The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, August 19, 1924, Page 7, Image 7

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    Heavy Selling
of Futures Sets
Wheat Back
blu.-i* t&eak and Not Far From
Bottom, Other Grains
Trail Down; Advance
Too Rapid.
Br » HAR1.ES LEYDEN'.
I n i vernal Service Staff for respondent.
I.ICBRO. Aug 18.—Heavy selling of
• «t futures today by longs who had
ia< tive profits put a stop to the open
bulge and forced a sharp setback.
n<? close was weak and not far from the
ttom. Other grains trailed wheat. A
cling that the recent advance In the
arket was too rapid and had probably
-counted much of the bullish situation
revailed. On the dips, however, absorp
'•n was impressive.
Wheat closed 1% to 2%c lower; corn
• '4 c higher to l%c lower; oats were
to l%c off and rye ruled 1 % to l%c
down.
The initial strength in wheat was due
nclpally to the sharp advance at Liver
1. but the volume of new buying dis
ed in the pit the past few days was
•'■sent during today's session and prices
i not hold up. Prominent, professional
•rader* were credited with selling the
Ik of the wheat during the day. Houses
th eastern connections sold early and
'hen bought. Failure of frost to material
to thy damage point in the Canadian
• rth west and an increase of s,846,000
) ushels in the United States visible sup
; h for the week augmented much of the
l rail zing.
Export sales of 300.000 bushels wheat
A\pre confirmed by the seaboard, and it
■vas intimated that more business may
ave been worked. Liverpool closed 1 Vi to
* pence h’gher, but foreign exchange
was weak.
Corn was choppy all day. On the
eaks fairly good buying was encounter*
• ! while realizing sales and pressure was
■ ted on the hard ppots. The crop eit
Uion Is not improved. Grain men say
hat corn over wide arras is in the same
• milltion It was a month ago relatively,
end unless unusually mild weather la
experienced for the balance of the sea
• n the crop will probably be hard hit by
f» nst.
Oats opened strong, and then sold off
nder heavy profit taking. One of the
?gest operators in the trade sold long
cts freely. Country offerings of this
grain have improved some of late.
Rye resisted pressure a great oart of
’he dHy. but finally gave way with other
^■alns. Thern was prominent buying not
. » In this pit at tlm*»s. but tho realising
' »* to much to overcome.
Provisions ruled higher moat of the
■ *sion. but weakened at the last. T.ard
> .is unchanged to 10c lower in a broad
»>ade and ribs were 12VjC lower.
Pit Not***.
While the peak of the winter wheat
movement • has been reached there is
tie evidence that farmers have stopped
selling. Arrivals at primary pointa today
were 4 905.000 bushels, compared with
. 208.000 bushels last year. The export
■mmand has been fairly active, but clear
in'es »rp not fast enough to keep avail
able suppliea from accumulating. Devel
opment* In an export way will probably
be awaited.
Foreign political new* was reassuring
f'nm a speculative standpoint. Cables
bad It that tho German loan would prob
bly be floated tome time before Oc
her. Stocks of grain abroad are not
^ge, and while native crons In parts of
'he continent are being harvested, fu
iiirn requirements are expected to be
i"»«vy from exporting countries.
There were reports from Nebraska that
wheat in shock was being damaged by
rainfall. These attracted little attention
apparently. The spring wheat move
ment is approaching and with the visible
supply totaling 10,000,000 bushels In ex
- *53 of last year and southwest farmers
showing no Inclination to let up in their
shipments bulls have been forced to act
cautiously.
Wheat and flour on ocean supply last
week decreased *2.51 2.000 bushels. The
>tal supply Is 37.533,000 bushels, com
ired with 36.200.OQ0 bushels a year ago.
The grain moving to Utirope 1* admittedly
e ng well taken. It is unusual at this
me of year to see ^tradilv advancing
! f ires when grain from the farms in the
nited State, is rushing to market. It
only natural to look for frequent ■st
acks following th»» advance of 36c the
>st two months. The advance In wheat
has been miraculous in more than one
vav. Later on in the season bulls say
rices will reach materially higher
Hround.
/-V
Out of the Records
V_J
Births and Deaths,
Birth*.
Clarence and Charlotte Robinson, 6036
Ho litith St., boy.
Earl and Nora Jones,# 1931 Ho. 19th St.,
Dewey and Gladys Sluter, 1045 So. 29th
Sr., boy.
Uwrfnre and Mary Rothge, 2613 Reeae
Sc. girl.
Bdhjamllt and Antonette Ranleri, 1023**
So 22d St., girl. *
Otto and Mildred Langbehn, *29 So.
l»'h St., b->y.
lames and Mamie Kesallng, hospital.
girl.
Arthur and Giulia Fortezzo, 1420 Corby
f girl.
Theodore and Bertha Mallory, hospital.
boy.
Fred and Ida 8mlth 2216 U 8t.. boy.
Frank and Bertha Callenkos. hospital.
bov.
Vincent and Goldie Van WJe. hospital.
girl,
Arnold and Margaret Christiansen, hos
pital, boy.
navid and Sarah Norton, hospital, boy.
Eric and Edith Karlen, hospital, girl,
lohn and Mary iAipome* h. hospital.
boy.
George and Alma Saltxglver, hospital.
boy.
lames and Alberta Handy, 1184Mi No.
20'h St., girl.
Dominik and Antonette Mendlno, 4919
Ho 23d St., girl.
William and Lena Merrlfield, 2267 No.
26th St , boy.
Heaths.
Tleeter Sophia Larson. 49 ysars. hospital.
Warren L*ydecker, Infant, hospital
Mrs. Marie Jenaen, 13 years, 3157 Far
n»rn 8t.
I'irino Patanla. 8 yeara. hospital
Olaf G. Almatroin. 40 yeara. hospital
A ufanda Porter. 67 year*, hospital.
In Divorce Court.
-L'k Mowery against Ruby Mowery,
(1 -acrtion.
Katherine \Plrkey against C. Clyde
Mickey, cruelty.
Alice Runyon against Forest Runyon,
t ruelty.
Building Permit*.
r Von Thaden, 1»24 No. i2d St . brick
»"»*r dwelling, 17.500
M Polonsky, 563 8o. 25th St., brick
'eoeer dwelling. |7.000.
E W. Fellers, 4537 Wirt Ht., frame
dwelling. 14.000.
Charles W’. Martin, 2936 Heotl St, frame
dwelling. 14.000.
Charles W. Martin, 2111 Iowa Si, brick
at i stucco dwelling, 16,000.
Real Estate Transfer*.
-*.r* guerite Jennen end husband
Western Mtg Sr. Finance row
!*eny, Jlascall St.. 62 ft W of
-Hi *t„ n*is«. I ».t««
M;irguerltg Jenaen and husband to
Western Mtg Sc Finance Co.
' infon St.. 240 ft. W of 86th Ht.,
S Side. 60*124 . J.700
.d eeph K. D’lpln Sr. Wife to Jimu
Kopeck and wife, 34th St.. 104
ft N of Wright 8t.. W Side,
r,2x132 ... l.ooo
Franc** H Gibson and husband to
Max A. Anderson, Whitmore St ,
188 ft. B of 28th Ave.. N Side.
.. ,n
Ida, M. Shlndelbourer end husband
to Robert H- Konper, Evan* St .
6 ft. W of Military Ave. S
Mid., £-n*12» . *#<l
The Benson Sr Garrett company »o
Howard D. Bergen, #* sb, N W
• or. t2d and Western Ave.. 498**
120 .. 8.654
Harold ,1 Grove and wife In
Frank M. Heberlmg and wife,
Bedford Ave. 100 ft, E of 44th
Ave. N Side. 60x128. 6.&0C
Fritz Noltlng to Joseph MUItish,
s W Cor 30th and Jefferson
St 54 4x130 1.*™
Winifred S UndIWe *nd husband
»o Rasp Bro* , 8 K Cor. 10th
and Grant St., 128x1 50 86t
Joseph Welrsteln and wife to Mor
ns Schlanker and wife. Decatur
-t . 120 ft W of 25th S» , S
Aid* 30x128 .
W.!U*m F. Hlns to Joneph G
Furatenb erg. tJ0»h Ht . 85 ft S
of Maple St. W Hide. 65x100.. 7.26C
Gertrude Have* to Carrie C. John
eon Davenport Ft, 236 ft, K of
.'7th A v* N Hide 38x132 . *.00(
Theodore W Afet.nlf* and wife to
l!*x Brown, \fapl* St . 84 ft W
of 4 2d 81 . s Sid**. 43x1 20. 66(
Theodore VV Metcalfe and wife •»
William A Van Horn and wife.
1 arnden Ave . 240 ft E of 30th
S> N Side. 40x110'« .
Western M'g- St Finance Co to
Marguerite A Morenrtv. Whit
more St . 163 ft. E of list Ave .
S Hide 6;| 46x120 . 6 25(
F»cda M. Sauer to Hans W Han
*r»n. N H ror. 12d and Spencer
St . 4|%tt80 . 711
Theodore W Metcalf# and wife to
Ruth O Dufva »nd husband,
^amden 4vr 16§ f' 3V of 30th
S' NT SMe 46x120 !4 • M’6<
1*' * Bvron Peed Cc to Vtnnt*
* wme• ad lOtb «r on ft 'J of Lari
n - te A • W Sid*. 45x114 . IM
f --^
Omaha Grain
^
Spot wheat, sold on the tables today
from 2 c to 2%c lower. The demand was
moderately good, although a large num
ber of cars was carried over unsold,
sellers refusing to follow the decline of
about 2%c in the future*. Receipts were
| 3b7 cars. '
| Corn sold at. unchanged prices to lc
lower with only a fair demand. Receipts
were 67 cars
Oats were a alow sale at 2c lower.
Receipts were 63 cars.
No sales of rye were marked up and
barley was lo to 2c lower.
Omaha Cash Grain.
WHEAT.
No. 2 dark hard: 1 car. ff.2l%; 1 car,
11.24; l car, |1.37; 1 car. *1.37.
No. 3 dark hard: 1 car, *1.21; 1 car,
$1.18.
No. 4 dark hard: 1 car, $1.26.
No. 1 hard: b eara. $1.22.
No. 2 hard: l car, fcl.26; 1 car. $1 20%;
1 car, 13.bs per cent1 protein, $1.31; 13
cars, $1.21.
No. 3 hard: 13 cars, $1.20.
No. I hard; 1 car (smutty), $1.22;
1 car, $1.20%.
No. 2 haru; 1 car. $1.22; 1 car. $1.21;
8 cars, $1.19; 6 cars, $1.20.
No. 3 hard: l car, $1.19%; 3 cars,
$1.19; 1 car, $1.18; 1 car, $12.11%, 1 car,
$1.16.
No. 4 hard: 8 cars, $1.18; f cars, $1.16.
No. 5 hard; 1 car $1.17; 1 car, $1.16.
Sample hard: 17 cats, $1.16%; 1 car,
$1.17; 6 cars. $1.16.
Sample; i car (smutty), $1.17; 4 cars,
$1.16%.
CORN.
No. 2 white: 1 car, $1.12.
No. S white: 3 cars. $1.11.
No. 4 white: 1 car, $1.11, 1 car, $1.10.
No. 2 yellow: 3 cars $1.13.
No. 3 yellow: 1 car, $1.12.
No. 4 yellow, 3 cars, $1.11.
No. 6 yellow, 1 car, $1.10.
No. 2 mixed: 1 ear, $1.12%; 2 cars,
$1.12; 1 car, $1.11%; 1 car, $1.13.
No. 3 mixed: 1 car $1.12; 1 car, $1.11.
No. 4 mixed: 2 cars, $1.11.
No. 6 mixed: 1 car, $1.10; 1 car, $1.09.
Sample mixed: 1 car, $1.07.
OATS.
No. 3 white: 4 cars, 61c.
No. 4 white: 9 cars, 49c.
Sample: 2 cars. 48c; 1 car, 47c.
BARLEY.
No. 3: 3 cars, 78c.
No. 4: 1 car 78c.
I Sample: 1 car, 76c.
Dally Inspection of Grain Received.
WHEAT
Hard winter: No. 1, 34 cars. No. 2, 67
cars; No. 3, 48 cars; No. 4, 90 cars; No.
5, 3 cars; sample, b5 cars.
Total. 307 cars.
Mixed; -No. 2. 2 cars; No. S, 3 cm is.
Total, 6 cars.
Durum: No. 3, 1 car.
Total, 1 car.
Spring: No. 3. 1 car.
Total. 1 car.
CORN.
Yellow: No. 2, 6 cars; No. t, 2 carif
No. 6. 1 car.
Total, 9 car*.
White; No. 2, 6 cars; No. S, 3 oars. No.
14, 1 car; No. 6, 1 car.
Total. 11 cars.
Mixed: No. 2, 7 cars; No. S, k oars; No.
14, 2 cars; sample, 2 cars.
Total, 16 cars.
OATS.
White: No. 3, 23 cars; No. 4, 20 csrs;
sample, 4 cars.
Total. 47 cars.
Mixed: No. 3, 2 cars.
Total, 2 cars.
RYK.
No. 2, 3 cars. No. 3. 1 car.
Total, 4 cars.
BARLEY.
No. 3, 4 c^rs.
Total, 4 cars.
OMAHA flECEIPTS AND SHIPMENTS.
(Carlots )
Receipts— Today Wk. Ago. Yr. Ago.
Wheat . 367 432 102
Corn . 67 73 85
Oats . .. 6 3 17 120
Rye . 16 2 2
Barley . 6 4 4
Shipments—
Wheat . 294 808 «0
Corn . 4 4 36 8 8
Oata . 1L 11 47
Rye . 3 1 3
Barley . 3
CHICAGO RECEIPTS
Week Year
Carlots- - Today Ago. Agu.
Wheat .*.720 782 485
Corn ...186 18 1 76
Oats .167 62 74
KANSAS CITY RECEIPT#
Wheat . 1.068 1,144 k24
Corn . 66 66 72
! Oata . 45 13 13
ST. LOUIS RECEIPTS
Wheat .337 6’.5 277
Corn . 8 6 66 128
Oata . 228 143 168
NORTHWESTERN WHEAT RECEIPTS
Minneapolis .4 17 236 698
Duluth .. 7 2 200
Winnipeg .62 71 100
OMAHA STOCKS
Bushels— Today. Yr Ago
Wheat .3.811.000 2.069,000
Corn . 268.000 177.000
Oats 1.16.000 262,000
Rye 38,000 34.000
Barley . ... 6.000 10.000
CHICAGO CASH PRICKS.
By l'pdlka grain company, Atlantic «312.
Art. | Open. (High. I tow. | Cloaf, Sat^
Wht. II I
Sept, I 1.33%! 1.34 3.29 % I 1.30% 1.33
1.34 i | 1.30% 133%
Dac. . 1.3a% | 1.38% 1.14% 1.39% M*%
1.37% I !.{*% 13*
May I 1.44 % | 1.45 I 1.40%, 1.41% 1.4.:%
1 1.45 I I 1.41% 144
Rye l
Sept. I 95% .95%! .93% .93% .94%
96 4,1
Dec. | ).00% 1.00% »• 98 % 99>
May 1 06% 1.07 1 01% 1.01% 1A6?
I 1 07 ! 1.05%
Corn |
3,p'- III lu i1,1 ,1:“% \:ll
Dec. ! 1.19% 120% 1.16%. 1.1. 1-JS%
.May 1 1.22 1 22 2 17%. 1.1»%I 1 20%
. | 1.21% 1.19%, 1.20%
Se*p". | .66% .66 .62% .64 j .66%
G6 .53%|
Dec. .68% .53% 6»% 47 J»J%
I .68% .56 %! .5.%
May I .62 .62% .60 .60%. .61
I .62%
Sept '13.95 13.97 13.10 13.47 19.93
Dec. 114.00 14.00 13.93 jl3.«2 113.97
Sep? ' 1 2-37 13 27 13.16 ili.lt J-7
f)orn and Wheat Region llulletln.
For tha 41 hour* ending «t * » *”•
Mnndav ‘ ll*l"
Sta?ton. Hlfh. Dow. latum
Ashland, cloudy . '* 6» J J*
Auburn, cloudy.“J ? „
Broken Bow. cloudy. .. 8* at
Columbus, part cloudy... 82 .6 ".wo
(,'ulbertaon. clear . »1 * “ *?
Fairbury, clear . at 61 o.uO
Fairmont, cloudy. 84 69 0 00
Brand leland. part cloudy 86 69 0 00
Hartlngton. cloudy . 78 85 o oo
| Hastings, clear . . *6 8 1 0 00
Holdrege, clear . »o 6' o oo
Dlncoln, cloudy . . *4 69 0.00
North I.oup, cloudy. 64 t,,
North Platte, part cloudy 68 68 0 00
f lukdale, cloudy . '* 61 ?•£*
Omaha, cloudy . 79 60 0 00
O'Neill, cloudy . 80 6a 0 31
Ked Cloud, clear. 87 tl ooo
Tekamah, cloudy . 77 86 0 06
Valentine, cloudy . 88 68 0.34
Minneapolis Cash tiraln.
Minneapolis, Minn., Aug 18.—Wheat—
Cash No 2 northern, 11.32 % tf 1.37 % ; No.
2 herd spring. 11.87% W1 62%; No. 1 dark
northern spring, choice to fency. 91 46%
til 63%; good to choice, 11.37 % ® 1.44 % ;
ordlnery to good. 91 34%®1.37%.
Old And new, September, |1.32%; old
end nl(Bv. May. II 40. old and new, De
cember, 91.28%
Corn—No. 3 yellow 91 18%
Oa'e—No. 3 white, 61%®61%r.
Hat ley—64 089c
live -No. 2, 88 % ® 89 %c, .>•
Fist—No. 1. 92 67 ® 2.8**
KanaAe 4'1ty (at* tiraln
Kansas City, Mr. . Aug 14 When
No. 2, hard, 91 2101.92; No. 3, rad *1.32
01 36 September, 81 21; December,
8129%: May, 81 *3 aekad.
Corn—No. 3. white. 91 110113; No. 2,
yellow. 8113%; No 3. yellow 11.1301.13,
No. 2, mixed 8111%; September. 81.12
asked. December, 9109% bid; May, 91.11%
asked.
Oats—No. 3, whlta, 84%r; No, 1. white.
53 %c.
Barley—90 081c.
SI. 9si tile Ornln Futures.
St T.oula, Aug 18 —Wheat Fututea,
September 9128%: December. 11.34%
Corn— Septetmber, 91.19%. December.
81 16%.
Oats—September. 66c.
Kansas City tte.r
Kansas City. Aug 13— Hay Ctt
(hanged, No. I prairie. 811 00012.00; No
1 timothy, 115 60016.00; choice alfalfa.
IJt on4623.00; clover mixed light, 912,50
913.(0.
New York Cotlem Futures
New York, Aug II.-—Cotton Futures
opened sssy; October. 88.9*01 December,
3(90031.94c. January, 111.340 29.12c,
March, 26 65c: May. 26,67c
Ituluth Mat
Duluth. Minn Aug II—Flat Close
September. *3 3 S ’ i ; October. 92 30%, No
vender, 82.3U. December, 82 26%.
Mlnneapolle (Your.
Minneapolis. Minn , Aug is Hour
Co,banged, family patents. 87.7607 8ft.
Hi au 823.09034.<10.
Road (condition*.
(Furnl«ho*l by the Onmlu Auto club )
All road* lending out of Omih* report
t<l to be In f»lr to good condition*
150 Ruud Markets F*nl lip.
The Oirmh/i Atitnmnblla club In pul
ling tip 41.49 ftinre rond mnrl,t rg In
Pouglua roll lily and r,n In Snrpv and
, \\ geblnfftnn rnnnlvee,
N
f 1
Omaha Livestock
k_-/
Omaha, Aug. 18.
| Receipt* were: Cattle. Hogs. Sheep
Monday estimate.... 14,000 10,000 28,000
Same day last week.1 2.220 12.575 21,490
Rome 2 weeks ago..10,483 7.199 14,199
Same 3 weeks ago.. 7,507 9.474 IK.821
Same day year ago..17.484 8,337 37,337
Cattle—Receipts, 14,000 head. The
week opens out with a rather liberal run
of cattle, the proportion of corn-fed steerK
being unusually large for this time of
the year. Quality of the offerings’ was
good and the market steady to strong
for the more attractive atecr*. sales In
cluding handywelghts up to $11.00. Grass
beef was in limited supply and quotably
unchanged and the same was true as to
cows ami heifera. Business in stockers
and feeders was quiet, with prices gen
erally steady.
Quotations on cattle: . Beef steers.
Choice to prime beeves. $10.10011.00;
good to choice beeves, $8.35 010,00; fair
to good beeves. $8.7509.25; common to
fair beeves, $8.0008.75. Yearlings: Choice
to prime yearlings. $9.85 010.60. good to
choice yearlings. $9.2509.86: fair to good
yearlings. $8.4009.23; common to fair
yearlings, $7.5008.36. Cows and heifers:
Choice to prime fed heifers, $8.6009.50;
good to choice fed heifers, $7.6008.60;
fair to good fed heifers, $8.500 7.50; com
mon to fair fed heifers, $5.50(06.60; choice
to price fed cows, $6 7507.85; good to
choice fed cows, $6.5006.75; good to
choice grass heifers, $4.7506.75; fair lo
good grass heifers, $4.000 4.75; good to
choice grass cows. $4.6005.25; fair to
good grass cows, $3.6004.60; canners and
cutters. $2.0003.26. Stockers and feed
ers: Good to choice feedeia, $7.0008.00;
fair to good feeders, $K. 0006.85; com
mon to fair feeders $6.00 06.00; good
to choice stockers, $6.2607.50; fair to
good stockers. $5 25(^)8.00; common to
fair stockers. $4.2505.00; trasftv stockers,
$3.0004.00; stock heifers. $3.0006.00;
stock cows. $2.5002.50; stock calves, $3.60
! 07.25; veal calves. $2.5009.00; bulls,
i stags, etc.. $3 2607.00. Western rangers:
Go da to choice grass beeves, $7.2508.25;
fair to good gratis beeves, $K 36 07.26:
common to fair grass beeves. $5.5006.25;
Texans and Mexicans. $4.2505.35.
BEEF STEERS.
No. Av Pr. Av. Pr.
2Q.1271 $9 00 3 3.1061 $9 40
27. 912 9 60 2 ]. 968 9 65
17 .1261 9 K5 1 9.1247 9 76
34.1208 9 85 24 9i.9 10 0O
44.1178 10 40 21 1247 1 I 60
18 .1K12 10 K5 41.1280 10 7b
21. 990 10 90 22.1162 1 L 00
STEERS AND HEIFERS
33 . 705 8 76 23 999 9 25
20. 786 9 50 49. 945 10 00
23 . 949 10 25
BEEF COWS.
1 . 1400 3 00 2.1135 8 75
FAT HEIFERS.
30 . 805 8 76
BULLS. STAGS. ETC.
1. 630-70 fi 60
CALVES.
1 . 210 7 60
Hogs■--Receipts, 9.600 head Fairly mod
erate supplies and slight decline* else
where resulted in a weaker tone locally
'his morning and the movement to shlp
i pets was under way early at around 10c
lower figures, while tha packer trad* was
fairly aeti\e at 100:15c decline Bulk of
all sale* was made at $8.1009.2 5. with
top $9.35.
No. Av. Sh. Pr. No. Av fih. Pr.
i 63..326 140 $S 00 20..240 $' 10
i K1..279 110 k 15 62..290 70 8 25
j 27..212 ... 8 30 63..137 70 8 40
68.. 279 . 8 80 75..213 ISO 910
| 58..287 . . 9 26 72..262 9 35
Sheep—Receipt*. 27.000 head. A liberal
[ run of sheep and lambs was reported at
hand Mr the opening day of the week
and tended to bring about a lower tep
[ dency, with initial transaction* showing
around 26c decline from last week's close.
1 Feeders were slow and weak, with aged
sheep also displaying an easier tone.
| Quotations on sheep: .Spring Iamb*, good
to choice. $13.26013.76: spring lambs,
fair to good, f 11.60013.00: feeding lambs,
*42.60(fy)i 3.25 : wethers. $6.5009.00; clipped
I lambs, fed. $12.60013.00; vearllngs red.
$9.75011.60; yearling*. rs*nge, $8 000
10.50; fat ewes, $5 0007.26.
SHEEP.
Fat ewe*. 21. Oregon. 17 >7 00
Fat lambs. 146 Oregon ... 7 4 13 40
Feeder lambs. 171 Oregon ...60 13 00
Clipped Iambs, 340 fed .. 78 12 60
Syring lambs, 69 natives . . 68 13 00
Receipts and disposition »>f livestock
at the Union stockyard*. Omaha. Neb., for
24 hours ending at 3 p. m , August 19
1924.
RECEIPTS—CA R LOT
Horse* and
Cattle. Hogs. Sheep. Mules
C If ft St P Ry. 13 . . , t,
Mo Pac Ry _ 2
U P R R. 66 27 )>2 1
C A N W. east. 2 1
C A N W, west. 1 50 4 8 1 5 6
C 8t P M ft O. . 25 U
C B ft Q, east. . 1 ...
C B ft Q, west.. 19 2 7 1 4
C. R I A p, east 10 2 1 . , .
C R l ft P, west 4 2 . .
I C R R. i .
C G W R R 2
Total Receipt* 520 J20 99 20
DISPOSITION—HEAD.
Cattle. Hog* Sheep
Armour ft Co.1175 • 19>6 3157
Cudahy Pack Co . .1540 21 4763
Dold Pack Co . 302 1282
Morris Pack Co .. 1 1 15 1 113 543
Swirt ft Co . 12"4 1 < > 3 48 1
Hoffman Bros IT
Mayerovich ft Vail M
Midwest Pack Co II
I»owd ft Kefer 29
Omaha Pack Co ... 54
John Roth ft Sons 21
S. Omaha Pack Co. . 8
Beams ft Murray . 2'»»r,
Geo. Murphy .. 67 4
Lincoln Park i*o . . 108 . • ..
Nsgle Park Co. .. 121
Sinclair Pack Co 85 ....
Wilson Pack Co .... los . ....
Swift, Ft Worth .60 .
Anderson A Son .... *1 . ... ....
Benton VS ft Hug* 86 . .. ....
Bulla J H . 134 .
Cheek W H .291 ,
Dennis ft Francis . . 285 .... ...
Ellin ft Co . »t .
Harvey John 279
Inghram. T J . if* ...
Kellogg FG....... 619
Kirkpatrick Bros ... 337
Krebbs A Co . 46
Longman Bros *, t
Luberger Henry 8. 136
Mo Kan C ft C C,,.. x
Neb Cattl# Co . 1«3
Root J B * Co .... 178 ....
Roaenstock Bros . 488
Sargent ft Finnegan 19*
Smiley Bros .... . . 248
Sullivan Bros . 40 ....
Van Sant W B ft < n 22«
Wert helm* r ft Degen 311
Other buyers . 706 . 74 25
Total . 10795 1136b 11269
4 hlcago Livestock.
Chicago, Aug. 18.-—Hog*-— Receipt* 69
000 head, desirable grades moderately a< j
five, mostly 10016c lower: choice weighty
butchers, better light light and slaugh
ter pige show less decline; bidding 15
0 25o lower on common and medium
kind; shipping demand narrow top.
$10 00. bulk good and choice 160 to 250
pound aversge*. $9.1609.95; better 270
to 350-pound weight. $9.$00190 desir
able ]40 to 150-pound kind, $9 250 9 40;
good and choice strong weight killing
pig* $8.60 0 9.00. heavyweight hog* $9
at'1 on; medium. $9 10010.00 light $*90
0 10 00: light light, $* 3009.70; packing
house, smooth. $8.350 8.7-'. packing house
tough. $7.9008 !5. slaughter plus. $8.00
09.00.
Cattle Receipt*. $5,000 head; f*-.|
steers and yearling! steadv to itnevenlv
lower; kind* selling at $10 and downward
showing most downturn, highly finished
offering* comparatively scarce, yenrltnvs
In best demand some slowness «»n t k
weight offerings run Inc ludes about 1. -
loads western rrassrrs: most gm**cra In
killer flesh, no early sales ■ arlv tup
handyweight fed steers. $7 20 severs!
loads yearling* and handyweight. $11.(nj
part load vearllngs on show order. $11.25:
bulk early sale*. $9 25010.60: fed cow*
very dull: some demand for desirable
hejf*rs: bulls strung to 15c higher most
ly 100 l 6r up on weighty bologna.*; best.
94.69; vaster* fully steady mostly $11.50
'"'M2.00 to packers: outsider* upward t«>
• 12.60; larger assortment stockers and
feeders; trade fully steady.
Sheep and Lambs Receipt*. 13 000
head alow. r*r|v *a|e* fat p*tue lamb*1
steady to at-ong; sorting Brht. early
sales to packer*. $13.66014 00; few to
shippers and cltv butcher* $ 1 4 26 cull*
most I'. 11 0009.60; no action on west
erns: heat held ground $14.28; strong;
bidding around steadv sheep steady;
choice rsnge ewe», $7.50; talkinr steady
on feeding lambs no earlv sal**
Rnnena Ully Live Rtock
Ksnsn* Ulty. Mo. Aur 18 fUnlted
Htales Mepnrtiuent of Agriculture) c»t
tie Receipt* 1<i.000 bend: • gives 8,000:
desirable handv weight, fed *<e**rs and
yearlings, wteadx • otrjrt be«-f steer- and
greasy fed stock, wegfc to J[>- lower,
bulls and < elves, steady, short load • alf
club yearling* fi) 25, best matured
Steer* $10 1" practical top venls, 6'i ,
sfoeker* fully steadv. feeder* wnk,
bulk, $4 00 07 26: bulk vain fed sierra
end yearling*, $8 00010 00. grits* cows,
$3 00 04.50, bologna hulls. $15004 00
Hog* Receipt*. 10.000 head, mostly 16
026c lower than 8a turd a v’s axaragr
shipper lops. $9.8- and pucker tops, $9 mi,
hill* of *Nle*. $9 1609 M, hulk of !80
to 275 pound • ci Hge* $9 40 fi9».n rm )<
Irig sows, $8 0008.28; stork tigs sold to
3fic higher, hulk of sale*. $7 0007.7*
Sheet) and T.autha Receipt*. 7,000
head; killing classes, strong to 16c strong
Fr . Uoloiadn gr ii -<*ed Idaho Isinba, $1190,
Uoloradn $13 700 13.86 top native*.
$11 50. Colorado ewe a. $7 OO'U 7 ?6, Texan
wet het s. f K 28.
Mf. ,ln*cph Livestock
**• losnpli. Mo Au* 16 ilogl Re
icetptt, 7.000 head; 10 018c Inwei . top,
$9 70: hulk. $'» 8109 65
Cattle Receipt* 5 Ron he*d , Irregular,
Hulis of steer* $7 50 u • . top. $10 00;
cows and heife?*. $.1 -4/9 26. rolv <*
$4 600 10.00 . *tn< kera and feeders, $4 Otl
07 76.
Hheep and Lamb* Receipt*. 8,500 head,
strong to ■*$»• higher tamba. 117 |0fti
911 90 . ewe* $fi 5007 60
1 niton Filflirea 4 lose
^•w 1 nt k Aug tt Co* t | Fill tr ■ •
(.‘loss hsrelv stead * h toper, 1 - f
"* KO. gr -ruber ‘4 tnt| :'t p . !,. uu ,
4 M.fli II T' h M.,
U. S. Steel Hits
Highest Point
for Two Years
Rubbers in Strong Demand,
Coppers Make. Cain and
Department Store Issues
Reaeb New Highs.
Ilr RICHARD KTIM-ANE
I niversnl Service Financial Kill for.
New York, Aug. 18. — Bulls ha«l little to
complain about in connection with today's
stock market. United States Steel went
to 111, its highest since* 1922. Various
railroad Issues, among them Illinois Cen
tral, St. Paul. Missouri Pacific prefeired,
Reading, Union Pacific* Chicago dk North
western and Texan & Pacific made ad
vances of 1 Mi to 2H points.
The rubber* hsd a field day. They
were in strong demand and made fine
gain*.
The coppers did very well. American
Swelting ami Refining went to 77*4--<i
gain of 4 Mi points; Utah to 81 a gain of
1 Mi*
The* nears were up. So w**re various
of the oils and motors. Nash Motors
vra* conspicuous. It rose 7 points.
The department afore Issues, particular
ly May and (Umbel.stocks, went to new
highs.
General Baking xgaln distinguished it
self, this time with an advance of 7 Vi
point*. The? corporation has been pros
pering nicely, but this prosperity was
swelled decidedly by the forr^.ght of tins
management In purchasing large stocks
of flour before the rise in the prices of
grain began. Now the company is con
fronted with a most prosperous year.
Wilson & «.'n. common and preferred
pic ked up some of their recent loss.
The n**ws that the Missouri Pacific
bandied the largest freight trsffic in its
history the first half of August tended
to increase confidence in the rails and add
to the general bullishness.
Transactions aggregated 1.082.000 shares
Ralls advanced on an average of half
a point.
Industrial* advanced on an average of
two-fifths of a point.
Foreign exchange was soft. sterling
down oearlv 4 cents franc* nearly 20
points, and lire 2*4 points
All the grains had an off day. Tdnulda
tlcm In corn was very heavy. (Considering
fs volume, it was well absorbed. But
for the relative strength in corn, wheat
probably would have declined more than
• did Wh( It, which is one of line with
Liverpool, was droopy throughout the ses
sion and showed a loss of from l%c to
74c a bushel, while corn was down from
M»r to 1*4c. Oat* followed mitt with a
drop of from *4c to l*4c, and rye was
off frfm J *4c to 2'«c.
Lard, of • otirse, followed the example!
of corn and dropped in price.
Oof fee wan fairly active and R to 8 ,
points higher
Cotton continued its decline, but !> be
ginning to show* resistance.
r x
| New York Quotations
v/
New York Stock exchange quotation*
furnished by .1 8. Bar he A Co., 224 Oma
ha National Bank holding.
Sat.
High. Low Close. Close.
Agri Cheat .•..!•■% 16*% 16% 10
Ajax Kubner . 11% 3 0% 11 10%
Allied Cnemlcal ..76 76 75 75%
Allla-Chalmers ... 60 69% 60 66%
Amer H «*t 3 42% 41% 42% 41%
Amer B S F. 8 4 86%
Arner Car.. 130** 130% 131%:
Am C A F .172% 171% J71 % 172 |
Amer ii 4 Death. 12% 12%
Am Ji . I. pfd ... 61% 61 67% 63%
Amer Int,er Corp .27% 26% 77% 26%
Amer Linseed Oil. . 20 20
Amer Locomotive. 8! *f'% *0% 10%
Am S a C .17% 12% 12% 12%
Amer .Smelt ... 77% 74 77 % 73%
Amer Smelt pfd ... .104% 103%
Am St! r . .36% 36%
Amer Sugar .... 46% 46% 4*% 4 6%
Amer S nnatrx 8% 8%
Amer T A T . 128% 128 128% 12H i
Amer Tolm co 15" -* 170 150% 150
* vr w A E I0i 110 111
Amer Woolen 78% 77% 77% 76%
Anaconda . .. 4 % 13% 40% 23%
Asa... Dr Ods 12"% 11* 11*% 119 6
Associated Oil. -J 28%
Atchison 10 % 104% 1!,6% 1
AG Coast L . 1 36 134 % US 136
AM Gulf 4 W 1 . 16% 16
Alls- Tack . .. * %
AM Refin t'o ...85% 85% 85% *4%
Austin - Nichols ... .. . 23% 24
Auto Knitter. 2%
Baldwin .124% 121% 124% 124%
Halt A Ohio ..64% 44% 44% 64%
Bethlehem Steel .44% 41% 44 « 43%
Bo-/ h Magneto • i * % %
Ilrkl - Man Ky .. 26% 26 26 77
Brkl - Man pfd . .. *9
Cal Pack 90 *9 49 * 84%!
Cal Petroleum - % 22% 22% 22%.
« a I &■ Arl* Min . 54% 64% 64% 54%
Can P.ic .152% r: 1 2% 161% j
Cen t ra I I. »dt h ... I 5 % K.% 15 % 15 %
Con L*ath PM 52% 61% 61** 62%
Cerro do Pasco 4 % 47% 4«% 4»
< handler oMtor* . 49% *0% 49% 49%
Cheaa A n . . . . 87 8 6 17 % 87%
<' h i G t Went .... C) f,S 6 % 6 % |
Chi A N W . 64% 61% 64 % 63%
C M A St P ... 16% 16% 16% 16%
Chi G W pfd ..16% 16% 16»* 17 |
C M A St P pfd . 28% 2- 2* % 2*%
C U I A P .35 24% 35 34% |
C St P It A O . . 47% 47% ■
Chile Copper .... 35% 35 35% 34%'
ihmo .21% 21 % 21% 31%
duett - Peabody . . .. 5f
duett - Pea pfd . 1 m3 %
Coca - Cola ....77 7 l% 76% 77 i
Colo Fuel A Ir 52 % 51 51 % el %
Columbian Carbon . . 43 41% I
Columbia Gas . 40% 4«i% 4 - % 40
Congoleum . 5 4 62 % 42% 53
Con Cigars .11% 16% 18% 19%'
Continental Can . 61% 6b 60% 60
Continental Mot 6% I
Corn Product* . . 32% 32% 32% 32%
Cosden ..2* ."?% 27% 27 %
Crucible .63% 62% 63 62% I
Cuba Cans Sugar. 14% t<% 14% 14%
Cuba c Sug pfd.. fir, % 64% *4% 64%
o»ba-Am Sugar .. 32% :t2% 32% 32%
t'uvamel Fruit . .51% 4*% ;.o 51%
Dm m i Boons 1 ’ % 1 % 1 f % 15 %
Davidson Chem 6-% 61% % 61
I*ela £ Hudson ..130% 13"% l.Vt% 130%
I'ltm* Mining 15% 15% 15% 15%
Dup de Nemours. 1“0 12* in.: 129%
Kastman Kodnk 111 lin% 110’* 110%
I iris .30% ?9% jo .10
r.!e StoV Bat 5 * * % 59 69%
I'ntmoUh Player* ..84% * 4 8 4 *6
Fifth Ave rf L. . 11%
Flak Rubber 9% S 9% t
Pletschmsn s Is f9% £| 69'* £*%
Freeport Tex ... *% 9
General Asphalt .. 46% 44% 4 *. % 44%
H*n Fleetrlc .. 27 .% 27 2% 27 3 % 37 4
Oneral Motor* .14% 14 % 14% 15
Gold Dust . . ... ... 40
Goodrich .25 24% 2-f» t%
Gt North Or- . ... .1"% in % i»t% 30%
Ot No Mv pfd_ 67% f»7 67 % 67%
Gulf States Stl .76 •<% . .% 74%
Hartmann Trunk 37', 37 37 % 37
Hayes Wheel .... 1 % ., % » ,
Hudson Motor* 78 27% ' 7%
Horne*take Min t’o 42% 41%
Houston M|| 71% To 7t% 6t%
llupp Motors . 1.1% 13%
Illinois Central .114% in% 114% 111%
111 < *n pfd .114 it: * lt4 Ji3%
Inspiration ’f% *% 2 9% 2*%
Int Km Com Corp *6% *5% 26% 26%
Int Harvester ... . 9.,% 96%
Int Mere Ms r ... 11 % 16% 11 1 ft %
Int M M pfd . 4 % 41% 4 2% 41
Int T A T . . ..73 t; % . 8 % 79% 1
Int Nickel . li% 19% 19% 19%
Int Paper .r • % 56% 6«% 6»}%
Inv Oil ■ . 13% 12% 12 . 12%
.lone* Tea . 21 % 2t>% 21 21
Jordan Motor .. it. % 1
K C Southern . 2 % 22 * % 72%
Kelly Spring 17% 16% 1.% 16% I
lvenuerott 49% 49 49 49%
Keystone Tire . . . '% %
Lee Rubber ... 11 16% j
LehIgh Valley 65 4 % 84 , I -
Lima Loromotlvs 8'% it*>. '
I.Ouse - Wile* ... 73 76 % 71 4'F,
I.outs A Nash D'1 % Ifti 101 I'M ,
Ma'k Truck ...16<% in: % 103% 1 n .1 %
May Dept store . 94% 9 3 % 97 % 92%
M*xwe|| Mot A .. 5'.% I 64% 62%
Maxwell Mot H 1 » 12% 13% 11
Marland . .13'-, 31% 3 2% .11%
Max ban Hea ... 21% 21% 21% 21%
Miami Copper . 25 24 % 24% „4%
Middle Slat..* oil 1% 1% t% 1%
M K A T , . . 15 % T. % 16% 1 .%
Mo Pacific 26 19% 19% it
Mo Pacific pfd ..61% 51% 63% f. 1%
Mont- Ward ... 37% .16% 37% 27%
Mother l.ods .... g% «% *% 8%
Nash M•>t ■ ■ a .... |t: inn I ' I -
Nat Uts< till .. 68% n, . • ei
National Knarnst :!%
Nat !.*«■! . ...Ifi'i % D.'» 1*' a 11, T % ,
N V Air Brake . 4.1 4 t 47 V,
N Y Central 11 o 109% i|6 11.9%
N T Chi A K» T. . 1 1 ’ % 116
N V N M At H . \'l \ 2. % -7% 27%
North Amer 6% *< % : • % :* •
North Peclfls ... 67 *.«% s*% «6%
N A W Ry 1-T 126** I ’6 % 136%
Drphsum . . 19 %
o«cm Ho* tie 4 11 % 1 i % 11 %
Pacific OH 49% 4*% 4«% 4H
Packard Motor lt% t | %, n% n%
Pan Amerhau * :7% 57% 8*
Pan - A merles r» R >-7% &« % 55% 67
Penn R n 46% 4 S % 4 % 46%
Peoples flee 150%
pore Marquette 8.1 * • % §3 «»%
Phil Co 60% 60 60% 50 K
Phillips Patrol >6 14% ♦% 14%
fiui'ce- Arrow 1 1 % 1 I
I'oslum Cereal 68% 6, % -8%
I'loesed Steel Car. 4 1
Piod A Refiner* 3 I % »0% <• % "
Pullman Li . % l 12 % 1 1 j % Lil%
Puma \ I* Hugs' 54 t % ; % ^
Pure Oil f4 2. % i 21
Ry fttee| Spiln* 1 •• lio%
Ray Consol 13% 12 % il% 12%
Read ms 6 * 6.1% *. MS
Itwplogle 1* 11% 12 M%
pep Iron A HI eel 49 41% 48% 4H
Royal Dot. h N V 41% 4 % 4 % 44%
SI 11 A H F 76% 6 % 26 % :»»«■.
S' I, A H w .15% 44 % 4 6 % • %
A hull" <' i it a» St I * »>', 12 %
S*’0* ftoehtirk in . % lor, l'i*', |n«l%
Shell I’nton nil... ti ia% i •. % i*»,
Si ui m«m o '* *5% 2 6**
g*n< 1st* *''1 17% 1 ? % |T* I %
•I «heff|f|,| . 71 7« 7* 69%
Skeiiy on . 18% 17% 18%
Southern racifjc. . 97 96% 97 96%
South Hv . 69% 98 «fi«4 68%
Stand O of Cal... 58% 57% 58% 57%
Stand O of N J.. 35% 3b 35% 35
Stewart -W . 53% 62% 52% 52%
Stromberg Car. 63
Htudebak?r . 38% 38% 38% 38%
Submarine Boat . 10 9% 10 10
Texac Co . 41% 4n% 40% 40%
Texas ft Tar ... 39 37 38 % .37
Timken R B ... 36% 35% 36% 56
Tobacco Trod ... 65% 6f. 65% 64%
Tob Prod "A**... 91% 91% 91% 91%
Trana Oil ....... 5% 4% 5% a
Union Phc .147% 144% 1 47 1 44 %
United Fruit .213% 218 219% 217%
17 S Cast Iron Plpel02% 100% 100% 100%
U S I ml Alcohol. 73% 73% 73% 73%
U S Rubber . 36% 34% 56% 34
U S Rubber pfd . . 89% 88% 89% 88
IT J4 Steel .Ill 109% 110% 109%
ir s Steel pfd.121% 121%
Utah Cupper . 8 1 80% 81 79%
Vanadium . 24% 23% 23% 23%
V'i vaudou .. 5 %
Wabash . 15% 1f.% 15% 15%
W aba ah “A" . ... 44% 42% 44 4 4 %
Western Union .114% 113% 113% 115
Westing Air B. 93
Westing Elec . 64 63% 63% M
White Kaglo Oil. . 23%
White Motors 60% :,9% 60% 59%
Woolworth Co ...113% 113% 313% 114 %
Wi Ilya-Overland K% 8% 8% 8%
Willy a - Over pfd. 70 69% 70 67 %
Wilson . 8% 7% 8% 7
Wilson rfd . 2-* 20% 21% 20
Worthing Pump . . 30% 29% 29% 29%
Wrgley Co . 4 2 41% 41% 4 2
Yellow Mfg C0. 65 56%
Yellow C t C'.. 4 8 i
Total sales of storks. 1.070,960 shares.
Saturday’s total sale*. 654,800.
Total bonds, $5,532,000.
f
New York Bonds
i-—-J
New York, Aug. 18.— Bond prices drift
ed irregularly lower today in a trailing
session which wits marked principally by
unusual activity in Serbian 8s and Si.
Paul Railroad issues. The influence of
heavy profit taking In t lie foreign ex
• hinges checked an initial advance in the
European bonds which was Inspired by
the successful conclusion of the interallied
conference
With Serbian 8s mounting more than 2
points to a new 1824 high record at 90,
reports were revived that an additional
loan to Jugo Klavia might be floated be
fore long. The Ponds closed slightly be
low the day’s level.
Indications that the St. Paul Railroad
1920 refunding program would be expe
dited, following the success of the Balti
more Ac Ohio's refunding operations, In
fuaed new strength Into the road a acti\e
Issues. Leadership or the movement was
assuim «t by the 4 per cent bonds of 1925
with the debentures 4a also gaining
grdund Other railroad Hens which fig
ured conspicuously in the trading were
T.ouirvilla ft Nashville 4s Chicago Ac Al
ton 3% a, Louisiana & Arkansas 5a. and
"Katy 1 adjustment Be. the latte*- being
influenced by the declaration of interest
due October 1.
Mixed price movement* marked trading
in other sertiotiH of the list. Gains of
from 1 to 3 points In Kelly Springfield
and Ajax Rubber «m contrasted with loxsea
Hi Philippine Railway 4s. Republic Steel
5%s and Dery !>ry Goods.
Considerable new financing is sched
uled for the week, offerings probably
will bt* made tomorrow of $19,000,000 Sun
Oil company 45-year 6% per cent deben
tures. A $3,000,000 issue of Buffalo,
Ro' neater and Pittsburgh 4% per cent
bonds was placed pr'vately.
I . 8. Bond-.
Pales fin $!.oqo> High. Low Close
113 Liberty 3%a -101.2 101 101.1
1 Liberty 2d 4s . ..301.16 101 16 101.16
24 Liberty 1st 4%*.103.21 102.17 102.18
1103 I iberty 2d 4%a. 101.23 101.IS 101 20
87 Liberty 3d 4%s..102.17 J02.16 102.17
-46 Liberty 4th 4%a 102 27 102 24 102.25
125 u a Gov 4 %a. . .106 105.29 105.29
Foreign.
?♦ A n TuMarWks 6s «1% M % 81%
30 Argen Gov 7a .. .102% 102% 102%
152 At gen Gov Cs . 84 93 % 94
34 Atm Gov gtd Jo 7s. 97% 97 97
35 City of Lord 6s... »(» *9% *9%
3 7 City of ( open L%a. 96 95% 95%
11 City of O P 7%s.. 92% 92% 92%
28 < ity of Lyons 6a... 90 81 % *9%
2 3 City of Mar 6s .. 9"% 89% 89%
* c of RdeJa 8» 47.. 95 95 95'
20 Cze lie pub 8s.101 1«0 % 10"%
SO J>ept nf Seine 7s... 97% 96% 96%
4 liom Rsp sf 3%a 91% 91 % 91%
■ l*ufc % lift n 29.103% 103% 303%
3 5 J> of Can 5* 52.... 103 102% 3 02 %
7 liu E I fi* ]#62 . D«% 96% 96%
116 ]>u E In 5%S 1 962. »l 90% 9u%
7 Framerican 7%s .. 97 96 % 96%
77 French Rep St> .108% It'7 % 107%
110 French Rep 7%t . .104% 104 104
72 Papancg* 6%s 92% 92% 91%
13 J-*pan*»e 4s ..8'.% 8 2% 8 2',
102 K Belgium 8k .107% 107% 107^*
34 K Belgium 7%s. .110% 11 r> no
33 K Leninark Os 100% ]f»0% 100%
4 K Italy 6 %s .1011% 100% it>G%
7 2 K Netherlands 6s . J00% loo joo
82 K Norway ba . 98% t7% 9»
169 K Serb# C Is.90 88% 89%
2 K Sweden 6a .1»4 J04 1<*4
17 Oriental D os ... M% ** **
117 F'arls - f, M 6■ .. M% g-% x.-%
24 R Bolivia 9* ..93% 91% 9.1%
7 Rep Chile 8a 1941.. 105 J95 105
• 3 Rep Chile 7S .... 99 98% 99
l Rep Col 6 %a . 99% 99% 99%
7* R Cuba 6 % a . .. 56% 96% gv%
1 Rep FI Salva 8* 102% 102% \%
16 R Finland 6s ... . 90 8t\ fit
8 St Queensland 6s .103 If; 30.1
1 St Rio Grande «■ .. 97% 9 % 97%
40 St San Panin Is . 100 99% 40%
*1* ?"*»* G 6%s .. 98% V* 9a %
33 I K GB 5 % a 19 29 1 11 % 11 0 % 1 1 •.• %
f f> T K GB 6 %e 1917 106% 10$ 10.'.%
3 7. US Brasil 8* . . 97% 97% 97%
6 t S BraaiI 7a 94 n% 94
Dementie.
.It Am Ag • ’hem 7%s. 94% 93% 94%
16 Am Chain Ha. 94 9 % »«
13 Ar.i F'nelting 69 .105 io»% 105
y Am Smelting Li. :»4% 94% 94%
6 Am Sugar 6w .101 100% 10f>%
4 5 Am TAT 6 % a. . . 102% 102% 1^2%
13 Am TAT 6a.!«2 J0!% 102
3 3 Am TAT 4* ..97% f 7 % 97%
11 Am W W ft E La . 9 3% 92% 92%
3 52 Ana Copper 7a *« 101 1«0% 101
7 4 Ana Popper 6a ’i 3. 9»% 9 7% 94
!%• 1 Ilf 92
12 Associated Oil € a. . 1 •> 1 11* 1 i#>i
22 AT.vSU gen 4s .. 9<i 89% 49%
2 A11 C Line 1st 4a. 90 90 90
1° Atl Kef deb 6a... 99 99 99
17 11 ^ n b .1M l.% 102%
”9 II A- O * v 4%a ... *9% 49% «9%
1 '•* H 4 n gold 4s 86 % 8 6 % 8 6%
12 l.iell Tell Pa let ltJ0n% iao% jao%
23 hCh Steel Rp.9l-% 96 96 %
2 Beth Ste-I f.%* 88% *8% s8%
1 Mrnden Copper 6a.. 164% Jr 4% 1*4%
4 RH^r llfll S* a % a . 9h % 9„ % 9ft c
3 Rk.vn Edison Is. lr>n% pn% !•<•%
2 71 U ■% > n - Man Tr 6 * . 81 % 81 % 81 %
7 Calif Pefmi 6 % s in’ 100% Jftl
3 Can No 6',i .115% U*% 115%
26 tan 1’ac 4* ... $| 40% 90%
:r, c r a •» s* l% i«ii% 1 (■ 2%
4 c ent Leather 6s . 99% 99% 94%
jo l ent Pa' gfU 4« . 4 7% «7% 87%
166 < hes A’ Ohio rv 5s. 100% loO jno
5.1 Che» At O , v < ',i 9»t% 96% >• %
96 Chic A Alt<>n 1%a 4 4 2 41
9 c H ft Q rfg ’a A . 1 a*. % lt»o% 1 g<> %
6«'i ' hif* A East J|| 7;% -j
•*' < b . Gt Weat 4* L6% b5% 5»%
142 «• M ft Hi p . v 4 %s 6 % f,2% 631,
; ■» c M A St J’ rf 4 % a 66% 56 f.< %
4 4 M ft St p 4* *25 34 6 2% 64
l« C ft Nortl rfg (• a?% a:*, 97*,
4 i ;h1e Hallwav 5a. .78% 78% 79%
7 Ch R I ft P gen 4s 4 8^ 83% 83%
2 8 Chic n 1 ft P rfg 4k 81% 8 1% 91%
1< l>r ll» ft -4 L 5a 79% 7f% ^
' : ch A Weat ind 4* .* , 7; ,
2 chile Cm) 6- 106% 104% 104%
* •’CCJfcfR L rf «s a i0»% it>4% 103%
]I Clev Un Term Rs 10" J00 100
6 f’ni (i ft K| 6a at..Joe% joo 3»>a
12 Commn Pow r,a .. 97 94% 96*4
17 c Co..l of M *a Ss % «7 % .
c C SUV d 4a at |0"% 100 % 100%
Cuban Am Bug 8a..It* 104 1 • s
’ • : > ft R Ur rfg 5* 44 4 % 44
I* I *env A K Or >n 4a 71% "«% 78%
6 I *et Edinofi rfg 6a 106 1C* left
1 Let Un Rvs 4%« 91% 4! \ 91%
4 I tit Pont da Nem .106% U>4% 106%
7 l>U(|Ue l.gt 6s. 10f% 105% 105%
4 Meat Cubs Bn ?%* 1 fi7 106% 1"7
179 Kmc Gos ft F ?%s 96% 9«% 9'1%
> Erie gen lien 4s. »4 * 61% 64
6 Fisk Rubber «• . . 10,3% 107%
'l ‘i**n Elen deb 5s .104% 104** 104 ,
16 (jondrivh fc % e 98% 94% !»$%
7 «londvesr T 8- 'll l«5«t 1" *s 1o.m,
. »ioodyaar T 6a '41.116% !1«% 114*4,
1. fir Tr Rv nf «' 7. 11 f. % 116% 115%
« C»r Tr R\ nf C «a,)(*6 % 106% 106%
4»r ft Gt -a A | Hf% 109% 109 \
Id CK North £ % a R .101% 101 lot
6 |?«»*1)»v Choo 8s II % I*”, *4 103%
2 6 Hud ft M • f■ .s A *7% 47 81
« Hud ft M ad In *a 67% 67% 67%
« limn O ft R 6 % a 99 % •»•>% 99%
2rt 111tn Ball T rfg 5a 97% y7% 91%
6 Illinois Cent f.%s 107% lot% 1M%
26 ICC Ht T.ftN r 7 a 96 94% 96%
I III Hle-l deb 4 % a. . 94 94 94
I Tn.1 Steel fs 103% 102% 1 "1 %
16 Inter Rap Tr la... 91% 91% 91%
1.1 Ini R r rf 5a at 68 an 64
106 Inf ft «lt Nor G 64% 54 8 4
14 lnt ft Gt Nor 1st 6a 93% 99%
.•* Hit M-ro Mar 1 f €1 *.«% *t 49
1 lnt Paper 6s 97% 67% *7%
I K* I'Sft \f 4 s ... 8 0% 45% Mi 4*
k •' P ft E La . 93% 93% 93%
K»* Terminal 4s . 84 8 1 %
14 Kans.'S 'JftF. 6s. 9*% 94% 9«%
6 k - H> f4p Tit e 4 a 9 4% 97% 4*',
1 Ten Ga, yu. 8%» 94% 94 *, 94 %
17 Luke Rhore 4s Ml.. 94% 9r % o*. \
' Mg ft* Mvera fa *t|% f4% 04%
?1 1 . ft N » 1007 . 104 % If' % 1"4 %
t I ft N unified 4 a 9 2* a 9' 9’ a
7 Lmilaul.e GftK 8a sor, f.»% on**
6- Magma t*opper 7a 119% 11' 119%
Manhattan Ity 4a 6!** »• i % 61%
*t Market St Rv .a 98% 94 9*
13 M idvale Steel ‘ a M % 4a % 86%
G-.ipftSSM %s ♦ * • , 4 ,
t M k ft T 6s . 101 101 101
111 M K ft T new 8a 63% e % *5%
2 0 M.» Pgr (at t- 94% pi 96
94 Mu Pa. gen • 63 61 % 61 %
7 Mont Power la 98 fs 94
. N E T*T 1st ht 101% 1*91 101%
3 n . • i A m $3 % % 92%
7S NY Central 6 a pri J04*^ 1"*%
V $ N . | . I f (K |g f I % ‘‘ ‘ % 4 ** ft
,* NVOAHlj. Ha . ...103% 109 : 9$
tl NY Edison 6 % a m% 1 IV % . t 2 %
Ml NY Nil t l»r *••’* 4 % 95%
1 I N Y N H 6a 77 % 77 % 17*,
IN V 6 a h% 6% 6%
19 v Y Tel 6a 1941 10;% 1«6% 1 <*6 %
.4 V V Tel 4 % a 06 % 96%
1 » N Y West ft 14 4%a 4** I 8 4
ti N Am E.|| ha « % ” % ‘ x
> Vnt O T ft L 6a A hi a-i hi
19 Nor Phc 6b R 104% 1* " % 104%
JO V (»r Pee 6a IV , . , 46, a. O'.
Nor Pac 4* . . . 8»% 8 5 * •
*. N • r « n let -a A 43 % "1N * *. %
‘ '• 4 ’ '
1 on. .'7\\ a b 4a .... c % %. % »
12 Pac. G A TC is ... 94 % 93% 97%
14 Pac T A T 6s 1962. 93 92% 92%
15 Penn U R 6%* ..110% 110% 110%
33 Penn R R 5s .1«3 ma% 103
14 Penn R R 4%s 94% 94 04
24 Pere Mar 5s ..... 97 96% 96%
6 Phila Co 6s . 103 102% 10.1
3 Phila Co t>%8 -95% 95 95
2 Phila A Read 6s . P9%. 99% 99%
42 Pler«e - Arrow Sg . 87% 86% 87
2 Pit is Y A A 5s B ..101% 101% 101%
2 Port Ry \. A P 6s. 94 93% 93%
S Pro A Re 8s WW..110 110 110
* Pun A1 Rug 7s ...109% 109% 109%
5 Heading gen 4%s.. 93% 93% 93%
3 Reading gen 4s ... 95 95 95
3 Rep I A Htl 5 % s. . 9<i 89% 89%
8 R Or We col *r 4s. 69% 69% 6*%
4 R I A & L 4 %s. , , 82 82 82
7 SLIM AS 4s RAG- dl 83% x:i% 8 3%
28 8LA8F p I 4s A.. 71% 71 71
106 SHARP adj 6s..., 81% 80% 80%
177 SHARK inc 6s. 74% 7 4 74 %
10 SLR W con 4s.... 85% 85% 85%
2 SP A KC 8 H 4 %s 79% 79% 79%
26 Seaboard A H r. 6s 83 83% 82%
27 Seaboard A L a 5s 63% 65 63 %
15 Sinclair C O col 7s 92% 92% 92%
19 Sin, Con Oil 6%s.. *6% 86% 86%
14 Sin Crude OH 5%s 100 100 3 00
8 Sinclair Pipe L 6a. 84% 84% 84%
26 So Pac cv 4s. 98 97% 97%
23 So Pac rfg 4s. 89 88% 88%
1 So Pac col tr 4s.. 86% 86% 86%
13 So Rail gen 6%s..l07 106% 106%
4 So Roil gen 6s-1<% 102% 1U3
13 So Rail gen con 5a 100% 100% 100%
70 So Rail gen 4s... 7f> 74% 76
45 So B T rfg 5a- 9 6% 96% 96%
10 Tenn Klee rfg 6s. 97% 97% 97%
30 Third Ave adj 5s. f»4 % 54% 54%
10 Third Ave rfg 4s. 60 i-9% 59%
2 Tolodo Kdljon 7s. 108% in*% 108%
2 T St r. A W 4s.. 82% 82% 82%
1 I’n K H A P rfg 5a 98% 9s % 98 %
4 Un Pac rfg 5s.. 105 104% 105
3 Un Pan 1st 4s_ 92 91 % 91%
4 Un Pac cv 4s.. .. 99% 99% 9<n,4
8 l S Huh 7%s 1M% 104% 104%
37 U S Rub 6s . 86 84 % 85
29 U S Steel s f 5s 104% 104% 104%
2 Utah P A Ht 5s- 91% 91 91%
25 Va-Car C 7s . 6 3 62% f,2
10 Virginian Ry 6s... 96% 96 96 %
7 W Sugar Ref 7s.. 102% 102 1«2%
14 West Klee 5s - 98% 98% 98%
20 West Md 1st 4s .. 65 64 % 4»5
33 VW-st Pac 6s.. 91 91 91
12 West Un 6%s,..110% 110% 110%
17 Westing Elc 7s.... 109 108% 108%
3 West Shore 4s .. 83 82% 82%
21 Wick-Sp-n Stl 7s. 76% 74 75%
•
39 Wil A Co s f 7%s 60 59 ft
28 Wi| A r*o 1st 6s 90 89% 90
19 Wil A Co CV 6s . 5 4% 5 % 54%
28 Young S A. T 6s. 96% $5 95%
Total sales of bonds, 312.170,000.
Chicago CMocks.
Furnished by J. S Bache A Cn 224
Omaha National Bank building, phones
Jackson 6187, 5188. 5189.
Bid Asked.
Armour A Co. Til., pfd.. 81% 8 2
Armour Co.. Del. pfd. 90% 91
Albert Pick .17% 18%
Basgjck Alemite .32% 32-n
Carbide . . 60 60%
Kd!s<»n. Com.130% 131
Continental Motors. *•% 6%
Cudahy . 64 65
Daniel Boone . 16 16%
Diamond Match .116 117
Deere, pfd . . 73% 75
Kddy Paper . 3r- 20
Libby ..5 5%
National Leather. 3% 3%
Quaker Oats.285 290
Reo Mot nrs... 16 16%
Swift A- t'o. ... .lf,6 3 06 %
Swift Int i . 2 4 -’4%
Thompson . . . .. 46 4 7
Wshl .26% 27
Mrigley . <!% 4: %
Yellow Mfg. «’*>. 5 4% 6 4%
Yellow Cab . . .... 47% 4 8
Foreign Exchange.
New York, Aug 18.—Foreign Exchange
—Firm Quotations in cents.
Great Britain demand. 462: cables,
452%: CO-dsy bills on bank- 4 49 %
France—Demand 5.49; tables. 5.49%.
Italy—Demand. 4.41%: cab:** 4 49
Belgium—Demand. 5 12; cables 6 12%.
Germany—Demand (ptr trillion), 22%
Holland—39.04.
Norway—12 94
Sweden—26.57
Denmark—16,24
Switzerland —18 *7.
Spain—13 4 7.
Poland- 19 V
< zccho-Slovskia—2 97 ,
Jugo Slavia—1.24%
Austrian 0014
Rumania —.46
Argentina- 33 8 7.
Brazil 10.'>«
1 Toklo—41 5-16
Montreal 39 31-72
New York General.
Ha-jr York Auk l' > r • d.
spring patents. >7,2'#97.77 soft winter
straights. >».. Zlyt.lZ, hard wintei
straight' 1C 50© 7 00
Rye Flout—Quiet fair to good. >240$?
iS.10, choice to fancy. I ZlUi 22
I Corn meal—Firm: fin*- white and yel
low granulated. >>.6003.70.
Rye—Knsy. No. 2 western. >1 02’*. ?
j o. |». New York and >1.001* c i. f *t
1 port.
| Barley -steady. malting I 04 © 1 06,
c i f Neve Turk.
Wheat - -Bpat, *"ak; No. 1 dark north
ern spring c. f f New Y<trk lake and
rail It 6»Q : Ne 2 hard winter f o ta.
lake and rail, >! 44^ N«». I Manitoba,
down. >1 €1\ and No 2 mixed durum, do,
I >1 4 3 6,
I Corn—Foot barely steady; No. 2 yellow,
r. f track. New York lake and rail.
>i 41 k, and No. 2. do, >1 59.
fiats «po* steady No 2 white. 61c.
Feed —Quiet; city bran, 1 no.pound •■ark*.
121.0", western br.<r *i« >29 ► ’a "2 6.
Hav S’e-idy. old No. 1. >TiSj !. No.
>27. No , I22e?1. shipping. >199:
Hops—R’eady state 1923, S9f/4Sc.
1922. 19 *; 2«r. I’aclfte coast 2923, 24f#29c;
1922. 2 1 #» C4c.
I*,.. rtS'e#,! men, >:? 7* f h • ’: d y.
J^Lrd—Barely steady, m ddleweat >14 to
fr 14*"
Jall-w—Firm: gpeclal loose. *Sr. extra.
Rice Steady: fancy head. 7V|01e.
9 *j»f St. loui* Livestock.
Fast St louls. in, .* Ug it—Hogs—
Receipts. 17.000 head early allies 2. i 5c
lower late sale* to packer*. 25c iowei ,
top >9.7 j hulk, good to choice 170 pounds
aid up. >9.7509 90. good 149 to 16“
pounds. >9 50 0 9 76 good weight killing
pigs, >4 7609 , light and plain kind*.
>7 500* 60 pa king s tv a. >7 «. i# 00.
Cattle—Re, ejpta, 9.090 b* ad native berf
steers steady; top. >10 $5. bulk R ::
9.50. west orn s'eers 1 *» t?5c low er, at »'•
€jr TOO; light yearlings and heifers. 15 0 26c
higher, at I* 5o s i*eef cows almost
unaaiH hie at >5 0 4 26. cancers >1 75
« • a;.d t •
light vealers. >10.>0
Fheep Receipt- 3 $00 hc.vd good lambs
se*rre. 2f>c higher few I**!, ?U ■_
12 $0. medium to gn*d k nd >12 I6|rl3 ■
rulls. unchanged at I ” r*»' ahsar stead',
light e«.es 9 -00; o1 hers, > 4 • 0 © 5 ' . fan
ners. >1 04) f| . 50.
New York ’*'U;sr
New York. Ang. 1*.—An a ivance of N
featured tiie raw sugar rra-ket *od.* the
spot price row being duly paid
Rua;ne*s was active, including sales of
about 2 ,fi 0#t bags t’ubajv and Porto Rican
for August nnd September shipment.
R*w sugar futures ad'.in ci 9 tP 1$
point* oi, a-five buying by houses with
Cuban connections, due to the advoitc* in
spots and re}.,It* that Kurope agstn win
buying tn t’uba
The advance met stop In** order* and
realising and reaction* f illowed final
prices being 1 to 2 p. r»* net higher on
grtivs positions September closed ' **4o
hccember 3 70c; Marsh. M*v, 4 ■
Refined sugar wr* firmer and unchang
ed to 1 points highs* the Ns* now ? irk
ing from 9 76 to 6 90 for fine granu
lated
Refined future* were nominal.
Mntit Pity livestock
Sioux City. la. Aug 1 * - rattle Re
ceipi*. 6 "00 head; marke* alow, killers
*. »k sit HfrN strong fat steer* and
yearlings. >7 0011 • bulk. *9c0i/lOOt
fst tows and holfer* >5 0009,75 can
nera and cutter*. >2 ■ -ff t M>: gras* w e
and heifers. >.' 7 5%. " 50, ' eais. >4 u
10*0; t-il r >.-. 60 t f- *•' feeder* >• Pllff
‘ 0(1; ar.xker*. >4!!i# 7 50. st.* k year
lings and • alvo* 14 < r d 7 1*0. feeding cowg
and heifer*. >3 50ff 6 •'0
Hogs Uceipts 10,00© head, market
trade deadlocked, bidding b.g quarter
lower; prospective top >9 96 bulk ef
Srtler* I4 N i . • light*. >9 r.n *i 9 2 * .
hut-her* mixed, f4' v ‘
hruw p*rkc* f4,0ff*35: stags. >« Or.
good P*gJ». >7 ftO'o'V.OP
Sheep- Ri-rr pt» 500 he.id market
steady, fat native lamb*. >12 40. ewes.
5
New Yerk Mrtsl
New York Auc 14- t’oi v*r Steadv
ap.«* amt ftuies. 11 **
Tin- 12aa> . spot amt future*. 12 76c.
Iron—5f e*dv . No I northern 20 00ff
21 50c. No northern. 19 If 60 C* 20 00c
Nn 2 aoiitne* n. 14 0.
Lead Fteadv. spot 9 00 #99 25c
7.1 nr—Btead' Fast St Lou** spot. 4 2»)c
Futures—6 20<T9 25c
j Antlmonv Spot 9 ?5e.
New York bi»«»t lotion
New York. Ang 19. Potion Fpot.
quiet, middling. 29.10a.
New York i of 1**11 limitation*
New York Cotton exchange «ju 'tailor*
| furnished be d s I* he a • ■'*
4’>mah.i National bank building Thcne .1A
Mdou
Art I 4 »pep > High i I w i rinse. | Ss t
lorl (3* »n |S*,M J« ,i , •« 13
l'*T. ’I «« « »" ,:)(>
■I»f> -|1 jo j:, S« :< «n :i «« '•*-4
M a f ‘4 1 '111 -4 91 »S • 1! 1* 14
Mm lll.lt !*,*B l* SI «i>
Nrn York *ngnt t|uotatioo«
Furnished bv .1 S Bn- be ^ t'o . 9"4
(hitaba Na' onnl Hank buiPI ng l*h • < '
I I I *
Art i I'pni 1 lb.gh i l.o* 1 rioae. J H*t
St'ii 4 M : 7S 1 t 40 I 3 *4 ’ f«i
lu.- | .1 7 .1 94 i 3 70 1 S 70 9 71
M i l f 3 *5 .4 4 3
Chlengo Hutter
<'hi. ag" A ug 1' Tli* hutter n •Ue'
today m od steadv mi lop >rc» and firm
nn medium and under gia.te* The cen
traNmd .*» mirktl was firm under itghi
sujpllr* and an Improved demand
Fre*h butter* **. score B Vi . 6i score.
3 4i , 91' me 35 Q 49 score 35« v4
j score. ,14< K7 actUc iiu> , 5 6 »r-ore tHjp
1 t'eufralise.t rarlols 00 k ue. ,56’* 99
I score. 3 5. . >4 *. or. .Vltye
N eve Y i»rk *»ll v er
\M f 4 'a •
| N. Y. Curb Bonds
— — — — - —
New York. Aug. 18.—Following It the
official list of i ranaactiona on the New
York Curb Exchange, giving all bond*
traded in:
.Domestic Bond*.
Sales High Low Close
b Allied Pucker 6s *9% 69% 68%
6 Allied Packer ** . . «4 63% *4
h Aluminum 7* it:* 10.1% aoi* 103%
22 Am Gaa & Elec 6s 95% 95% 95%
Am Roll Mill* 6s 100% 100% 100%
1 Anaconda Cop 6s 104 104 104
1 Anglo Am Oil 7%e 103% 1<*2% 102%
6 Ass Sim Hdw 6%s 83 83 83
2 Atl Gulf Ac VV J 6s 54 64 54
1 itelgo Can Pa Us 9b 95 95
b lie Mi Steel 7* 1935 103% 103% 203%
1 Canad Nat Ky 5s 100% 100% 100%
7 Cities Serv 7s •D" 96% »6 96
20 Cun Textile 8s.... 80 79% 80
2 Con P At li 6%s. 93% 93% 93%
1 Deere & Co 7%a..to3% lu3** 1n3%
i 23 Det City Gas 6s.... 103 102 % 103
I 19 Det Edison Us. 109* 109 V* 109*
1 Fed fchig 0« 1933... 101 101 101
6 Fish Body Us 1928.102% 102% 102%
3 Hair, Robert 7s- 99 99 99
4 Gen Asphalt 8a....lU5 104% lub
6 Gulf Uil 5s. 98 98 98
2 Inter Match 6%« .. 87% 97% 97%
14 Kenn Copper 7s . .100% 106% 1ut>%
2 Lehigh P Sec 0s...lui* 101% 101%
1 Lehigh V Harb 5*..100% 100% 100%
2 Libby Me A L 7s...100 100 100
7 Liggelt-WIn 7s ..1)5* 105* 105%
4 Morris & Co. 7%s , 98% 98 98 %
3 7 Nat Leather 8s ....100% 100% 100 *
25 N O P Set be .87% *7 67%
2 N Stales Pow 6%a 97% 97 97
20 N S P<)W evt 6%g.l01 100% 100%
2 Penn P & L 5s . . 92% 92% 92%
8 V S C of S .1 7a_108% 108* 108%
18 Pure Oil 6%s . 95% 85% 95%
1 Shawaheen «s .104% 104 * 104%
8 St Oil N Y 7a 1926.104 103% 104
4 St Oil N Y 7s 3 931.107 106 % 106%
3 St Oil NY 6 % a 108 108 108
1 Sun Oil In .100% 100% 100%
7 Sun Oil 6s . 95% 95% 95%
2 Swift At Co 5a....104 104 104
i; Tidal Oaage 7s - 98* 98 98
1 Un Oil Prod 8a_,38 38 38
11 Vacuum 011 7a . ..107% 107 * 107 *
21 Virginia Ky 6a .... 96% 95 * 95 %
2 Web Mills 6%s ...103% 103% 103%
Foreign Bonds.
6 King Neth Us 1972.100 100 10ft
2 Russian 6%s . 17* 17 17*
21 Rub 6 % * ctfa N C. 16% 16% 1 6 *
6 Solvay At Co 6s....101% 101 101*
Omaha Produce
V - — - -^
Omaha, Aug. 38.
BUTTER.
>'■*, nry—Local jobbing price* to
taller." Extras. 30c; extras in 60-lb. tlb*.
3S< ; standards. 2»c; firsts, 37c.
,'a;; -Buyer* paying 28c for beg*
ta;> butt. in rolls or tub"; 26©28c fur
packing stock. For best sweet, unsalt
«d butter 201.
BUTTERFAT.
Fur No. 1 • amery Omaha buyera •'«
paying -ij> .,»• r It a >. country at at ions; lie
delivered at Omaha.
VH»•;.■$If MILK.
I. no p*r rivj for freah milk testing
3 5 delivered on dairy platform, Omaha.
EGGS
For eggs delivered Omaha, on lots-off
basir, around I'’ 40 par case. For No. 1
fr»eh eggs, graded baa s, 18.70©'®.00; sec
ond", per dozen. 23 ©24c ; cracks, 21 ©22c.
Piic.s above are for eggs received In
n*w o” No. 1 whitewood cases; a deduc
«-n of - w’ill be made for second-lgand
oases. No 1 egga must be good average
s.ze. 4 4 ibs. net. No 2 eggs, second*,
-onsist of small slightly dirty, sla.ned or
washed eggs, irregular shaped, shrunken
[or weakened egg*.
| In some quarters a fair premium is
being paid for selected eggs, which must
not ue more than 4 8 hours old. uniform in
size and < olor (meaning ail solid colors—
all chalky white or all brown, and of the
same shade). The shell must be clean and
-•und and the eggs weigh 25 ounces per
dozen or over. Producers must necessari
u-l.eer their wn eggs to benefit by
■h's litter class if iention.
! ibt ng i,r:< es to retailers: U. S. spe
* ials. 24-®35c; U. S. extras, commonly
-v no wn as selects. 31 ©32c; No. 1 small,
M © 27c; checks. 25© 24c.
POULTRY.
'ea Quotable for No. 1 a’oek alive.
Broilers. 1 4 © 2 lbs., 26© 30c, 2©2’« ibs.
J- 2 7c; Leghorn broiler?. 22 ©24c; spring
Ja It* and over. 24©30c, hens over 4
;b." . 18© 2>" h^ns under 4 lbs. 35© IS*-;
Leghorn hens, 12 ©14 roosters. 10 ©12c,
d- k*. {ft young, 12c; old ducks, f.f.f.,
8 © 1. geese, fff, 8©10c; pigeons. 81.00
per dozen.
Under grade poultry paid for at market
value. Su k or crippled poultry not want
ed and will not be paid for.
Jobbing prices of dressed poultry (to
retailer*)-? Springs, soft, 38©3Sc; breiiera,
4i3\c; he; v 21 ©25c rooster*, l$©ltc,
ducks 22©28c: geese. 15©20c.
FRESH FISH.
Tr.bb - g pri * quotable as follows:
Fancy whit a Lsh, 24c; lake trout, 30c;
halibut, . northern bullheads, large,
atfiah, 2^G32r; f.le? cf haddock,
black cod sable f "h. 14c . red anap
pcr. 2* fl-rundera. 2Cc; crapp;*# 2ic;
black *a. 32c; Spanish mackerel. 18* to
2 i •* . - . yellow pike. 22c; striped bass,
2n> . white perch. 14r. pickerel. 35c,
* it 'ok *almor, Jftc; ailver salraor J:c,
'-oxen fish. .©4c less than pr es above;
ling cod 12c.
CHEESE.
American cheese fancy ysd*. jobbing
- quotable aa follows; S ngle datsie*.
l uble daisies 23c; square prints,
74c- young America. 24c; 1* ngbnrn*. 23 4c,
brick, 22c; limburger, 3-lb. styla, 12 25
ter doren, Swiss, domestic, 32c. imported
Roquefort 62c; New York white. 22c.
BEEP CUTS.
|»r; »•* steady and uncharged Swift A
i «>> sal* s -f fresh 1 vef In Omaha
* * * ending August It, averaged 1126c
per l lx
Whoieaalo price quotable* No. 1 rtba.
'• 2 e, No 14c; No 1 Join*
3 No 2. 32 . No. 3, lie. No, 1, round*.
7 No 2. 2»-r . No 3. 3: He: No 1
- : 2v No -* »Hc,
V 1. plate? 9 ■» No : ic; No l tkjw
FRUITS.
Jobbing prices:
Or apes— Ihompion. seedless. 28-lb.
crates |1 7 , males, crate. $2 .2.
A;, New Early Harvest, bushel bas
ket. I. 00. California Gravenatems bo*.
I _5 a* in-.u i*i" k, bask-t. 8. 0®
rears — 4 . «r box.
I« 0. C. dorado, do. b ishei baakat. $3 60
Fieimsh Beauty, 12.00.
J>* •' ado '’art en. bo*. 11 10,
Arkansas Liberia, bushel basket, 116®
Plum*—California. per crate. 82.25©
3.00
Banana*—Per lb. T^r.
I-emon*—-California, extra fanev. per
:■ v »' 00 faru>. per box. 86 0ft. choice,
r 1 U v. dnte*. 1 do ccj«t carton
S 2 ft f
Ptl '» ntn fan-> 14 1(0
Q :• so
Oranges—Valencia*, extra fancy, n#r
box ft 00 © g a€.
T, FLOUR ,
I rices Quotable r und Infs »•»* than
car.'cad lo»s, f o b Omaha. follow.
* rt*t L»u>nt. in M-lb. bag*, $7.tu©7l0
:-*r hb' furgv « .ear. in 4t -lb Up. )i ii
•\:.*5 P- r Md white or yellow cornmeal.
8* *0 per 10v rounds
VEuafABLER
Jobbing nrl ee
On me Spa? h. crate 8® lbs. 12.80,
'1 Huhing'im, yellow, in si he, <c per lb.,
h rne grown iloarn bunches. 16c
t -ns II* niegrow fs- i. li.O®
*y Helens—| to 12 n er*tr.
U !term*Ion*—Crated. 4 melons It
3 per lb
Cauliflower—Pf c-ate |2 5®
per market basket, hot he us*. basket.
81 O0
Sweet potatoes—Alabama. 80-lb ham
per. I’ At*
* '4
pen j fl.nta. II 75. Arkansas * and
arjs f* :l.
t'abbage—: ijc per lb crate* ?c per lb.
1.e11u» ■- Head per .rate, |4h00. per
’en. Si 7 leaf per dose*. 40
R .te Beets carrots and turnip*, mar
ket basket. $ ftr
Tofii.it d—4 baaket crate*. about If
II s . f »
Cel,.ry -Oregon ring stalks, f! 2S©1 75
Michigan, do* 7 6,
JV|-i.e.„ 4 ,r een pisrVet bn-Vet. fl «0.
C*'tt*n«eed Meal p#» cent f4* eft.
P«-sie>.— Per d<»**n bunches *ftff75c.
R*.J shea—-7.ftr per doien bun-*he*
^ Beans—Oreen or wax. market basket.
Peiatoe* New *rop, in sacks. lV^e p*r
lb
Sweet Com—Jft©:8r- per dosen.
Ff.&l),
Market qiiotabl* per ton. carload Iota,
r. c b. t «raha
|
■»n sh• >rt» 12* ft©?7 0ft gray sh'fta,
L1 f.'Ur iv.; Idlings, litre' tfddcg
136 60©3T 00
Hcuvnv Fee ’ W h *a or ve’low. I4t 04*
j Hiecsier Fved'ng Taukagw- 6® per cert
r.1n«eed X*®*’ *4 pee cent. spot. 144 ««.
Vlfx.f* V|*i—' bo e. prompt. |J4 0O.
N ' 1 prompt, 12.' OC N ?, prompt
ll" ftft
Egg She • -Pried and ground. J#0-lk
lag* ton ’of* 128 id rrr ten.
roi! terrain C«mde need, for feeding f*
f—■ ■
1,1,1. Ion, J.«lo p»r lb : fltkt butWrimllk.
500 to 1.600 lb*., fc lb.
HA«
Nominal qiionilora, c«rlo»d 'oi»:
Upland 1‘r.lrt*— No 1. ■ ».
No $10.00*12.00; No. * $ (.»• 0\\
Midland Prulrle—No. 1, $ll0n*i?,00.
No 2 IS or® 10.00; No. 3. 10.00*0.0*.
Lowland Pralri*—No. 1. 10.00*0.00; No.
$$.00*0.00.
Pm kinc Hay—06.60*7 60.
S'ia\v — Oat a, 11.00*0.00, whaat. $7,006
0.00.
Alfalfa—<’hoir» old. $16 00*!».«->I
$17.00*10 00; No 1. old »'6'00®iU
now $16.00*11.00; alandard. old. OU.OOCi
14 00; n#w, $12.00*14.00; No 1. O.d.
$11.00*11 00. naw, $10,011*12,00; N». 1..
old $9.00* 11 00. now $6.00*10.00.
HIDES WOOL. T ALLOW.
Prices nr* quotable us follows, delivered
Omaha, dealers’ weights and sele?tlon»_
Bides —Heaeonable. No. 1, 8c: No 2, ift
green, 7r and 6c; bulla, 7c; branded, <r.
glue hides. 5c; calf, 12c and n*4c; kIR
11c and 9>/frc; glue skins. 6»*c; dry hides
lie. dry Halted, tc; dry glue. €>ec; de*
f one, 111.00 each; horse hides, 13.76 aim
12.75 ea'h; ponies ponies and glues, 81.D‘
each; colts. ?6c eaeh; hog sktn*. lac each
Wool—Pelt*. |1 OO to 81.75 each depend
ing on size and length of woo
.•mbs f>0c to 81 00 each, depending ci.
size and length of wool; *o earing*. 2*?
10 30c each; clips no value, wool 2ld*l'
Tallow ai<<1 <Srea*e—No. 1 .allow, 6*4''
B tallow, 6c; No 2, tallow, 6\*e. A grease.
G *4c. It grease, «c; yellow grease, 5 ****--.
brown grease. 4%c. pork cracklings, »4'»
r»er ton; beef, ditto. 120 per ton; beaawax,
| $20 per ton.
New York Prod ore.
New York Aug. 18.—Butter—Firm rre - ,
oelpis. 6.620 tubs; creamery, higher than
[extras. creamery extra# <• U
I score), 38$6c: creamery firsts (88 to 01
i score). 36 0 38c: pecking stock, current
! make No. 2. 27 0 27 Vic.
Kggs—Firm: receipts 7.685 cases, frefth
gathered extra firsts. 36038c; fr**ah gath
ered first*. 32035c; fr^sh gathered sec
finds and poorer. 2 8 fr 31 >4 c; nearby hen
nery white, closely selected extras. 56gi
66c; nearby and nearby western hennery
white*, firsts to average extras, 40054< .
nearby hennery browns, extras. 420 46c
Pacific coast whites, extras. 47c. Pac-ifk
oasr firsts to extra firsts. 39041c; refrig
erator extra firsts. 3-0 34c; refrigerator
firsts, 31 032 He.
Cheese—Kasv ; receipts 1 30.496 ponnd*
slate whole milk flats fresh, fancy t«»
: fancy specials. CO^SlHc; state w'hol"
I milk average run, 19019Vfcc: state
whole milk twins, fresh fancy. 20© 206*c.
»w York Dry Goods.
New York. A us 18.—At the opening «f
'spring woolens by the American Woolen
company price comparisons showed a de
cline or 2*4 per cent from the last fa.I
prices and 7 per cent from spring pric*v
ef a year ago on worsted fabric* Little
change was reported on wool goods where
comparisons were possible Buyers wer*
preaent n fair numbers, their operation *
being more noticeable on the woolen*
than on worsteds.
Cotton good* opened weak owing to a
de- line in raw cotton and continued he*i
ration on the part of buyer* Raw si
uas affected by th»* strike In Paters*-*'
silk r;i ills, and the demand was not •••
general.
New York 4 of fee Futures.
N>» York. Aug. 18.—A further advance
ir * offee futures today as * result of
- old weather reports from Brazil we -
becked by realixiHg around 14 60c fo**
December. with rear*ions of a few pel
from the best. Offertngs were compare
tively light however, and after opening
2 to 10 points higher the market closed
at net advances cf z to 10 points Sale*
were eatfmated at 46.000 bags. Closing
quotations:
September. 15 23c; October. 14 07c; De
cember, 14 55-: March. 24I€r; Ml).
13 6 Jc ; July. 1 3 63c.
Spot coffe* steady; Rio 7s, lC^c; San
tos 4s. 2*\@>21i4c.
< hacigo Cash Grain.
Chicago. Ill Aug 18.—Wheat—No. 2
red 11.36(4. NO 2 hard. 81.21^0131.
fora—Vo : mixed, 81 22 01.H; No. 2
yellow, fl.22 % 01.24
f 'at*—No 2 white, S$0£6He; No 3
white, 53**05Sr.
Rye—No 2 06c.
Barley—700 8*c.
Timothy Se«d—87.000 *25.
• 'lover See,}—115.090 21 j*
La-d—fll.»7; r'be. 11121; belies
813.50.
4His and Ro*4n.
■t-i-ar.ij*h Ga.. Aug 18 —Turpentine -
steady. SSHc. sales none; receipts, lit
larrel* shipment!, 164 barrel!; stock, 12.- 4
061 barrels.
Rf>eli»—Firm; aaler 2.2! 4 casks: Te
-wipta. 1.445 casks, shipments, 299 taSks
■Stock. 105,605 casks.
1 Quote: B 84" D. 84*9 . E. F. G H
r 14 171$, K *4 00 M *4 05 ; X. 85 U
I w. O. 86.10. WW. X 84.50
Bovtoo Woo).
Boat^n. Aug II.—A very good bus* nee*
>» in progress „n fh* wooi market. Fir»
wools are *tl!l fn demand. Foreign ! Be
howorer. are quiet. Domestic line* s-e
stii] well below foreign markets. Fine
inmesne grown wool, both fa* delaine
5 r d f re s’apt-* territory of similar grades
»r» he*d a 8135 to |140 per p end
scoured bag)* at Boston.
_ Chicago Pe4atoe«.
r'v-ago Aug 1* —Potatoes—Market
barely steady; receipts. 153 '•an; total
V 5* sh pm•«)?«- ‘ ?7 nrt: Kansas sackec*
I- sh cobbler*. 81 3^01 45 Missouri sacked
l' « cobbler*. 11.29 01 4r<, according to
eualitv; Missouri wicked Early CmJea.
11 150 7 2s Minnesota sacked and bulk
••' v Oh « 8I.fftifri.35: Kentucky sack#.'
lr*sh Gobblers 8! «501.71; Virginia ba
reied cobb era f: <502 90
Visible Gnls bunnl*
New York Aug 1*.—The visible sup
r*ly ‘‘•f American gra n show* rbe fol
lowing charge* »n bushel*
Wheal—Increased 8.7J7.0M.
Com—Tn-'reased. 441.On*.
• 'ai#—Decreased. 73.99ft.
Rre—Increased. 84« 00>^
Barley—Increased 61.044
Kansas C ity Treduea.
Kansas City. Aug 18—Butter—i:*.
changed creamery. J7ff8*c. pa^s ng. 54c
Eggs—Unchanged. firsts. 28 We, »*
Isctcd, 34 c. ■
Poultry—Uncharged: hens. 29c: bre
*rs 24c. spnng» 25c. rosters. 1 Jc.
rotaloe#—Unchanged: Ksw Valley Cob
le's and Red River, choice. *1 000, >e
New York PoaltTV.
New To-k. Aug II—Poultry—LBe
1 steady; Y.'niler* bv freight, r,,072g
1 *xpre«s ' fr’3» fowls bv frelglit. 2|4l
; 7Sr by *ip'»sa 21080c: rooster* o
! freight, 18c; turkeys by f-e‘fbr. 24r; b\
i*»prera, 250?.Cr Dressed steady tc flre^
'hirken* 14 47 45c; fowls, 2# •He; ••<
'roost*'*. 1502:c. turkeva. 8C042e.
4 hicage Prod»ce
• ' i|f Aug 11. — Butter — Me'ke
stead' ••Amery extras. Mk9l<Sr
I stardai da 3«-. evxtr* firsts. tSkflfe.
fir*ta 3 4 tt t*c seconds. 32f7 33c
Lege—X! 'kg* hirher; '•reipts, 3 0 te*
: *s*e« f'rsts 29031c, ordinary firs?*. 2*0
I 2S*yO
I ondon Nilver
’ ‘ c « '.i-Br sliver. 81 !t
| rer. •* i>er ester Morey 2\ n*r v+r
, l’ » up1 rate* Short Mila, 3 78-16 jw
• er ’ hree on? ha bi.Is, J\02 18-18
J per rent
■' IlA. J
AN INVESTMENT
of $100 or mere, placed after care fat f
investigation of the merit and le*ati
rnsey of an offer I wit) make yon by
mail upon request. *hou!d at le*»t
double 'our money, with every raaaoe
able provision for safety of pnncieel. ^
which i* later referred out of a rink
in* fund provided therefer.
Mr offer m atrtctly limited and for
•erioua-mmded people only who can
reahxe nhen »hoan the unlimited poa
* bilitiev -.n the manufacturin* of Elee
trie Heatin* Equipment. |
Write me t.>day for proof.
D. J. OKeefe. H2 CWeh Streat.
Room $-C. New Havan. Caaa.
MIDDLE STATES
OIL
What are the future prospects
of this company?
Kully covered in our market
I review.
A Free Cop* on Request
P. G. STAMM & CO.
Dealer* in Stocks and Bond*
35 S. William St., New York
I pdikc Grain Corporation
(Tnvit# Wii«
Oic»|« *1 Ttttdt
* Mt MBk US - and
v AU Otfe+r Lead ng ExrUlfH
Outer* for grain for future delivery in the prin
cipal markets given careful and prompt attention.
OMAHA OFFIfFi 1 INCOLN OFFICE.
Phone AT lantie AS 12 T -M-C5 Terminal PuiMinr
^IS-25 Omaha Grain Phone ft 128$
Exchange long Distance 120
I - . - _ --- - ir. .- , ,,,,, „ *i *
. *- ■ 1 .... 1 "' 1 1 ..- -