, delivered In new case*. 27.05; seconds. 19c; cracks, 18c. Jobbing prices to retailers: U. 8 spe cials. 27 ©28c: U. 8. extras, commonly known as selects. 25© 26c; country run, 24c; No. 1 small, 23c; checks. 21c. POULTRY. Buyers ere paying around the following prices for No. 1 stock: Alive—Urollera. up to 2 lbs., 30© 35c per lb.; heavy hens. 5 lbs. and over, 21c: 4 to 6 lbs., JOc; light hen*. 19c; stags and old roosters. 13© 14c; ducks. fat and full feather* d. 12©16c; geese, fat and fuli feathered, 12©15c: turkeys, young toms and hens, 21c; old torn* and No. 3, not cull*, 17* ; pigeon*, $1.00 per dozen; ca pons. 7 Jb*. and over, 28c per lb.; under 7 lbs., 24c per Ib.; no culls, sick or crippled poultry purchased. jobbing prices of dressed poultry Mo retailer's): Spring*, soft, 35c; broiler*. 65© 60c; frozen, 32© 13c, hens, 28c; roosters, is©2<‘ 2 Y • g***e, 20©26c; turkeys. 3-*c; No. 2 turkeys, considerably less. - FRESH FISH. Jobbing prices quotable at follows: Fancy white fish, 30c; lake trout. 22c; halibut, 22c; northern bullheads, Jumbo. 20O22c; catfish, 30©32c; fillet of haddock, 27c; black cod cable fish. 18c; roe shad, 28c; flounders. 20c; crapples, 20©25c; black bass, 35c; Spanish mackerel, 14 to 2 lbs., 25c; yellow pike, 26c; striped bass, 20c; blue pike, 16c; white perch. 12c. Frozen fish 2©4c less than prices above. CHEESE. Jobbing prices quotable on American cheese, fancy grade, as follows: Hingie daisies, 22c; double daisies, 214c; Toung America*. 22 4?: longhorns. 214c: square print*, 224c; brick, 22c; llmberger, 1-Jb. style, $3.8? per dozen; Swiss, domestic, 38c; Imported Roquefort, 68c; New York white, 24c. BEEF CUTS. Jobbing prices quotable: No. 1 ribs, 27c; No. 2, 26c; No. 2, lie; No. 1 loins. 27c; No. 2. 35c; No. 3. 23c; No. 1 rounds. 19c; No. 2, 184c; No. 2. 15c; No. 1 chuck*. 134c; No. f. 12c; No. 3, 104c; No. 1 plates, $4c; No. 2, 8c; No. 2. 7c. FRUITS. Jobbing prices; Cherries—California, about * lbs, 14.00. Pineapples—Per crate, $3.50© 4.50. Apples—Irr~ barrels of 140 lbs.; Iowa Wlnesaps, fancy, $6.25; Ben Davis, fancy. $4.75; Missouri Pippins, extra fancy, $6.00. Apples—In boxes: Washington Wine ss pH, extra fancy, $2.75; fancy, $2.25; choice. $1.85; white winter Pearmaln, ex tra fancy, $2 25©2.50. Lemons — California, fancy, per box. $6.00; choice, per box. $5.50. Strawberries—Louis ana. pint#, $2.50 J>er crate; Arkansas, quarts. $4.59. Grapefruit—Florida, extra fancy, $4 00© 4 60; fancy, pe- bo= $2-60©3.75. Oranges—California, extra fancy, ac cording to size, $3.75©5.76 per box. choice, 25©75c less; Florida Valencias, per box. $5.00. Cranberries—Jersey, 50-lb. boxes, $4.00. Bananas—Per Ib., 7c. VEGETABLES. Jobbing price*: Cantaloupes—Dus about Juns 1. Mar ket, Cauliflower — California, fancy, crates. II 25. Eggplant—P*r do*.. $2 00; 20e per lb. Cabbage—Celery cabbage. 10c i>er lb ; new Texas cabbage. S^c per lb.? crates t-C per lb. New Roots—Texes b*et* *nd '•arrota per doz. bunche*. 90c: bushel. 12.<*0. Onion*—Tellow. n, sacks, per 1U. 2c; ▼ hits 3e; new crystal wax per crs»e, 2.75; Bermuda yellow tw»r crate, 32.25; home grown, dozen bunches. 30c. Tomatoes—Mexican, lugs, 25.0*0 5.50. Roots—Parsnips and carrots. In sack*. Sc per lb. Celery—Florida, »1.76e:i5 do*. Peas—Per hamper, 33 7604.25. Peppers—Gre*»n Mango, per lb., 25c. Cucumber*—Texas, market basket. |2 00 Parsley—Southern, per dozen bunches, • Oc. Bean*—Green, per hamper. If.00; wax. 95.0000. 00. Spinach—Homegrown. 760 per bu. Potatoes—Nebraska Chios, per lot !ba., II 50; Minnesota Chios. 91 §5; Idaho Baker*. 4c per lb.; Western Rasset Rur ils. 12 00 per cwt.; n*w crop Trlumpha hamper. 14 0«; Texas Triumph*. In sacks, 5^4 05c per lb Asparagua—Home grown, doz. bunches, 91-0001 25. I.ettuce—Head, per crate, 14.60 per do*.. 11.25; hot house leaf. 75c per doz. FELD Market quotable per ton, carload lota, f. o. b. Omaha. Cottonseed Meal—49 per rent, 945.00. Hominy Feed—White or yellow, 120.00. Digester Feeding Tsnkage—60 per cant. 940.00. Wheat Feeds — Bran. Ill 00: brown •horts, 919 00; gray shorts, 120.90; red dog. 927.60 039.00. Linseed Mea!—34 per cent, 142.10. Buttermilk—Condensed, for feeding, in Wolfe Oil » i Corporation — Quoted I I $ SU5j#s* & , j ShmUri 4 .v. Y Stick EttcUnp M Wall St., New York Whitehall 6170 bbl. lots 3 46* per lb : flaks butttrttii ,k, 600 to 1,100 lbs . 9o per lb. Eggshell*—Dried and ground, 100-It*, bag*. 125.00 oer ton. Alfalfa Meal—No. 1 *pnt. prom PL $24.00; new crop. Jufte and July, $24 00; No. 2 spot, $21.00. w FIELD SEED Nominal quotations: Omaha a»T*d Coun cil Bluffs thresher run. per 100 lb* ; Al falfa. $21.60022.00; Sudan gra.-s. $6,000 7 00; cane need. $1.2001.30; common mil let. $1.2601 60; German millet. $2.00 02.SO. FLOUR. I^res quotable In round lot* (leas than carlots), f o. b Omaha, follow: First patent in 9$-lb baa*. $6.3600.46; per bbl fancy clear, in 43-ib bag*. $1.2006.3" per bbl.; white or yellow cornmeel, per CWt-i $1.85. HAT. Nominal quotation**, carload lots: Upland Prairie—No. I, $12,600 13.SO; No. 2. $9.60011.60; No. 3, $7.0008 00. Midland Prairie—No. 1. $11.60 ©$1S.$0J No. 2. $8.50010 50; No. 3. $6.0008.00, Lowland Prairie—No. 1, $8.000 9.00; No. 2. $6.0008.00. Packing Hay—$6.6007.5". Alfalfa—Choice, $20 00021.00: No. 1, $18.00019.00; nandard, $14.00017.00; No. 2. $ 11.00 0 13 00 : No. 2 $ 9 00 01:. >0. Straw—Oat. $8.0000 00; wheat, $7,000 8.00. HIDES. WOOL. TALLOW. Prices quotable a* follows, delivered Omaha dealers weight* and selections: Wool — Pelts. $1.00 to $1.75 each; lamt*. 75c to $1 60 each: clips, no value; wool, 30 0 36c. Tallow and Grease—No. 1 tallow. M4e; H tallow, 5c; No. 2 tallow. 4He; A grss-<. 3%c; B grease, 6c: yellow grease. 4Hr-. brown grease, 4c; pork crafKbngs, $5'j.0*j Cer ton; beer cracklings, $50.00 per ton, eeswax. $20.00 per ton. Hides—treasonable. No. 1. $c; No. *. 5He; green, 5< and 4* ; bull*. 6c and 4c, branded. 5c: glue hid* *, 3 He; calf. 12c and 10He; kip. l»c and 8Hc; glue skins. 6c: dry flint, lie; dry failed. 8c; dry tiue. 6c; deacon*. .5c each: horse hide*. 3 25 and $2 25 each; ponies and giues, 1.60 each; colts. 25c each; bog skins, 15c each. New lurk General. New York. May 20.—Hy*f—Steady; No 2 western, 79c. f. o. b. New York, and 77'*?. c i. f. export. Barley—Easy; malting, 88 0 94c, c. 1. f. New York. Wheat—Spot, steady; No. 1 dark north ern spring, c. i. f. New York, lake and rail, $1.4286: No. 2 hard winter, f. o. b., Jake and rail. I1.21H; No. 1 Manitoba, do, $1.17H; No. 2 mixed durum, do. $1 20**. Corn—Spot, steady: No. 2 yellow and No. 2 white, c. i. f. track New York, do mestic, ail by rail, 96 He; No. 2 mixed, do. 95 He. Oats—Spot, quiet; No. 2 white, 68 0 68 H^ F*ed—Ea-y: No. 1. 131no 032.00; No. 2. $28."0029.00; No. 3. $23.00 0 24.00 ; sha - ping, $19.00021.00. Lard—Easy; middle west. $10.900 11.00 Tallow — Easy,- special loose, 6"»0 7c; extra. 7 He, nominal. Flour—Steady; spring patents, $6,250 6.75; soft winter stra.ghta, $5.000 6.50; hard winter straights, $5,650 6.25. Rye Flour—Quiet; fair to good. $4.CO 04.20; choice to fancy, $4.2504.40. Cornmeal—Quiet; fine white and yel low granulated. $2.150 2.30. Barley—Steady; malting, $0 0 94c, c. 1. f. New York. Hay—Steady; No. 1, $33 00034.06; No. 2. $30.00031.00 ; No. 3. $24.00025.00; ship ping. $21.60023.90. Hops—Steady; state. 1923 crop. 6O0S6r; 1922 crop. 23027c; Pacific coast, l$2i crop. 35038c; 1922 crop. 24 02W Pork — Steady; met*. $26.006 27 00; family, $27 00. Hlce—Steady; fancy head, 7H051' New lork hurar. New York. May 20.—More libera! of fering* of duty free aurars caused k further decline in the local raw •ugfc market today with spot prices now quote,' at 6 13c duty paid. There were sal?.0 of 33.0^9 bags of Porto Rican for ear!-. June arrival to local and outport refiner* at &.53c and D.f'OO bags of Cuban for the second half June shipment to an operator at 6.69c. Raw sugar futu-ea were easier, reflect ing the decline in ape's and continued light consuming demand Brokera t*;th Cuban and western connection* were the principal sellers, final prices showing net declines of 6 to 13 points. May close.] 3.79c; July. 3.90c; September, C.9Sc. Dt cemtxr. 3 «6c. N*i» changes occurred In refined pi. < * which ranged from 7.263 7.5*0 fer fl? « granulated Withdrawals vrer* {„ proportions, but new buelm-ss continu'd light. Refined futures were nominal. Ho*ton Wool. Boston, May 2" - Trailing Is slow :n alt lines, with prices unchanged Some business has been done in scoured wools Foreign wools in Pond here continue to move the port traae. although the volume has been somewhat 1cm Sales in tb* western primary market* showed a range of 40c to 43c per pound at country potn's in Wyoming and adjoining territory. Dried Fruit*. New York. May 20—Evaporated apples, dull; prunes, demand poor, apricots and peaches, quiet; raisins, steady. Vew York Cotton. -v*w York. Msy 20 —The cotton marke* closed steady at net advances of i • . 15 points. » l»uluth Flax. Dulucth. Mi sn., May 9.—Close Flax— • fit * ***’-. J.JI’sc. r-vmber, 2 !4 4r <.». |%e. m HOLLAND for the first time in history offers bonds payable in United States dollars. Kingdom of the Netherlands External 6% Bonds Du* 1954 Price to yield over 6.wrc Circular on request The National City Cempeny First Nat’l Bank Building. Onsak* Telephone JA ok son 3S1S If' When you think of GRAIN, CONSIGNMENTS, SERVICE You think of UPDIKE at OMAHA—KANSAS CITY—CHICAGO—MILWAUKEE Ample finances assure country shipper* of immediate payments at their drafts and t>alance duo always remitted with returns. Telephone AT laatic 6313 Updike Grain Corporation * / "A Reliable Consignment House*' J. S. BACHE & CO. Established 1552 — (New York Stock Exchange , i Chicago Hoard of Trade Mfltbiri'S N»w York Cotton Exchange Vard other leading Exchange*, j Nrjjf York: 42 Broadway Chicago: 108 S. LaSalle St. Branch.. end correepnndrnte located in prtncil*l eltiem Stocks, Bonds, Grain, Cotton, Foreign Exchange Bought and Sold tor Cash or Carried on Conservative Margin 224 Omaha Nat'l Bk. Bldg., Omaha Telephones JA ckson 515? 91 ••The Bach* Be*lew" *ent on ippliestios—Co i respondent* Incited * 0