The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, November 13, 1924, Page 12, Image 12

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    wheat Sells Off |
Earl but Makes
Brisk Recovery
j
?ally Falls Short of Previous
Close, However; Export
Sales Boost Corn; Oats
Drop Off.
By CHARLES J. LEYDEN.
I'divcrsal Senlce Staff Correspondent.
Chicago, Nov. 12.—Wheat sold off
\bruptly early today In sympathy with
-h» break in foreign maxkets over the
mliday, but In the last hour staged a
ori*k recovery aa Important buying
?nterad the pit. The rally fell short of
?h«- previous close, however. Cash intcr
sstK. exporters and several prominent
5P* rators were credited with taking the
oulk of the wheat offerings out of the pit.
Wheat cloned He to l%c Tower, corn
was 1 Ha to 2He higher, oats were He
higher to He lower and rye ruled un
changed to He off.
Export sales of corn, strength In the
cash market and a bad weather ou’tlook
wevo the stimulating factors In this
grain. In wheat an overbought situation
was uncovered as prices worked lower
during the first, hour, but It was quickly
corrected by the fresh buying power. The
carrying charge between December and
May wheat widened to 7c at the close.
Tho seaboard confirmed export sales of
600,000 bushels, with intimations that tha
day h business wai larger. Liverpool,
compared with Monday, was off 3Hd to
4d. and 2d to 2Hd down from Tuesday's
finish.
Corn tried hard to move higher early,
but was sustained the while by the wea.k
fness in wheat. Locals sold the market
on tD«* hard spots, hut were finally forced
to cover. Commission houses* especially
those wtlh eastern connections, were ac
tive buyers of corn In the last hour.
Several of the local corn bulls were
credited with supporting. Huaklng of
corn is likely to oe delayed if weather
in«iIce.tions pan out the next few days.
Outs dropped with other grains and
thou rallied to an Irregular close. Com
mission house trade wns mixed early, but
Jafr* there was active support given.
Rye showed relative strength early, but
ran into considerable realizing on the
hard spots. Export demand for this
grain was moderate.
Provisions were irregular. Lard was
92 He lower to 7He higher and ribs were
unchanged.
Pit Notes.
The brisk recovery in Wheat was a sur
prise to many in%«he trade. After a 16c
advance the majority were apparent y
of Hie belief that a good setback was n
order and the early weakness today only
(tended to accentuate this theory. ine
'enormity of the buying pow-r that. is
back of tho bull movement was brought
Into plav as the xsesslon progressed, how
ever and the market closed wtlh almost
Icvei y indication of working higher,
i Tho movement of wheat from the
faims in this country is letting up *ra<lu
aJl\. and shipments are enlarging. Du
luth cleared more than 2.000.000 bushels
’of wheat today, as reflected by the prl
in. v board, at d Jater in the day mes
m»,i*. from that market advised that
HP c were 1,1 SO.000 bushels of spring
wh at l usheln of durum and 702.
000 hiplul' rye loading winch had not
ben lifcdm-tr-.l from the stocks.
Tim Winnipeg whe-.t market stano.l a
•tiumt.-r rally than fliil ChUago
!Tim •lay anil ' lo«-<l ii<- lu. ’. a
Rains over the Argentine helped to da
nn m the Liverpool market. Judging from
tha' new* from tha southern hemisphere,
the present outlook Is for a much .mailer
crop tint., last year, all of which tend,
to Strengthen the world situation.
The world's available supply or
and flour for the week increased 13,792.
nun bu tiels and totals 241.40J.o00 bUbliclo,
against 227,251,000 bushels last year The
Hiss of tho available supply is far front
burdensome, in the belief of the Dado.
There have been millions of bushels or
grain headed to Europe the last few
months, and Hu moderate increase in the
available supply proves conclusively that
tho consumptive demand abroad
enormous. Hash "Ip at *" Liverpool re
! mains rt fancy prentiu n.s over the pit
price there, end then- i< every reason to
[believe it will rontluuo t«» do so.
CHICAGO PRICKS.
Ft\ I pdilte■ drain company. Atlantic 0312.
i Oi t.7: 11 ;>B». Low. I Close. | Yes.
fvi®
|Vay 38
July hr.;/ 1-3641l;M4i L««%
D?? t.3T»! 1.35 t.S7>,! 1.374
V,,v . 1.39 1 1.364' 1.3841 1-39 4
.; - .1.! 1.38 4'.
Juh l'._T.il 1.2*41 1.214' 135 ',1.22
'tr L.. ..mu,!
'-"'i v’>.| w7,i v.us
Jub. jj;:; \\'&
Dec* A, ‘I M4J -O I -H‘4 ■***
>l*> '<'■ ' .-74' .56 ' .67 4| -57?i
.1 u 1 v .*4 56 -5'1- 56 '6:i*4
•5<,»1 1 | \
Irw" tu-nn 14.20 'u 10 1 1.20 :14.35
m',v I t oo 14.05 13.85 14.05 14.00
Rih» | ! 12.60
Jon. ■ . -
\cv York < of fee Futures.
\. w ' York Noi 12. —Sharp reactions
feaI ured the market for coffee futures
t,,.' . •ffU'ffig to rcourts teat Brazil was
c,rr.':!iiff>3.-I- fI'ccly unrl heavy r naming
j.. r< . 7„i i i • prluding brokers, sup
pi "1 *" h i.p-.idmt for
HU<I Hr, ilia-i .»< fount March sold off
: ,1 :• i t .. and after opening
jlower, tile market closed
h: a n7-t q, dine - f 4.'. to 75 points. Sales
were , . il at 108,000 bags.
fb. IRC nnotalions: December. 2-»»C7
\l|ii, p :.T.iy. 2105c; July, 20.25c.
Septein'ber 19.‘ *'• _
Spot •eeff-. . steady; Dio «s, .oQZ&HC.
2*H -9' -
1 hhlffO Butter.
file,ego. Nov 12.—The butter market
tod a \ uoiviinuetl firm with another /&c
r.Uup.c tlm medium an.l h.wer grade*.
... however wn. .irtivc. although
KkU- not allowing a» much Inter
p. , ms" yesterday. The centralized car
market was firm’, with cats rather llmU
e<! Intefcit on storage centralized cars
4-> .cred on 90 score cars at a wide range
° ] •’ r .1'’ Bui • r—92 score. 39c: ®1l*corA
*7 i * *,< 4.r. 89 score 34HC7
. t NT’vure. 31c; 80 score. 29Hc
«>niuli/.rd darlotM—90 score. 37He; 89
acui i«!5® 36He; 8*t score. 32He.
I New \ork Dry fiOtkls* , .
\. York. Nov. 12 The rotton cloth
was active today and difficulty
' ‘ rlcoUn|er«Ml In retting the required
, ,.,|..X. <|u:fititles and the jlerlred de
i‘i\c.l#T on coirtr.M tH. The price basis
b. ,i Sn-hangcd. Burlap prices were un
4-b . Mt/ftL in tic primary market, ns wall!
i u^tplds and a floats. Lower sterling
r reduced tho current puces of
Raw silk was 6c a pound
lii heftodny on active demand at Yoko
Artificial silk price* remained
um-hniigcd. despite record activity and
a gioMntf ahoriage.__
S Turpentine «znd Koaln:
’^Hvaonah. Ha., Nov. 12.—Turpentine,
firm. K0'/h0H'. "ales. 516 ]>*rre>la; re
nts T 254 barrels; shipments, 463 bar
,-eiH - Aol k. 11.611 barrels.
ft Of I d—Firm: sales. 640 casks; receipts.
4,7 31 i^aske; shipments. 857 casks; atock,
"iV'tt. K, 16 40S6.47U: M, »6 45©
H.-0; ^. $6.80; WO, $7.40® 7 4o; ,
IT.SQffiJt.OO; X, $8.26.
H •: Does Exactly What
Mj the Name Says
fl fheworld’* *Te«te*t Bdentific
.remedy tor curing » Cold.
|J.(1. and rcoomimndMl by th.
IPg 4n*nuf*ctur.r« of TANL’AC.
Wk ' For by ell i»>4 <rg««ta«»
^ ADVERTISEMENT.
Good For Weak Eyes
ThSfiulck action of glmple oumphor,
»»ydr«fctis. wltchhnzel. etc., ns mixed
5n Ldivoptlk eye waah aatonidhes pco
jde. One atnnll bottle hclpe any caae
•veak. Bore or strained eye*. Aluml
yium eye cup free. Hherman & Mc
Connell DruK Stores.
Omaha Grain
___'
Nov. 12.
Cash wheat sold on the tables today
2c to 3c lower, owing to the lower options.
There wu a good demand, however, nt
the decline and tables were well cleared
of samples. Receipts were 120 cars.
Corn sold at unehangd prices to lc
lower. Receipts, 12 cars.
Oats sold from %c to lc lower. Re
ceipts, 23 cara.
Rye and barley sold at about unchang
ed prices. ,
OMAHA CARLOT SALES.
WHEAT.
No. 4 dark: 1 car. $1.44.
No. 1 hard: 1 car. $1.44: 1 car, $1.41%.
No. 2 hard: 2 cars. $1.4 0%; 7 cars.
$1.41: 1 ear, $1.42; 1 car. $1.39%; 1 car.
$1.38%; 1 car, $1.40; 1 car. $1.39; 1
car. $1.43%.
No. 3 hard: 1 car. $1.41; 5 cars,
$1.40%; 1 2-3 cars, $1.40. l car, *137;
2 cars, $1.38; 1 car. $1.39; 1 car, $1.41;
1 car. $1.40.
No. 4 hard: X car. $1.39; 1 car, $1.44;
4 cars. $1.40: 3 cars. $1.38: 3 cars, $lo6.
Sample hard: l car. $1.38.
No. 1 spring: 2 cars, $1.60; 1 car, $1.47;
1 car. $1.46.
No. 3 spring: 1 car. $1.48; 1 car, $1.60.
Sample spring: 1 car, $1.47.
No. 1 mixed: t car, $1.39%.
No. 2 mixed:'1 car, $1.38; 1 car. $1.36;
2 cars. $1.39.
No. 3 mixed: 1 car, $1.40; 1 car,
$1.38%; 1 car. $1.45.
No. 4 mixed: 4 cars. $1.38.
CORN.
No. 2 white: 1 car, $1 05.
No. 4 white: 1 car. $102.
No. 2 yellow: 2 cars. $1.09
No. 3 yellow’: 1 car. $1.06%.
No. 4 yellow: 2 cars. $1.06.
Sample yellow: 1 car. 92c.
No. 3 mixed: 1 car, $1.03.
No. 4 mixed: 1 car. $1.04.
OATS.
No. 2 white: 1 car, 49e; 2 cars, 4$%c.
No. 3 white: 2 cara. 46c.
No. 4 white: 2 car, 47%c; 2 cars, 48c;
3 cars, 47c.
Sample white: 1 car, 46c; 2 cars, 46c.
RYE.
No. 1: 1 car. $1.25.
No. 2: 2 1-3 care, $1.25.
No. 3; 1 car. $1.23.
HARLEY.
No. 2: 1 car, 82c.
No. 4: 1 car, 79c.
Dally Inspection of Grain Received.
WHEAT.
Hard: 12 cars No. 1. 42 cars No. 2. 17
cars No. 3, 9 cars No. 4, 7 cara No. 6,
5 cars sample.
Mixed: 2 cara No. 1, 4 cars No. 6. 1
car No. 1.
Spring: 11 cars No. 1, 1 car No. $, 1
car No. 3.
Durum: 1 car No. 1.
Total, 113 cars. •
CORN
Yellow: 2 cars No. 3. 3 cars No. 4. 1
car No. 6. 1 car No. 6.
White: 1 car No. 6.
Mixed: 1 car No. 2, 4 cars No. 3, 3
car No. 6.
Total, 14 cars.
OATS.
White: 6 cars No. 2. 19 cars No. 3,
4 cars No. 4. 6 cars sample.
Total, 33 cara.
RYE.
2 cars No. 1, S cars No. 2, 2 cars No. 3.
Total, 6 cars.
BARLEY.
1 car No. 3. 1 car No. 4.
Total. 2 cars.
PRIMARY RECEIPTS AND SHIPMENTS
(Bushels.)
Receipts—» Today. Wk. Ago. Yr. Ago.
Wheat .3..Sin.nno 4.400,000 1,637,000
Torn . 639,000 618.000 807.00:1
Oats . 769.000 1.316.000 660,000
Shipments —
Wheat .3.612.000 3,219,000 488.00'!
Corn . 323,000 351,000 386.000
Oats .1.076.000 1.056.000 558.000
CANADIAN VISIBLE
■Wheat .26.167.000 19.917.000 33.64*.000
Oats .11.334.000 10,314.000 4.954.000
OMAHA RECEIPTS AND SHIPMENTS.
(Carlots. 1
Receipts: Todav. Wk Age Y’r Ago .
Wheat .1?0 9® M
Com . 12 1» *;
Oats . 2* «?
Rye . 7 7
Barley . 2 1 <
Shipments: + ..
Wheat .1*2 27"
Corn . 27 .4 16
Oata . 21 45 38
Barley . * ‘ *
CHICAGO RECEIPT?
Week Year
Carlots— Today. Ago. Ago.
Wheat .1*2 192 32
Corn .15® 257 325
Oata ’. »S l*i® 67
KANSAS CITY RECEIPTS.
Week Year
Carlota— Today. Ago. Ago
Wheat .183 201 242
Corn .149 ijj 58
Oats . 14 27 43
ST. LOUIS RECEIPTS
Week Year
Carlots— Today. Ago. Ago
Wheat .214 88 265
Corn ... . 51 2.r»
Oats . 39 70 132
NORTHWESTERN WHEAT RECEIPTS
Week Year
Carlots— Today. Ago. Ak",
Minneapolis . 534 667 471
Duluth .1351 1468 139
Winnipeg . 1021 1024 1974
Minneapolis Cash Grain.
Minneapolis. Minn., Nov. 12—Wheat —
Cash. No. 1 northern. $1.47% ©1.60%: No.
I dark northern spring, choice to fancy,
$1.69% ©1.71% ; good to choice. $1.53%©
1.58%; ordinary ito good. $1.49% ©1.53% ;
No. 1 hard spring. $150% ©1.71%; No. !
dark hard Montant, on track. $1.46%©
161% . to arrive. $146% ©1.64%; Decem
ber. I! 49%; May. $1.5/>%.
Corn—No. 3 yellow, $1 11% ©112%.
'»ats--No. 3 white, 46%©46%C.
Barley—67 © 83c.
Rye—No. 2. $1.26%©1.27. .
Flax—No. 1. $2.69% ©1.63%.
Chicago Spot Market.
Chicago. Nov. 12.—Butter—Receipt*,
7,031 tube; last year, 3.798; 11 old cars.
8 new; extras. 39c; standards. "7%c;
4-\tra firsts. 36©37%c; firsts. 32%©34%c;
si store. 35%c; 88 score. 32%c; seconds,
29 <n 31c.
Eirgs—Receipts, 2.342 rases; last year.
3.538; 6 old cars, 3 new; firsts. 43©50c,
dirt*. 32©34c ; ehex 31 ©32c; refrigerator
extra firsts. 38% ©37c; refrigerator
first*. 35©35%r.
Kansas City Cash Grain.
Kansas City. Nov. 12.—Wheat—No. 2
hard $1 421/1.54; No. 2 red. $l.62«1.57;
f)ecemb^r, $1.4.;% split bid; May, $1.80%
asked; July. $1 31 asked.
rorn—No. 3 white. 91.02%©1.04; No. 2
'■allow. $1.06© 1.07; No 3 yellow, $1.05;
No. 2 mixed. $1.01 ©102; December.
$1.04% split bid: May. $1 09% split bid;
July. $1.10% split bid. .
Hay—Unchanged to onc higher; No 1
prairie. $10 50© 11.00: . holre alfalfa, $22 60
©23.00; others unchanged.
New York .Poultry.
New York. Nov. 12—Poultry—Live
steady: chickene. by express, 2B©30c;
broiler*, by freight. 28 ©32c ; by express.
::2©40c: fowls, by freight, 20©25r; by
express. 19© 28c. Dressed steady; prices
unchanged.
Duluth Flax.
Duluth. Minn . Nov. 12.—Close flax
November. $2.64: December. $2 60; May,
92.68.
At. I-on is Grain Futures.
St. Louis. Nov. 12.—Close: Wheat—De
cember. $1.52: May. $1.68%
Corn—December. $1.10%: May. $116%.
Oats—December, 52c; May. 57c.
Minneapolis Floor.
Minneapolis. Minn., Nov. 12.—Flour
Unchanged to 26c lower; family patents,
$8.06©8.40.
Bran—$24.00© 26.50.
Chicago Egg and Butter Futures.
Nov. It.
Quotations furnlahsd by Oeorgs fc
Clark. 1327 Woodman of tha World build
tng:
Eooa.
I Cars. I Open. | High. I Low. | Close.
Novff,,| 16 .86 .85 HI • *« .86%
Dec. 1 192 ■ 3 8 % I .37%| .88%| .68%
BUTTER.
I Care. I Open. I High. I Low. | Close,
Dec. I 49 ' I .34 % I -34%l ,33%l .83%
Jan. I 58 I .33*11 .83%) -33%) .34
New York Cotton.
Quotations furnished by J. fl. Racks A
Co.. 224 Omaha National Bank building
Phonse Jacltson 6187, 61 88, 6188.
Art. 1 Open. I High. I Low. I Close. I Tea.
Dac. 24.39 124 62 24.04 124.23 24.28
Jan. 24.61 (24.72 24.36 24.81 24.50
Mar. 24 86 26.01 24.62 (24.76 24.76
Mav 25.18 26.30 24 92 26.06 26 06
July 124.88 !25 00 24 73 124.80 124 80
Fast Nt. Louis Livestock.
East 8t. Louis, III.. Nov. 12— Hogs—
Receipts. 18,000 head; trading steady
with Tuesday's average: closed dull and
weak; extreme 10c lower; top, $9.86:
bulk 170 pounds and up, $9.40©9.?6; 140
to 160 pounds. $8.76©9 26; bulk pigs,
$8.00© 8.50; packing sows, $8.60.
Cattle—Receipts, 6.000 head: best beef
steers, fat light yearlings, heifers and
bologna bulls steady; light vealers, *9.00
©9.60; gross steers, low priced heifers
, and other classes 16c to 26c lower; a few
I medium weight steers. $8.00©>9.2T.; grass
1 ers, $5.25© 7.90; fnt light yearlings, |8.76
■ /ft)9.60; most beef cows. $3.76©4.25; run
ner*. $2.25 © 2.75 • bulk, $2.I6©2.«0; bulk
1 bologna bulls, $3.50© 4 00.
Hheep snd Lambs—Rocelpt*. 2.500
head; steady; top and bulk wool lambs.
■ $13.25; three decks choirs 79-pound clip
ped lambs. $12 00; cull lambs largely
$9.00; bulk mutton ewes. ffi.Oo.
VNtlmated receipt* for Thursday: Cat
tle. S.ono head; hogs, 12,000 head; sheep,
l H Imad.
Boston Wool.
Boston, Nov. 12- The wool market is
active in about all lines. Prices continue
to show an upward tendency. Medium
and lower grades In particular are sell
ing st an advance. One-half blood cloth
ing fleeces of the better clwsa are lc to
2c per pound higher In the grease Thire
elghts blood combings havg moved freely
at 62c.
J. A J
Omaha Livestock
N ■ ■ V
Omaha, Nov. 12.
Receipts were: Cattle Hogs Sheep.
Official Monel a \ . 19.25s 9.974 11,647
Official Tuesday . s.289 9.537 8.801
Estimate Wednesday 6,000 10,000 8.500
Three d. this wk. . . .33,547 29,511 28,948
Same d. last wk. ..19,702 10.606 18.918
Same U. 2 wks. ago 45,083 20,977 27,944
Same d. 3 wks. ago 42.773 23,433 23.647
Same d. yr. ago ..30,393 28,172 21,611
Receipts and disposition of livestock at
the Union stock yards. Omaha. Neb., for
24 hours ending at 3 p. m.. November 12.
1924.
R ECEIPTS—CAR LOT.
Cattle. Hgs. Sh.
C M St St P Rv _ s 12
Wabash R 11 . 1 2
Mo Pac Rv . :;
U P R R . G3 75
C A N W east . 6 I 1
G & N W west . til 39 4
C St P M fr O . 18 12
C B A Q east . 14 ti 4
C R & Q west . 21 1:» 11
c n I i P e«| 12 3
C R I & P west . 2 . 3
I C R R . :»
C G W R R . 6 1
Total receipts .270 124 *?G
DI8POS IT 1 ON — H E AI >.
Cattle Hors. Sheep.
Armour & Co . 575 3335 1795
Cudahy Pack Co ...1734 9X9 1538
Hold Packing Co 145 1466 ....
Morris Packing Co ... 712 940 593
Swift & Co .1J 21 1 479 1630
Hoffman Bros . 78 ... ....
Mayerowich A Vail 9 .
Gong and Keefer .... 21 .
Omaha Packing Co 3 .
5 Omaha Pack Co .... 42 . ....
Murphy J W . 1535 ....
Kmneth & Murray . 523 ....
Lincoln Packing Co 32 ... ....
Nagle Pick Co . 30 .
Cudahy Pack Co D . . 177 .
Anderson Ac Son . 30 .
Benton VS A: Hughes 3 .
Bulla J H . 19 .
Cheek W H . 4 .
Dennie & Francis .... 37 .
Harvey John . 113 .
Inghram T J . 13 ....• ....
Kellogg F G . 207 r.
Krebbs & Co . 3 .
Longman Bros . 124 .
Luberger Henry S .... 137 .
Mo-Kan C & i’o . 102 .
Root J B * Co . 182 .
Sargent A Finnegan . . 88 . ....
Smiley Bros . 110
Wertheimer A Degen .156
Other Buyers .1366 .... 2009
Total . 7323 9207 7565
Cattle—Receipts, ti.000 head. Although
i he supply of beef rattle was compara
tively limited the market was extremely
dull and anywhere from 10@25c lower
than Tuesday. Bad markets east were
largely responsible for the depression and
neither packers nor shipping buyers
seemed anxious for cattle. Best yearlings
on sale brought 112.00, but short-fed and
warmed-up cattle sold lower than at any
lime recently. Cows and heifers suffered
fully an much Joss as ihe beef steers and
iho trade in atockers and feeders was
simply demoralized with prices the lowest
of the season.
Quotations on Cattle—Choice to prime
yearlings, lll.40@12.40; good to choice
yearlings, 910.60011.36; fair to good
yearlings, $9.5«)@ lo.50; common to fair
yearlings, 98.0009.25; trashy warmed-up
yearlings. $6.00 @7.50; choice to prime
heavy beeves. $9.76011.00; good to choice
heavy beeves. $9.00 09,75; fair to good
beeves, $8.00# 9.00; common to fair
beeves. $7.00 08.00; good to prim© fed
heifers. $8.00ff*> 10 50; plain to good fed
heifers. $5.6008.00; common to good fed
cows. $4.00 05.75; good to choice grasa
beeves. $7.0008.00; fair to good prata
beeves, $6.0006.86; common to fair gra»-/
beeves. $5.0005.75; Mexican steers, f . /U
#4.75 ; choice to prime grans heifers, ?
# 0.75; good to choice grass heifers. $4 76
0 5.75; fair to good grans heifers, $4.'n 'a
I. 75; choice to prime grans cows, $6.00
# 5.75; good to choice grans cows. $4.15
1*4.85; fair to good grass cows, $3.60@
4 10; canners and cutters, $2.&0@3.60;
Choice to prime feeders. $7.00# < 25; good
to choice feeders. $6.6507.50; fair to good
feeders, $5.76@6.50; common to fair fe**d
$4.0005.50; good to choice stock'rs,
$6.500 1.50; fair to good atockers. $5.lit)
06 60; common to fair stocKers,
6.50; trashy ntockers, $3.00'% 4.2', stock
heifers. $3.5004.75; stock cows, $2*’>0Q
3.40; stock calves, $4.5007.60; teal
calves. $3,600 10.00; bologna bulls, $3.00
@3.40.
BEEF STEERS,
So. Av. pr. No. Av. Pr
22.1015 7 75 21.10X1 8 00
25 .1032 1 1 40 21 . 1137 11 90
STtfERS AND HEIFERS
13. 81 3 6 60 23 . 921 7-10
IS.738 7 50
BEEF COWS.
10. 8 25 3 25
WESTliKN CATTLE
NEBRASKA.
Av. Pr.
15 Cows . . 930 3 75
25 feeders . 917 4 sS
COLORADO.
30 feeders . 777 7 26
NEBRASKA.
MilldaJl Cattle Co.
34 stockers . 474 6 65
16 rows .1038 4 0u
Hogs—Receipts, 10,000 head. Fairly
oderate supplies tended to mike trade
w fhl* morning with shippers absoi b
"t a few « hon e butchers at prices steady
to weak with Tuesday, while the packer
t'■.«de was dragfry with Initial bids lower.
Bulk of all was at $8.4409.15 with
« arly top. $9.25.
IIOGB
No. Av. Sh. Pr. No. Av. Sh. Pr.
73.. 177 8 60 44. .369 8 70
4 9..34 3 75 *6.. 3*8 180 8 80
33.1256 8 85 75..200 S 90
72.. 201 S 95 77..214 .. 9 00
50. .:’.4 3 4 0 9 15 103. . 261 9 25
Sheep—Receipts, 8.600 head. Under a
fair demand and rnther favorable reports
fmm other centers fat lamb prices ruled
around steady levels today, while feeders
also displayed a firm tone with, aged
sheep steady.
Quotations on Sheep and Lambs—
Lamb*. good to choice. $12.25013.60;
lambs fair to good. $12.00ff 13.26; feed
ing lamb*. $12.00013.60; wether*. $6.00#
$7 50 clipped lambs, fed $10.76@ 1L0<);
yearling*, range $7.0009.50; fat ewes,
$ ;,n# 7.60- breeding ewes, yearlings ex
cluded, $0 .0008.00, feeding ewes, $u.00@
6.26.
FEEDING LAMBS
245 fed .. 73 1$ 35
FAT I, A MBS.
461 fed . 90 13 S6
327 fed . 79 13 60
4 hicafo Livestock.
Chicago. Nov. 12—(United fitatss De
partment of Agriculture!—Hattie—Re
ceipts. 18.000; market, practically nothing
done; lower grsdes fat steers and she
stock predominating In run; some inquiry
for specialties on yearlings and handy
v eight orders; some common and me
dium grade offerings neglected; bids un
evenly lower on both grassy and short
fed natives and western grassers; ap
proximately $.500 western grassers Includ
ed in receipts; some highly finished
handywelght steers held above $13.60;
heavies averaging around 1,600 pound*.
$10.00. bulls steady to weak; supply
weighty sausage bulls small: leal calves
very slow; choice kind tending lower.
Hogs—Receipts, 33.000 head; market
steady with Tuesdays best prices; big
packers doing little; fairly broad de
mand; top. $9 85; bulk desirable 200 to
326-pound butchers, $9.4509.75; 140 to
180-pound averages largely $8 2609 26;
bulk packing sows $8.8009.10; majority
atrongwelght slaughter pigs, $7.5008.00;
heavyweight bogs. $9 6009.86; medium,
$9 2509 86; light. $8.1609.60; light light*.
$7.0008 76; packing bogs, smooth, $8 90
@9.15; packing hogs, rough. $8.6508.90;
slaughter pigs. $7 00@8 on.
Sheep—Receipts. 19,000 head; market
active; fat lambs steady to strong; un
dertone strong, sorting very light; early
bulk natives and comeback. $13 50013.86;
few» to city butchers up to 114 00; most
culls. $10.60011 00; fat sheep and feed
ing lamb* unchanged; fat e.woa top. $7.60;
feeding lambs, $13.76014.00; early top,
914.25.
Knnaas f’lty Livestock.
Kansas City. Nov. 12 —Cattle—Receipts.
II, 000 head1 ralvaa. receipt*. 2,500 head;
killing *teer* slow, about steady; quality
very plain; grosser* and short fed* large
ly $5.0009.00; top yearlings. $11.00; she
stock, steady to 16c lower; butcher cows
and heifers. $1.5006 00; canner* and cut
ter*. $2.5003 25: bulls. 10 to 15c lower;
westerns. 83.0003 36; native bolognas, up
ward to $3.76; cal vc* steady to weak;
practical veal top, $9.00. stocker and feed
er steers dull. $5 0(i@7.00; stock cows and
heifers, steady to weak at $2 8506.00;
stock calves, weak to 26c lower; mostly
$5 00 07.00.
Hogs—Receipts. 11,000 head: few early
sale* to shippers and packers, fully steady .
now very slow with many early bids with
drawn; one load choice henvte* to -park
era, $9.65; bulk of sslea, $* 8609.60; de
sirable LOO to 800-pound butcher*, mostly
$9.4009.66: packing sow*. $8 4008.76;
stock pigs steady, $f>50@7.00.
Sheep—Receipt*. 3 000 head; killing
classes, strong'to 15c higher; fed lamb*.
$14 00; native*. $13.85- clippers. $11 H0@
11.90, srnntl hunch * ewe* up to $7.60.
fflnif* f’lty Livestock.
fMoux URy, Ih.. Nov. 1 2 Cattle— Re
ceipt*. 4.000 head; market alow; klllei*
Heady, 25c lower; stockers, steady, L*c
lower; fat yearling*. $10.00012.60: short
med*. $;».50@8.50; fnt rows and heifers,
$6.00011.26; rsnner* and cutters, $. 50
# 3 00; grime rows and he|fi*rs, 13.000
60. veals. $4.00 0 . hulls. $3.(100
•100; feeder*. $6.0009.75; atockers, 14 00
#7.00; stuck yearlings and calves, $4 00
#7.00; feeding cow* and heifer*. $3,000
5.00.
Hogs—Receipt*. 13.000 hend. marks!
steady, strong; top, 89.30* bulk of sales,
$8.5009.26; light*. $“O0#9.0fl; butchers,
’ > >19 if; mixed 1 • 9 'III; p* ■ ■
$8.4008.80; nt it s*. 17 0007.25, western
pig*. $7.000 7 36.
Kheep nod Lamb* Receipts, " ooo bead
market atfudy.
St. *Io*e|»li Livestock.
St Joseph. Nov 12 Hog* Receipts
12,000 head- market, it end v to 10c lower,
ton, 19 66 hulk $U:«»4,
Hattie—Receipts, 2.500 head. inotkH.
Hteadv to 25c lower, hulk of sleeri $•'<
'a loon lop. $19.60; cow a Hod n fi
$:i 90 09 °n: oa|VN $3 99 0 9 00; sto( k< r*
and feeders, $:! 5«@7 25
Xhesp— Ra< eiptn. 4,f*00 head : market,
stead' . lunVba. $12.000 14.00, iwti, lli 00
07.00. i
A 4 V r A'A A A ■ A A A A—w *4 A 4 • AAA ■ *»_
Peaks and Deeps
in Stock Market;
Prices Fluctuate
V igorous and Healthy Reac
tion Wednesday; Steel
Trade News Good; Oils
Gain; Rails Divided.
By RICHARD SrlM.ANE.
Universal Service Financial Editor.
Now York. Nov. 12.—It is a ease of
the peak* and the deep* In such vola
tile stock markets as are being furnished
these days.
Take twr prominent securities such
r*s l*. S. Cast Iron Pipe and United
Bakeries as examples. Both are pretty
rlosciy held. Yesterday Pipe sold at
124,«; today It went soaring to 139*4—
a. rise of 1511 points within 24 hours.
Bakeries, on the other hand, sold above
ISO Tuesday on the curb; today it went,
tiiHslmig down to 112. It closed at 124
which was 27 points down for the day.
A short time ago 260 was predicted
for the Bakeries.
The stock market today made a vigor-,
ous and healthy faction. It needed that
treatment and stood it well. News from j
the steel trade was exceptionally good.
Most of the oils made gains for the j
day.
The rails, which were the leaders and
the mainstay in the big rise, were di
vided badly, some being strong, others
weak.
Davison Chemical swung between 44
and 35*4- closing at 40, wlii< h was down
4*4 for the day. Southern Pacific moved!
between 102 and 105*4, closing at the
bottom. Hears Roebuck went down to,
125 and up to 120%, closing at the top.1
which was 574 up for the day. Western
Union moved between 114*4 and 117 Vs.
closing at the top.
Ho it went through a fair number of
Issues.
Coppers were steady. smelters very
strong, merchandisers quite sturdy and
the equipments strong in the morning
and not so strong later.
The market should be better for the
•heck it received. It was running wild
and would have become dangerous.
Transactions aggregated 2.263.400
shares. This was the fourth day since
ihe election that sales exceeded two mil
lion.
Rails had a net decline of seven-tenths
af a point.
Industrials had & net advance of f!ve-|
ninths of n point.
Foreign exchange: Sterling. 3*4c down;
French francs, 2 points down; lire, 1V4
points up.
Call money. 2 per cent.
Time money unchanged.
It was not a good grain market. Liver
pool. due to come 1 % pence down, closed
2 and 21* pence down..
Chicago was bullish and commission
houses advised customers to get aboard
but the customers apparently didn’t, for,
with the exception of corn, the grains
h; d a sagging tendency all day.
Weather information was bullish, rain
r>r snow being indicated for must of the
grain belt. In Canada temperatures were j
$ below at Edmonton, and 14 below at.
Calgary.
Australian advices were of heavy rains
with high winds and hall throughout the
commonwealth.
Cotton held within a narrow margin
and had few features of market Import- j
a nee.
Coffee, 5 to B5 down.
Sugar, 5 to 14 up.
New York Quotations
i — >
No*' York Stock Exchange quotations
furnished by J. S. Bache A Co., 824
Omaha National bank building:
Tues.
High Low Cioee Close
Agricul Chem ... 15% 12% 14 14%
A :a x Rubber ....*♦% 9 ’J 8%
Allied Chem . 77% 74% 76% 74%
Allis-Chalmers ... 64 62 62% 43%
Atn Beet Sug . . . 40 29 40 29
Am BSP . R2%
Amer Can .150 147 148 % 150%
Am C A Found .174 170% 173 173%
Am H A Lea... 11 %
Am H A Beat pfd 68 66% 67 46%
Am Int Corp .... 30% 29% 30% 80%
Am Linseed Oil .. 20% 20% 20% 20%
Am Lororno . 85% *3% 84% 81%
Am Radiator ...123 122% 123 123
Am Ship A Com .. 10% 10%
Amer Smelt . *6% 85% 85% 85%
Am Smelt pfd ...106*4 106 106 % 105%
Am SteH Found .40% 39% 89% 40%
Amer Sugar . 4 5% 43% 44% 43%
Am Sumatra .... 5 7% 7% 8
Am TAT .129% 129% 129% 129
Arn Tobacco .169% 168 168% 169%
Am Wat W A E.110 10&% 110 110%
Amer Woolen ... 59% 57% 57* 67%
Anaconda . 39% 38% M % 89%
Aeao Pry Goods 128% 127 iff 128%
Aseoc OH . 33% 31% 31% 32%
Atchison .111% 110 110% 111%
Atlantic Cl.14.’. 141 141 % 142%
At Gulf A W I . . 16% 15% 15% 16
A11 Ref Co . 93% 93% 93% 92%
Austin-Nichols ... 8*. 25% 26% 25%
Baldwin .123% 122% 122% 125%
Baltimore A Ohio. 69% 68% 68 s* 69%
Barnsdnll A. .. 1»%
Bethlehem Steel.. 44 43 43 % 48
Bosch Magneto... 24% 24% 24% 25
Brook.-Man. Ky... 32% 31% 32% 31*
Brook.-Man. pfd. 7 4
Brooklyn Ed. Co..120 119% 120 119%
Cal. Parking. 95 96%
Cal. Petroleum . . . 24% 23% 23% 24
Cal. A Art*. Min. 53%
Canadian Parific.153% 154
Central Leather... 15% 15 16 14%
Cen‘1 Leather, pfd. 47% 46% 46% 4;> %
Cerrn de Pasco... 48% 4* 48% 48%
ChendPr Motors . 28 27% 28 28%
Chcs, A Ohio. 88 86% 87% 88
Chicago O. W. cm. 9% 6% 9% 8%
Chicago O .W. Pfd. 25% 24% 25% 25%
Chicago A N W. 6s* 67% 67% «8%
C. M\ A 8t P. ... 16% 14 14 15%
r. M A St P. pfd. 2 5 23% 23% 24 *
C.. R X. A P. 4 1% 59% 39% 4^%
C. St P. M A O. 49% 49% 49% 49
Chile Copper. 34% 33% 34% 34%
Chino . 26 2-7% 25% 26%
Cluett-Psahody ... 62 60 62 69%
Cluett-I*. pfd.H‘4 102% 104 103
Coca-Cola .77% 77% 77% 77%
* *olo. Fuel A Iron. 39% 88% 88% 89%
Columbia Carbon.. 4? 41% 41% ♦ «%
Columbia Gas. 447% 48% 44% 43%
Congoleum . 43% 42% 43% 42%
Con. Cigars. 21% 22%
Consolidated Gas.. 75% 73% 74% 78%
Continental Can... 62% M% 69% 68%
Cont Motors. 7 7%
Corn Products ... 39% 88% 38% 89%
Cosden . 39% 28% :•% 28%
Crucible .. 69 % 66% 58% 59%
C C Sugar_ 13% 12% 13% 12%
C C Sugar pfd . 6ft % 58% 69% 67
cm,a-Ain Sugar ..29% 28% 29% 28%
Cuyamel Fruit ... 60% 4*% 6*% 47%
Daniel Boons .... 9 8% 8% 8
Davidson Chem .. 43% 86% 40 44%
Pel A Hudson-128% 127% 127% 129%
Pupont . ..129% 127% 127% 129
Eastman Kodak ..113% 112% 112% 112%
Erie . ...31% 30% 30% 30%
Elec Stor Battery. 63% 62 62 % 62
Famous Players... 86% 86 86 84%
Fifth Av Bus Lins. 11%
Flak Rubber . 9 9%
Floischman’l Yeaat 82% 81 61 82%
General Asphalt... 48% 47 47% 47%
General Electric... 266 % 261% 264% 261
General Motors ... 68% 57% 67% 58
Gold Bust . 40% 39% 40% 40
Goodrich . 32 30% 22 30%
Gt No Pro . .... 82% 31% 32% 32%
Ot No Uy pfd. 6 7 % 66% 68 % 04 %
Gulf Stales Steel.. 76 73* 78% 76
Hartmann Trunk . 84% 83% 34 34
Haves Wheel _ 34% 33% 38% 83%
Hudson Motors .. 27% 27% 27% 27%
Hnmestake Mining 45% 45 45% 45
Houston Oil . 73% 72% 72 73%
Hupp Motors . 13% n% 13% 14
Illinois Central . .113% 112% 113 113%
III Central pfd ..114 113 ]l» 113%
Inspiration . 29% 27% 28% 26%
Int K C Corp. 32% 31% 22% 22%
Int Harvester .. . 98% 97% 97 % 97%
Int Merc Marine.. 10% 10 10^ 9%
Int M M pfd. 40% 38% 39 * 3* %
Int Nickel . 20% 20 20 20%
Int Paper . 48% 47% 47% 46*
Int T A T . 82% 82 82% 82%
Invln Oil . 1f% B. 16% 16%
Jones Tea . 17% 17% 17% 17%
Jordan Motor .... 33% 32% 33% 34
K C Southern .... 27 % 26% 2 6% 26%
Kelly-Springfield . Hi If. % r. % 15%
Kennecott . ... . 49% 48% 48% 47%
I.ee Rubber . 9% P% 9% H>
Lehigh Valley ... 70% 6J% 69% 70
Lima Loco . 64 6l% 6 3% 63%
Loose-Wilts . 8<* 77% 78 79
Lou A Nash .104% 103% 103% 102%
Muck Truck.10*j inn 101 % 99%
May Dept Store . 97% 97 97 % 98
Maxwell Motor A. 70% «9 69 69%
Maxwell Motor B. . 21 % 22
Mai land . 40% 88% 40 38%
Mcx Seaboard ... 18% 17% 18% is*
Miami Copper ... 23 22% 22% 23
M K a T Ity .... 25 84 4 24 % 25
Mo Pno . 26 25% 25% 25%
Mo Pnc ptd . i.4% 63% 64% 64
Mont Ward . 4 4 41% 43% 41%
Mother Lode .... 8% 8% 8% 8%
Nash Motors ... 160 % LH 158 160 %
Nat Biscuit . 70% 70 70* 70
Nat Enamel ..... 21% 1%
Nat Lead . 169 * 157 % 157* L'.s*
N Y An Brake 4 .% 4 4 % 45% 44 %
N Y « entrn I ... 1 16 114 % 114% 115%
N Y ('A- SI L . < 116 % 116% 116% 116
N Y N II A II. . 28% 27 % 28%
North Amer . . . 34% 34', 34% 34%
North I'm' 68* 6, 68% 66%
N A W Ry .26% 12 % l.'l % 12 4 V,
Orpheum . 96 2 4', :’4% 24%
< 1 wen a Bottle ... 4" 41% 41% 42
Pacific OH ■ 65% 54% 6 4 * 66 %
Packard Motor 13 % 13 13% 12%
Pan - American 56 % 56% f>5G
Pan • Am B * 1% 54 * 64 %
Penn ft It 4h 4; 47% 47*
Peoples fla* let pH Ium 109
Pei** Marquette (.4% 6-1 6 4 64
Phils Co 49 % 49 49 % 48 *
Phillips petrol .. 3 7% 36* t 36 •’»
Pierce - Arrow * % 8%
Post inn Cereal 80 77 „ 79% 78 V.
Pl‘e*M*d Steel l’nf 4 7 46 % 46% 46
Producer* Refln . .'9 28 * 29 28*
Pullman 13«% 1 34 134 % 136%
Pun4n Afceiie 8 44 % 42* 43% 42%
Pure t»ll 27% 27 3tJI 27*
Hail ttleei bpiiug 129 131 UA 121% I
*
Ray Consolidated 15% 15% 16% 15%
Reading . 65% 65 65% 65%
Replogle . 15 14% 14% 15
Rep lr A St _ 47% 47 47 % 46%
Royal l> N Y _ 46% 45% 46% 45%
8t L & S F . 51 47% 50% 46%
St L & 8 W _ 46% 45% 46% 4C%
Schulte Cigar St 112 110% 112 109%
Sear* - Roebuck .130% 125% 130% 124%
Shell Union Oil . 20% 20 20 20%
Simmons Co .... 34 .13% 33% 33%
Sinclair Oil . 19 14% 18% 18%
Sloan - Sheffield . 72% 72 72% 71%
Skelly Oil . 23% 22% 2.1 22%
So Pacific .166% 102 102 104%
So Railway . 72% 71 % 72% 72%
Standard Oil Cal. 62% 61% 61 % 62%
Standard Oil N J 38% 34% 34% 18%
Stewart-Warner . 56% 66% 66% 56%
Strom Car . . . 65 65
Studebakar . 38% 38% 38% 38%
Sub Boat . 8% 7% 7% 7%
Texas Co . 43% 42% 42% 43%
Tex Gulf Sul ... $3% 82 83% 82
Tex A Pac ..41% 40% 40% 41
Tlmk Roll Bear 37% 37% 37% 37%
Tob Prod . 67% 67 67% 67%
Tob Prod "A" ..92 91 92 91 %
Trans Oil . 4% 4% 4% 4%
Union Pacific ...147% 145% 1 46 1 47%
United Fruit . 206 206
USCI Pine .139% 129 139 126%
U S Ind AIco _ 81% 79% 80% 81%
IT S Rubber _ 35 33% 35 33%
U S Rub nfd _ 88% 87% 88% 87%
IT S Steel .115 11.1% 113% 115
U S Steel pfd. 122% 122%
Utah Cooper ...... 82
Vanadium . 27 25% 25% 27%
Vjvaudou . 9%
Wabash . 19% 18% 18% 19
Wabash **A” 52% 51% 51% 52%
West Union .117% 114% 117% 114%
W Air Brake 101% 100% 101 100%
Weat Electric _ 65% *4% 64% 66%
White Eagle O .. 26% 26% 26% 26%
White Motor* ... 66% 65% 66% 65
Wool worth Co ..111% 110% HO 110
Wlllys-Overland . 7% 7% 7% 7%
WIllys-O Pfd _ 64% 61% 62% 64
Wilson . 5% 5%
Wilson pfd . 16
Worth Pump .... 41% 40% 40% 40%
Wrigley Co . 44 43% 44 #3%
Yel Cab T Co .. 43 42 42% 44
Yel C Mfg Co .. 38% 38 38 39
Total sales. 2.295.100; today’s 3 p. m.
sales. 1.855.200,
New York Bonds )
% --/
New York. Nov. 12.—Heavy profit tak
ing which followed the recent strengthen
ing of time money rates, turned bond
prices reactionary today. Seml-specula
tlve railroad Issues alone withstood sell
ing pressure and further accumulation of
popular members of this group accounted
for the bulge in total sales to more than
123,000,000.
Liquidation of United Slate* govern
ment obligations was attributed to bank*
and large investors who were said to be
transferring funds into high-yielding
bonds and stocks in anticipation of a re
duction of taxes by the next congress.
Treasury 4%s at one time broke 18-32
but closed with a new loss of only 7-32.
Liberty bonds were from 1-33 to 7-32
lower .
An almost unprecedented demand for
the "Katy" adjustment 5s carried this is
sue to a record high level a 73%. The
activity in thene bonds wan the outstand
ing feature of trading, although buying
orders aUo were extensive in Frisco liens,
central of Georgia 5s and Chicago &
Eastern Illinois 5s.
High grads rail mortgages encountered
unusually heavy realizing sales. which
brought losses of a point or mors In New
York Central 6s, Union Pacific 4s. Atchi
son General 4s. Northern Pacific 4s. Baito
A- Ohio 4s, and Reading 4%s. Switching
operations fhlo higher yielding Issues were
said to be underway.
A 15,000,000 issue of Minnesota State
4% per rent-bonds has been awarded to
local banks and will be offered to yield
•lightly above 4 per cent.
United States Bonds.
(Sale* in 11,000.) High. Uw Close
427 Liberty 3%s ....100.29 100.18 100.29
1 Liberty 1st 4s....101.28 101.28 101.28
113 Liberty 1st 4 V**.. 101.30 101.24 101.26
937 Liberty 2d 4%s..101.12 101.4 101.8
567 Liberty 3d 4%s ..101.26 101.16 101.22
1231 Liberty 4th 4%s.103.12 101.3 102.8
209 U B Trees 4%s.105.30 105.13 105.24
Foreign.
2* Anton Jurgen 6s .. 88% 88% 88%
8 Argentine 7* .102% 102% 102%
24 Argentine 6s . 94 92% 94
49 Aurttilan Gov 7s ... 95 94% 94%
30 Bordeaux 6s . 88% 88% 88%
13 Copenhagen 5%s .. 96% 95% 95%
56 Great Prague < %s. 92% 92% 92%
81 Lyon# 6s . 88% 88% 88%
32 Marseilles 6s . 88% 88 68
6 Rio Janeiro 8* 47.. 93% 91% 93%
10 Czechoslovak 9s 52.100% 100% 100%
95 Dept Seine 7* . 92% 92% 92%
20 Dom tan 6%g 29.-103% 103% 103%
6 Dom Can 5s 52....104 103 % 1C3%
74 Dtch E In 6* 62 97 96 % 96%
46 Dtch Kind 5 % a 63 89% 89% 89%
1196 Ger ext 7s . 95% 94% 95%
21 Framerican 7%s .. 93% 93% 93%
179 French Ite 8h ....105% 104% 105
121 French Re 7%s ..100% 100% 100%
108 Jap 6%» .92% 91% 92
29 Japanese 4s 83% 83% 83%
9 K of Bel 7 %s ...110% 110% 110%
B0 K of B 6 % s rets 98% 96% 96%
20 K of Den 6s _101 100% 101
16 K of Hun 7%s K6% 88 88
40 K of Neth 6s '72.101 100% 101%
42 K of Neth 6s '54 .103% 101% 102%
10 K of Nor 6s *43.. 99 98% 99
61 K Serbs C Slav 8s 88% 87% 88
IK of Swed 6s ..104% 104% 104%
10 O Dev deb 6s..... 89 88% 88%
33 Paris-L -M 6* . 81% 80% 80%
17 Rep of B 8s . 93 92% 92%
7 R of Chile 8* '41 .106% 106 106%
32 Ren of Chile 7s .. 93% 98% $4%
1 Rep of Cob. 6s% 99% 99% 99%
34 Ren of Cuba 6%s 97% 97 97
3 R of El 8 • f 8a. 102% 102% 102%
22 Rep of Fin €« ..87% 87% 87%
2 Stats of (J 6s . . .103% 103% 103%
1 S of Rio G do S 8s 95 95 95
13 8 «.f Sari P a f 8a. loo 99% 1*0
2 Swiss Cnnfed 5a .115 115 115
62 8 G 6 % * \f .100% 100% 10‘i%
5? H., KofGBAI6%a'29 .113% 113% 113%
41 I Kofi; It A16 % ’37 186 105% 105%
44 Brazil 8s . 96% 96 99%
10 Brazil-C’snt R E 7. 82% 82% 82%
Domes! k.
• Am Ag Chem 7%s 95 94% 98
4 Am Chain sf deb 6s 96% 96% 9*%
7 Am Smelting 6s .. .106 106% 105%
1-j Am Smelting 6s .. 97% 96% 97%
41 Am Sugar 6s. 99% 99% 99%
76 Am TAT 6%».10.1% 102% 102%
.9 Am TAT ts.101% 101 101
67 Am T<\ 1 4s.97% 97% 97%
1 Am W W A K 6* . 92% 92% 92%
72 Ana top 7s 38-101% 101% 101%
111 Ana (op 6s '63_99% 93% 99%
9 Armour Co I>#1 b %s 90% fft% 90%
11 ^5f2'JAt#d 011 101% mi%
JJ gen 4s. 90% *9% |f%
I* ATAsf *dj 4s .... 81% 81 83%
* d* C,t L,n* *»* 81% »1% 91%
*5J 2 i ^ rfK *9 '96.. 101% 1U1 101%
5 * 0 «%1-90% 89% 90%
! g * 0 gold 4s. 88 88 88
1 Bell Tel Pa 1st 5s 101 100% 100%
“2 Beth Steel con 6s.. 94 *3% f«
7 Beth Hteel pur 6s . 69% «9
2 Brier Hill Steel 5%s 97 97 97
*1 S,kyn c» H»l% 101 101%
202 Bkyn-Man ?r sf 6a. 83% 82% 82%
It B ft * P 4 % s. 87% 87% #7%
3 Calif Pet l%a.101 100% 100%
I? d**b •%••*. 117% 117% 117%
23 Can Pac deb 4s- 79% 78% 78%
26 Carolina C A O la.106% 105% 105%
16 Central O* 6%a. 10‘t uau mo
1 <’h| R A Zj 4s ... 89% *69% 89%
132 Chi A E 5s . 76% 76% 74%
194 ('hi Gt West 4s .63 81% *t %
73 Chi M A 8t P 4%s. ft# 67% 67%
?4 Chi M A St P 4%* 63% 62% 53%
179 Chi M A 8t P 4 %s 74% 72 % 7 2%
22 (hi A North 5« .100 99% 99%
17 Chicago Rail 6* .. 77% 76% 78%
44 Chi R I A r 4a... 88% 83% *7%
327 Chi R I A P 4s ., 1M *rT% 83%
4 Chi Un f?ta 6s B. .102% 102% 103%
26 Chi A West Ind 4s 77*9 77 77
l'*6 Chile copper 6s . .108% 107% 107%
57 Cleve C c A S L 5s 96% 95 95 %
22 Clev* Un Ter 5s ..100% 100% 100%
IK Colo A So rfg 4 % * 91% 91 91
7 Col G A Kl 8s....100% 100% 100%
S3 Common Pow 6* .. 97% 97% 97%
13 Consumers P 5* .. 91% 91% 91%
6 Cub* Cane S 8* . 94% 94% 94%
6 Cuban Am 8 8a .108% 108% 104%
9 Dela A Hud 6* . 99% 99% 99%
< Denver G A F « 92% 92 92
15 D A R G rfg 5* .. 47% 47% 47%
.1.1 I* A R G con 4* . 83 82% 42%
9 Det Edison rfg 6* .107% 107 107 %
5 Del utd Ry* 4%s.. 73% 73% 72%
3 Dpnt Nam 7%* .. .107% 107% 107%
11 Duquesns Lt 6s ..106 in« ]06
67 East Cub Bug 7%a.l04% 103% 104%
10O Kmp GAP 7 %m ... 97% 97 97 %
-’93 File evt 4s D .... 71% 70% 70%
130 Kt is gep Hep 4* ... 64% 0.1 % 63%
! 12 Fisk Rubber 4a ...107% I07 707
1 12 Gen Kleo d 5a.106% 105 105%
10 Goodrich 6%s ..100% 100% 100%
40 Goodyear T M 31..109% 1 Op 109%
57 (t nod year T 8s 41 .120 119% 119%
10 Gnd Tnk Ry C 7s..117 116% 117
f> Ond Tnk Ry C 6s .101% 107% 107%
15 Grt North 7s A. .. 109% 109% 109%
63 Grt North 6s.. .. 94 9.1 % 93%
10 Hershey 6s .10 % 101% 103%
i.J Hud A M rfg 6s A. 87% 8 7 .4 7 %
13.1 Hud A M ad Inc 5s 67 66% 66%
5 Humble OAR 5% a. 100% 100% 100%
*1 III Ball Tel if 5s... 94% 97% 9.4
10 HI c.mt 5 % s . 103 102% jot
’ I CC8tLA NO rf 6s 97% 97% 97%
6 III St «1 4 % a . 94% 03% 93%
61 Int R T 7*.90% 90 90
D* Int It T 6s . »•*» 64% 64%
47 Int R T if 6s . ..67% 66% 66%
230 Int A G N .id 6a. 65 64 % m%
l ♦ ir.t ,Vr G N 1st 6s 101 100% 100%
»• Inter M M a f 6* 87% .47% 87%
4 Inter I* rvt 5* A. 16% 46% 86%
4 6 K C Ft X A M 4s. 82% 8 2% 82%
4 K City I* A L 5*. 9 5% 95% 95%
11 Kan C « 6s .... 89% 89% 89%
. ; Kan C T 4* . 46% N4% 85%
1 *• K G A Kleo 6s . 94% 94% 98%
4 Kelly S Tire s* 97% 97 87
h Lac G of St I. 6%s 96 % 94% 94%
•'4 IS A M S d 4s II. 96% 9ft 96%
6 Liggett A M 6s 99% 99 99
10 I. G A E 6* 92% 92% 92%
CHEST COLDS
Apply over throat and chest
— covet with hot flannel cloth.
X/ICKS
58 Mag Copper "■.118% 117 117
14 Manat! Sug 7 %s 99 98%
24 M’anhat Ry con 4s.. 64% 64% 64%
3 Mkt St Ry 7b. 98 97 9H
7 Mid Stl cv 5a. 87% 97% 87%
1 MK A T pr 11 6a C.102% 102% 102%
125 MKikT n pr 11 5s A. 87% 87% 87%
810 M K A T n adj 5a A 73% 72% 73
4 5 Mo Pac 1st 68. 99% 99% 99%
259 Mo Pac gen 4s... 64% 68 % 64
19 Mont Pow 5a A... 98% 98% 98%
10 N E T A T 1 at 6s.101% 101% 101%
66 N O T A M 5%s. 99% 99 99%
241 NYC deb 6s.Ill 110% 110%
130 N Y C rf & Imp 5a. 100% 100 100
1 N Y Cent con 4a. 83% 88% 83%
34 N Y C A St L. 5%a 95 9 4 94%
21 N Y E rfg €%«... 114 113 Vi 114
106 N Y N II A H 7a 93 92 92%
1490 NYNH A N 7a <f) 91% 90 90%
58 NYNHAHcvOa '48 80% 79% 80
108 N Y R 4s rtfs’. . . . 41 39% 41
11 N Y T ref 6s '41.106% 106% 106%
10 N Y T gen 4%s .. 96% 96% 96%
33 N Y W A B 4%s. 66% 55% 66
6 N A W cv 6« ...123% 123% 123%
7 N A W con 4s . . 90 89% 89%
10 N A E a f 6a. 97% 96% 97%
88 N P ref 6a B ..107% 107% 107%
33 N Pac new 5s D. 97% 97 97
151 N Pac pr Hen 4h . 85% 84% 84%
♦0 N R Pow 1st 6s A 94% 94% 94%
! 30 N Bell T 7s .. .108% 10$% 108%
15 O A C 1st 6s _101% J01% 101%
58 O S I. jJk 4s . 97% 97% 97%
30 O-W R im A N 4s 83 8*% 82%
1! P Gas A Elec 5s . 94% 93% 93%
25 V T A T 6s 52. . 9i% 93% 93%
7 Penna Ft R 6%s 110% 110% 110%
20 Penra R R Ken 5s 103% 102% 102%
19 P R R Ken 4%s . . 94 93% 93%
37 I’ere M rfg Gs . 98% 98 98 %
13 Phlla Co rfK 6a ..103% 103% 103%
8 Phila Co 5 Via .. 94% 94% 94%
16 P A R C A 1 5s .101% 101% 101%
3 3 Pierce Arrow 8s... 84% 84% 84%
10 I* A R 8s w w ...109% 109% 109%
36 Punta A Sug 7s.. 105% 104% 105%
112 Reading Gen 4 %s6. 94% 93% 93%
13 Reading gen 4s . . 94% 94 54%
15 Rem Arm* a f 6s 94% 94% 54%
2 Rep I A S s f 5a.. 94 94 94
16 Rio G W col tr 4s 72% 72% 72%
49 H 1 A A L 4 % a ... 84% 84 84 %
35 S li I M A S rf 4s 92% 92% 92%
4 5 St LIMAS 4s RAG d 86% 85 85
109 SILAS F pr li 4s A 72% 72% 72%
346 StLAS Fr ad 6g .. 84% 84% 84%
618 St li A S Ft* in 6s 77 76% 76
2 St L So con 4« ... 86% 86% 50%
8 St Paul Un I>e 5s. 101% 101% 10i%
13 S Ant P S rf 6s.. 99% 99% 99%
107 Seab A L co 6s . . . 86% 85 85
267 Seab A L ad 5e ... 72% 71% 71%
lt7 Seab A L rf 4b ... 59% b® 59
47 Sine Con O col 7s 9i% 91% 91%
107 Sine Con Oil 6%*. 87 >‘8% 87
115 Sine Crude O 6%a.l00% 100% 100%
7 Sin.- P L 6b . 84% 8 4 84%
91 So pac rv 4s . 97% 97 97
68 So Pac rfg 4s . 89% M9% 89%
11 So Rail g© 6 via ...107% 107 107
6 So Rail gen 6s_ 104 1 03 % 103%
42 So Rail gen 4s .. 75 74 % 74%
39 So Bell T rfg 5a.. 96% 96% 36%
15 St G A El cv 6%a.l02% 102% 102%
2 Steel Tub© 7a .106 106 106
IK Tenn Elec rfg €«.. 98 % 97% 97%
24 Third Ave ad 6s .. 47% 47 47%
6 Third Av«t rfg In .. 56% 56% 66%
11 Toledo Eolson 7s .110 109% m%
43 TStLAW 4s . 83% 83% 83%
33 IT P 1st 4s . 92% 91 % 91 %
22 U P evt 4s. 99% 99% 99%
18 U P rfg 4s. 85% 85% 86%
15 United Drug evt 8s.115% 215% 116%
7 U S Rubber 7%a...l04% 104 104 %
95 U S Rubber 5s. 84% 84% 84%
26 U 8 Steel af 5a_ 105 104% 104%
10 Utah PAL 6a.93% 93 93
11 Va-Car Chem 7%s. 35 34% 35
66 Va-Car Chem 7a... 67 65% 67
9 Va RAP rfg 5s . . 93% 92% 92
S3 Virginian Ry 5s. 96% 96% 96%
1 Wabash 1st 6s.100% 100% 100%
66 Western El 6s. 99% 98% 99%
13 Western Md 1st 4s. 64% 64% 64%
4 Western Pac 6a.... 90% 90% 90%
8 Western Un 6%a..lll% 111 111%
20 Westinghous© 7s... 108% 108 108
11 West Shore 4s. 83% 82% 82%
7 Wick-Rp Sf 7* ... 77 76% 77
10 Overland 1st 6%*.. 99% 98% 99%
16 Wilson Co sf 7%s . 49% 47 49
8 WiiSOn A Co 1st fis. 89% 89% 89%
3 Wilson A Co rv 6a. 47% 47 47
14 Youngs S A T 6s . 95% 95% 95%
Total sales of bonds today were $33,
259.000, compared with $16,532,000 pre
vious day and $12,312,000 a year ago.
C hlrago Storks.
Furnished by J. 8. Ba< he A Co., 224
Omaha National Bank Bldg.
Bid Asked.
Armour A Co 111 r-fd . . sl% *2%
Armour A Co Del pfd .. Sf % 89%
Albert Pick . 20% 21
B as sick Alemtte . 36% 37%
Carbide . 65% 65%
Edison Co .132% 13 3
Continental Motors .... 6% 7
Cudahy . 73 7 4
Daniel Boon© . 8% >•%
Diamond Match .117 118
Deere i fd . *3 8 5
Eddy Paper . 16 ....
National Leather . 4% j
Quaker Oats . .296 JQ0
Keo Motors . 17% 18%
Swift A Co .110 110%
Swift International .... 32% 33
Thompson .4k 49
Wahl . 23 23%
Foreign Exchange Rates.
„ Nov. 1*.
Following are today's rates of ex
change as compared with the par valua
tion. Furnished by the Peters National
tank. Par
Valuation Today
Australia . 20 .000016
Belgium . 191 0486
Canada . 1.00 1.00
Cxecho Slovakia .20 .0302
Denmark . 27 1775
England . 4.8$ 4 6075
France . 193 0537
Germany .238 gold .25*2
Greece . .195 016$
Italy .19a .0487
Jugo-Flavia .20 .<«150
Norway . 27 1 485
Sweden . .. .27 .2692
Switzerland .195 1933
New York General.
New York. Nov 12—Flour—Firmer;
spring patents 97.ftA0l.tS; soft winter
straights, $7 25© 7.7$; hard winter
straights. $7.7508.2$.
Rye Flour—Firmer; fair to good, $7.2$
ft 7 SO; choice to fancy. 17 55|i 7 7 5.
Cornmeal—Steadier; fine white and yel
low granulated. $3.200 3 30.
Ry©—Bardy e’eady. No. 2 western.
tl-43%, f o b. New York, and $1 41%,
c. 1. f export.
Buckwheat—Steady; fine milling and
Canadian. $2.25 per 100 pound*
Wheat—Spot, easy No 1 dark north
ern spring, r t. f New York, lake and
rail. $1.80; No. 2 hard winter, f o. b ,
lake and rail. $1 €$%; No. 2 mixed
durum d< $1.65, No. ] Manitoba, in
bond. $1 *2%.
t orn—Spot, firm No. 2 yellow, r. j. f,
♦ rack New York, lake and rail. $1.29% :
No. 2 mixed, do. fl 28%.
• *ats—Spot, steady, No. 2 whit*. $0%c.
Barley—Firm; malting. $1 04 ©1.06. c.
I. f New Y"rk.
Feed—Firm; city l»ran. 100-pound
sacks. $31.00: western brwr. do. $31.$90
II. ou.
Hay—Steady: No. 1. $2* 00; No. ?.
$25 0002$.00. No 3. $22.90013.00: ship
ping. $18 000 19 00.
Hope—Steady: state 1924. 32©$7c; Pa
cific coaat. 1 924 1 7©22o. 1928 16017c,
Pork—Steady; mess $33 5*0 34 00, fam
ily. $32 00036.00.
Lard—Basv. middle west. $15 44015.15.
Tallow—Firm, special loose, 9 %c; ex
tra, 9%c.
ITS 1
m
ORIENT
HONO KONG has winter
weather that would make s
Lo» Angeles jealous.
Hong Kong has golf, horse racing,
yachting. Smart society. Life In gay
colors. And it's just a week-end run
to Manila.
Plan roar trip to the Orient this
year. It costa no more to go on the
giant Empress liners-largest. fastest
and finest shins on the Pacific. Fur
ther information from local steam
ship agents or
R. S. Elworthy, S. S. Gen. Agt., 7t
E. Jschson BUd, Chicago, III. For
Frright Apply G. F. Nichols. 1025
W. O. W. Building, Omaha, Neh.
Canadian Ibafk
\ __ it awat rus woaia f
PAZO Ointment
A Guaranteed Remedy
I?OP ITCHING, 11UND, DII TC
rUI\ BLEEDING Ok J'KOTkODING llLLo
It is now put up in caOaptnble tuhes with detachable
pile pipe making it very easy to apply.
75c
j - ■ '
DRUGGISTS refund money if
it fails to cure.
Special directions enclosed with each
package. Your druggist will order it.
(Also put up ip old style Tins. 60r.)
Omaha Produce I
•___'
November 1*.
BUTTER.
Creamery—Local Jobbing price* to ra
tallere: Extra*. 39c; extra, In 60-lb. tuba.
38c; standard*. #8c; flrnta. 87c.
Dairy—Buyer, are paying 26c for No. l
table butter In rolle or tube; JlCJIe for
packing Block. For No. I aweet. unaalted
butter, 24c.
BUTTERFAT.
For No. 1 cream Omaha buyera are
paying 29c per lb at country atatlona;
35c delivered at Omaha.
FRESH MILK. . . .
Price quotable, *2.35 per cwt for fresh
milk testing 3.6 butterfat. delivered on
dairy platform. Omaha.
ECiUS.
For egga delivered at Omaha: No. 1
fresh egg*. graded basis, 40©41c per doz
en; seconds, 30®?lie; cracks. 24®25c.
Prices above for eggs received in new
of No. 1 wfcitewood cases; a deduction
of 26c will be made for second-hand cases.
No. 1 eggs must be good average size. #4
lbs. net. No. 2 eggs consist of small,
slightly dirty, stained or washed eggs,
irregular shaped, shrunken or weak-bod
ied egga. . .
In most quarters a premium Is being
paid for selected eggs, which must not
be mora than 48 hours old. uniform in
size and color (meaning all solid colors—
all chalky white or all brown, and of the
same shade) The shell must be clean
and sound and the egga weigh 26 ounces
per dozen or over. _
Jobbing prices to retailers: U. P spe
cial*. 48c; t\ P. extras, commonly known
a* selects. IGc; storage selects. 37©1*<'-;
No. I small. 36c* small, storage. 33c;
checks, 25©26c.
POULTRY.
Under grade poultry paid for at market
value. Hick or crippled poultry cot want
ed and will not be paid for.
Prices quotable for No. 1 stock, alive:
•Springs, all sizes, 18c; Leghorns, springe.
15c, hens. 4 lbs., 18c; hens under 4 lbs..
15c; Leghorn hens, 13c: roosters, 10®lJc;
ducks, f. f. f.. young, 14© 16c; old ducks,
f. r f, 12©13c; geese, f f. f.. 12©’13c;
turkeys, fat. 9 lbs., up. 20c; pigeons $1 00
per dozen.
In some quarters dressed poultry Is
now being handled on 10 per cent com
mission basis The market is nominally
as follows. Fancy young tom turks. 10
bs., and up. ::6©40c* No. I hen turks.
i lbs and up, 34© 38c: old toms. 32© 35c;
No. 2 turks. 20c- No. 1 geesos. 16®20c;
ducks. 18®22c.
Jobbing prices of other dressed poultry
(to retailers): Springs, soft, 24©26c; broil
ers. 40c; heils, 21© 24c- roosters, 17018c.
CHEESE.
American cheese, fancy grade. Jobbing
price quotable as follows: Single daisies.
224c; double daisies, 22c; square prints.
24c; longhorns. 224c. brick, 23He; lmi
burger 1-lb. style. $3.25 per dozen; Swis*
domestic. 38c: imported Roquefort, 68c;
New York, white ri’c.
BEEF CUTS.
Wholesale price quotable: No. 1 ribs,
24c* No. 2. 21c; Nc. 3, 14c; No. 1 rounds
j9c; No. 2. 14c; No. 9c; No. 1 loins.
34c; No. 2. 27c; No. 3. 16c* No. 1 chucks.
12c; No. 2. 10c; No. 3, 6 He; No. 1 plates,
8 He; No. 2, 8c: o. 3, 6c
FRESH KISH.
Jobbing price* quotable as follows:
Fancy white fish. 30c; lake trout, 28c;
buffalo. 16c*, bullheads. 24c; northern cat
fish. 35c; southern catfish. 27c; fillet of
haddock. 25c- black cod sable fish, 18c;
red snapper, 27c; flounders 20c; cripples,
26c; black bass. 32c; Spanish mackerel.
1H©2 lbs , 25c; yellow pike, 28c; striped
bass. 26c; white perch, 17c; pickerel, J8c;
Chinook salmon, 30c; silver salmon. 26c;
fall salmon. 22c; frozen fish. 2©4c less
bass. 20c- white perch 17c; pickerel. J8c;
than prices above Frog saddles, Jumbo.
$4 6® per dozen. Oysters, $2.7u© 4 29 per
gallon.
FRUIT?.
Quotable Jobbing prices for No. 1 stock:
l'ear*- Extra fancy bushel basket,
$3.25- box, $4.60. Heifers, baskets. $1.75.
Apples—In boxes, extra fancy Delicious.
$5.0ft; Jonathans. $3.25; Oravensteins,
$1.75®2 75; Bellflowers, $1.75; Spitzen
bergens. $3.00. In baskets. Jonathans,
$1 40©2.25; winesaps, $.\00©2 35; winter
Banana. $2 25- Grimes Golden. $2 25- King
David, $1.86; Ben Davis. $1.60; Roman
Beauty $2 25. In barrels. Grimes Golden,
$6.00. Ptayman Winesaps. $8.50.
Oranges—Valencias, extra fancy, per
box, $6 50® 9.00.
Grapefruit—Florida 14.50 ® 5.60.
Bananas—Per lb.. 10c.
Lemons—California, extra fancy. It 60;
fancy. $9 00: choice. $8.00; limes. 100
count, carton, 12.00.
Quince—California extra fancy, box,
$3.2503.60.
Cranberries—50-lb. box, $6.60; 100-lb.
barrel. $11.00.
Grapes—Concord, standard basket, 40©
42c; Tokays, crate. $2 2502.50; Red Em
peror. $2.50.
VEGETABLES.
Quotable Jobbing prices for No 1 stock:
Sw#et Potatoes—50.1b. hampers. $2 25;
Jersey, bbl . $4.50.
Onions -Spanish, crate. 60 lbs.. $2 50;
California, white. In sacks. 2Hc lb ; red
globe, in sacks. 2He lb.: yellow. 3He lb.
Peppers—Green market basket. 75c:
red. large, market basket. $1.26
Roots—Beets and carrots, In sa^ks. Jc
per lb; turnips. 2Hc; rutabaga*. 202Hc.
Cauliflower—Per crate. $2 26.
Cucumber—Hothouse, extra fancy, per
dozen. 12.50.
Honey Dew Melon#—• to 11 In crate,
$2 25
Cabbage—2 He per lb ; crates. *c per lb.
Tomatoes — California, per crate, as
packed. $4.00.
P.sdishee—Per dozen bunches. I$c.
Potatoes— Home grown, in sa^ks. ll*c
lb Idaho baker*. }r
Lettuce—Head, per crate. $5.00; per
doz. $1 25; hothouie leaf. fOc.
Celery—Oregon, doz. stalks, $1 0001 9«;
Michigan, doz.. 76c; California, rough,
crate, $6 50.
Parsley—Per doz. bunches. 00 075c.
FLOUR
Prices quotable round lota (less that
carload lota. f. o. b OznahaN. follow:
First patent In 98-lb. bags. $8.0008.10
per bbl.; fancy clear. In 49-lb. bags. $6.75
ft 8 *5 per bbl.: white or yellow commeai.
$2 65 per 100 lbs
FEED.
Market quotable per ton, carload lots
f. o. b. Omaha
Digester Feeding Tankage—60 per cent
protein, $60 00.
Hominy Feed—White or yellow, $38.00.
Cottonseed Meal—43 per cent protein,
$4* on.
Buttermilk—Condensed for feeding. 10.
bbl. lots. 3 46c per lb.; flake buttermilk,
600 to 1.000 lbs . Ic lb.
Mill Feeds— Bran, standard, prompt.
$2.: 5t‘; brown short* around, $2f.0'’1; gray
sh >rta. around $30 50. flour middlii g*. I
Alfalfa Meal—Choice. November and
i
I
THE belt cord truck tire
that Goodyear ever built!
It'i the new and improved
Goodyear Cord Truck Tire.
Thicker and itronger lide
i walli, the beveled All-Weath
er Tread, and longer wear
ing rubber compound. More
dependable, more powerful
| and more economical than
ever.
An up-to-date booklet. *‘A Tire for
Every Task.” giving valuable in- ] "
formation about the line of Good
year Truck Tiree, i» youre for the
aekinf. Juet write or phone us.
Rusch Tire Service
2205 Farnam Street
GOODj^ftCAR |
December delivery, secondhand
• •'M nn Vo 1 Novcfflbtf and D#Olfll64
delivery secoodbaod b*g*. $z&.00; No t» I
November end December delivery. $3*..
132 00 redd of. $30.60® 40 60; mixed ciirn
If flour and feed. 76c® 1.00 morrL p%tot<S£*
£Kg Sheila—Pried and ground. 100-1&
bag*. ton lota. $25.00 per ton t.|B
Llnaaed Meal —34 per cent prote’o,
prompt. $49.60 HAy
Nominal-quotations, carload lot*:
Upland Prairie —No. 1. VA*Wfoi0*
No. I. $10.00® 11.00; No. 3. fl.00 99.0°.
Midland Prairl* — No 1. 1 60»
NODo:wu”d#®®i?r?ii-No.' L .VOODOO;' Nv
Alfalfa —Choice. 114 Vlfoom* «*'»#
!.,6«?l®10?5>’!*No*rL }u.oWloo°- r'°
Packing Hay—$F>.50®7.60. _
Straw—Oat. $7.00—8 00; wheat, $6.00®
7 °U' FIELD SEED.
Nominal quotation*, per 100 P00"'1"'
fair avprMflre ounlitv: Alfalfa. $14.0') >
1 <5 r.0; sweet clover, C.00@10.00; red
clover. $10.00@21 00; timothy. S4.t0et.in.
Sudan arasa. tS.Tt«t 4.26; common m llet.
$1 96®1 F»o- German millet, $1.60®*.
’huSa'woOL. TALLOW. .
Prices a*~e buotabb- as follows, dealer*
weights and selection: v, _
Hides; SfHSonable. No. 1. lie, *s°- -•
10c: bulls. 8®7c; brands, 8®7c; glues, 6c;
<alf. 114/ 12 S c ; kilt, l-ifltmc; deacora.
$1.00 each; glue skin*. 6c; hnrjenlde*.
$5 00® 4.00: ponies and glues. $2 00 earn,
colts.' 25c ea< h; hog skins He ca«_h; dry
flint hides, 13c; dry salted bide*. 10c; dry
*1 WoolY Pelt*. $1 75*12.5« each for full
wooled skins; lambs* 60c®l.o0 each,
shearlings. 40® 60c ea^h. depending on
length of wool; clip*. He each; wool, de
pending on quality. 32®45c per lb
Tallow and grease: No. 1. tallow. Be,
B tallow. 7c; No 2 tallow. A grease. -
8c: B grease. 7 c; >ellow grease 6r;
brown grease 6t4c: pork nrac kllrtg*.
$60.00 per ton: ■ beef cracklings, $40.00
per ton; beeswax. 20c per Jb.
New York Prod nee. /
New York. Nov. 12.—Butter—Steady. ^
receipts. 8.841 tubs. Creamery higher than 1
extras. 41V*® 42c: creamery extra* (92
score). 41c; do first* (88 to 91-score),
34 fa 40 Vic.
Fggs- Firm: receipts. 7,236 case*,
t'hcexe—Firm; receipt*. 97.668 pound*.
State, whole milk, fiats, fresh, average
run. 20.
4'hlrngo Prod nee.
rhicago, Nov. 12.—Butter—Higher;
creamery extra- 39c; standards. i-Hc;
extra firsts. 3* 'a 37Vic; firsts. 32 4©34>*c.
seconds. 29*1314
Kgg* — Higher; receipts. 2.342 c*»e*;
first*, 43® 50c; ordinary firsts. 37® 41c.
Khiiihx City Produce.
Kansas City. Nov. 12—Kgga—lc higher;
firsts 47c; selects, 66c* other produce un
changed __
ADVERTISEMENT.
Pyorrhea Yeilds
To Chlorine Gas
To those who have followed the re
ports of the remarkable curative pow
ers of'chlorine Gas in certain disease,
It will be interesting to know that
this gas is now available in a simple.
Inexpensive form known as Jo-Vex.
Jo-Vex combines the Chlorine <ias
with other-dalable element, especially
designed and balanced for the treat
ment of sore and bleeding gums, loose
teeth, trench mouth and all forms of
Pyorrhea. Thousands of laymen and
dentists who have already used this
new product are amazed at its won
derful power to heal sore and bleed
ing gums and stop the dread disease
of Pyorrhea which end, in broken
health and loose teeth unless con
quered.
Almost all good druggist, are now
supplied with Jo-Vex, especially Sher- <
man & McConnell, who have just re- X
ceived large shipments from the
laboratory. However, if your drug
gist's supply is exhausted you may
send fl.00 to The Jo-Veg Chemical
Co., Akron, Ohio, for a full ,tze bot
tle with complete Instructions.
ADVERTISEMENT.
QUICK RELIEF FROM
CONSTIPATION
Get Dr.Edwards’Olive Tablets 1
That is the Joyful cry of thousand
since Dr. Edwards produced Olive
Tablets, the substitute for calomel.
Dr. Edwards, a practicing physician
for 17 years and calomel', old-time
enemy, discovers the formula for Olive
Tablets while treating patients for
chronic constipation and torpid liver?
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets do not
contain calomel, but a healing, sooth
Ing vegetable laxative.
No griping is the ''keynote” of these
little sugar-coated, olive-colored tab
lets. They cause the bowels and liver
to act normally. They never force
them to unn-itural action.
If you have a “dark brown mouth
—bad breath—a dull, tired feeling—
«ick headache—torpid liver—constipa *
tlon. you'll find quick, ,ure and pleas
int results from one or two of Dr. Ed
uards' Olive Tablets at bedtime.
Thousands take them every night
lust to keep right. Try them. 15c
»nd 30c.
Sore throat* are quickly
▼ helped — by the grate*
^ ful and penetrating
w warmth of Ben-Gay. It
^ stops congestion and
▼ eases pain.
For: Sore maadea
Ssr**
Backache
Tired feet
^ Rheumatism
The Original 4
BAUME BEN SUE
(A—IgdaHpm)
TV's. 1 #emtn« a Ca.
Aam. Agraa. N. T.
AIIV F.HTISFWKNT.
This New Treitmeat
Never Fails to End Piles
Many sufferer* front Pile* or Hem
orrhoid* have become despondent be
cause they have been le.t to beltn e
that their ca«o was hopeless and that
there was nothing In the worldtohelp
them.
To these people we say, "Go to your
druggist and get an original box of
MOAVA SrPPOSlTOHIPS line of
these Insarted Into the rectum ac
cording to direction* will lie found to
Site Immediate relief They reach the
source of trouble and bv their sooth
mg healing, antiseptic action tirs
allay the pain and soreness and then
lit direct contact with the uleers and
ptiea cause them to heal up and dis
appear forever
li s slmplt ttonderful how ipeedllv
itii v a, t. Hle-sed relief often eome*
in two days. Kten in oases that have
steadily resisted all known treat j
menta, marvelous tesultr h..te (.een N
I'htatned. '
Heap'll Prug Co dispense MOAVA
si P1XVSITORIKS m tha original bov
dr can gat it, for you on abort aouca.
•
J