TTIE OMAHA DAILY BEE: WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1908. 7 CHAIN AND PRODUCE MARKET tack of Buying and larger Receipts Cause Lower Values. DAMAGE REPORTS BOOST BULLS Late Birlnt Brought sharp Reaction Closed for tha Day. tha High Polat Omaha, Auguat 11. 1J1 Because of a lack of buying and larva receipts values oi,the eacnang hUJitJ ower today arid several fractlona were ioat during the eariy par of the session. Damarlng crop new has ressed.to be a bull factor-for the . time being. A w'il marked rally wu brought on near lh jloae on a general drying up of ofKriiikd and a -desire by shorts to cover. . wheat opened at 0c and cloned tl4c. on continued liquidation and lower cbl4 am) heavy recelpia which caused few sfferlnge. Later arter t.ie eariy had been absorbed late buying brnugiit. a aharp reaction and values clos.-d on tha high point for the day. September wheat opened at and closed . Cora was slow as far as the option was concerned and proved dull early, but like wheat, too an upturn near the close ana tdVaftcrd shsrply on strong bidding and a higher cash market. September corn opened at Vic and closed at Tie. Primary wheat receipts were 9M.000 buels end shipments were 641.000 1l receipts Isst ysr of l.m.onO bushels and shipments of SR3.0OO hushehv Corn receipts were iWO.OOf) bushels and hlpmftnts were 840.000 bushels . '" receipts last year of 649.000 bushels and shlpmente of 2M.000 bushels. Clearances were none of com. 1,000 bush els of oats, and wheat and flour equal to HA, bushels. . . . Liverpool cldsed Vflld lower on wheat d-d d higher on corn. Loral ranee of optional Aftlclea.l Open. I Hlgh. Low. CVoe. Year. Wheat I apt... I Corn-. 1 flept... Oste-. I Fept... May... I I BOH ttV! 7?m -I 43 'V TIM 4R 01V I 4 I 4kSI T.M 4'i 4-H, Com. 207 31 Oa;e 4 15 Omaha. Cash Prices. WHEAT-No. I hard. 9n0lHe; No. 3 hard. 8Sfimc; No. 4 hard. M8c; No. 3 tprlng. 311S96C. . ,.-,,,,,. CORN No. 2. T4T44c; No. , 73V.Hc; 5 white. 74S7&c. OATS No. 3 mixed. 4fiV.J?4V; No. thlte, 4HHff47c; No. 4 wnlte. asVnMiC RYK-No. 2. 741"r7oc; No. 3. 72B73c. C'arlot Receipts. Wheat. io.to 4Ji Minneapolis 1-' Dmeha "J jututh w VIIICAUO GRAIN AMD PROVISIONS I satires oi tk Tradlsa and Cleslag Prices on Hoard of Trade, CHICAGO, Aug. 11. Active demand for tain grain here and at southwestern mar ket engendered a strong closing rally In Hie l.jtnl wheal market loony, um oritur i . rihiiverv cloalnB with a net gain of -,c Uoih closed with a gain of V1, but oats weakened and finished the session with a net loss of yc-' Ifovlslons advanced a shad to Tha wheal market was nervous the srl-ater part of the day, but developed a 5..J.i.i-.l ,in,n fnne lata In the session and oloaed with the price very close to tha top Despite a Id 'decline at Liverpool, the market waa firm at the start owing . Kir, Kv aaveral of tha leading com- minion houses, based On -vere hallst ornis In South Dakota yesterday. Toward the on, or the first., hour, the market broke hatply on free sales by a prominent long. wl".-lt rlsiBO,-dlsaosed of approxU "1 . ww 'k.,1,i The close was ' ktrnn; -. fiantamber -opened a shade higher ti i2Vic higher t 3Jj&3 sold orro M,c and then advanced 4iM- n,l ... t 94ts4c, Primary receipts lis nuluth Vnd Chicago rented receipt, "f 5T0 car." agalnet 734. oar. last week and ' 860 eara a year ago. . th(l . The -Vwr 'owing-' to temier aenvnrj " ; .r.. . v..4... congestion, and the dlstani oeiiver... . inclined ""t trVn" ih ol Mill m fc.." ; " September naa nnmrnal. f. o. K; -afloat. Optkm market was stronger on scarcity of 8ptembr shins closing 1c not higher. Septemb r 4hH-V. closed at M'4c; Decemb. r closed at Sc; Mv closed at TlHo. OATS Receipts, 13.1.00 bu. Spt niarkel weak; m.xed osts. 2 to 32 pounds. h34e; natural white, to 32 pounds. SH''i:; clipped white. 31 to 40 pounds. f.'SfSc. HAY--Stedy; ahlpping. iHbc; good to choice, ar!ic. . lllilh-S Htesdy ; rlogota. S'ic; irmi.i American. 2nc. I.ISATHKR-Steadv; acid, 244.C. PROVISIONSBeef steady: fAmllv. I' 7S 17.50; mess. 314 Vi 15 &o; beef hams. Mv'O $); packet, ll5.noil 00: city extra India mea IJ4 2J OD. Cut meats, steady; plckhd bellies, $llc; pickled bama, Lard, firm at tt.6ftf9.7o; refined, stendv; continent. $10.: South American, 110.75;' compound. S 12" -H- Prk- "?,)f stesdy; family. HfMliO; short clear, ll6.S0f18.W: mess. 17.5017. 76. , x TALLOW Pull; city (12 per pkg.). 6 1-lr. country (pkgs. free). ftH'B'oM. Pi:TTER Firm: creamery specials. 234c; extraa, 23c; thirds to firsts. 18&2ic; state liitlrv. common to finest. lffiJSlc; proceas, common to special, 16821Y4c. CHEE8I3 8teady; state, full cream, spe cials, 12v41i34c; small, colored or white, fancy, 12c; large, colored or. white, fancy. HHc; good to prime. Uptime; common, l)c; shims, l'VU'c. Kt firm; western iirsis, i0'n;j seconds. 17U180. pnrLTRI uressen. steady western spring chickens. 12V19c; fowl., Kvei3Vic. WEATHER Ii THE ORAITV BELT showers Probably Wednesday, wltfe Lower Temperatare. OMAHA, Aug. 11. I. The weather Is generally clear through out the east and south, exoept light rains are falling In the lower lake region. A renerallv cloudv and unsettled condition. with local ahowers, prevalla over the cen tral valleys thla morning, and light showers were general from the Missouri river wesc Into the mountains within the 1at twenty- four hours. Tha weather is slightly warmer ast of the Rocky mountains, but Is fol lowed by cooler In the west and northwest, and It will he cooler In thla vicinity to night and Wednesday, with probably local ahowers. Omaha record or temperature ana prroip- Itallcn compared with the corresponding day of the last three years: ivb. urn. ijt,. urv Minimum temperature.... 68 64 f4 70 Precipitation 08 T W w Normal temperature for today, t degrees. Excess In precipitation since March 1, .06 of an Inch. ... .. . Deficiency corresponding penoa in iw i. 3.61 inches. ... Deficiency corresponding penoa in iaue. 2.52 Inches. . L. A. WELSH, Local rorecaaiar. SENIORS STOCKS AND BONDS Cora and Wheat Recto BwIIetltt. For the twenty-four riours ending at I a. m . 75th meridian time, Tuesday. August 11. 1906: Temp Stations. Msx. Mln. Ashland. Neb t8 Auburn, Neh 85 F5 Broken Bow, Neb. Mi S3 Columbus. Neb... W f tCulbertson, Neb. 88 68 Falrbury, Neb.... 8f M Fairmont, Neb.... 86 51 n T .1 u n rl Jeh U& A7 Vlartlnrton, Neb.. ) M Hast ngs. Neb.... 8f. 63 Holdrege, Neb.... 80 i Oakdale, Neb 85 85 Omaha. Neb 86 t Tekamah, Neb... 87 67 Alta, la 82 83 Carroll. Ia 88 61 Clarinda, la 90 68 Sibley, Ia 83 M Slou CKy. Ia... 83 66 Bain fall .12 .17 .75 .10 .00 .75 .46 ' JO .12 - .58 .38 .62 .OS T .01 T .10 . .04 Sky. Raining Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Clear Pt. cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Raining Cloudy Pt. cloudy Raining Cloudy Cloudy Raining Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Raining Market Hai Mott Distinct Reaction Thai Has Occurred for Many Days. SELLING MOVEMENT LAST ALL DAT Actio Dae Largely to lonvlctlea That Reatloa It Orerdae Cloe lag; Prices Lowest of the Seesloa. NEW YORK, Aug. li. The stock market today had a more distinct reaction than nat occurred for many day. The receni rise In the market, starting early in July, has been remarkable for It. freedom from the usual backsets and pauses which usually characterise a speculative move ment. Ijlsestlon of oroiits st tntervsls and a reaction over part of the upward course of prices is considered necessary to preserve tue health and undertone of the market. The conviction that such a reac tion was overdue had more to do with to day's reaction than any news of conditions. the selling which canted prlcea down ward was aa concentrated a. mucn or me buvina which has crtceded it snd which csused the supposition of the Isrgtly pro fessional character or me receni maraei. Sales at a sinsle stock bv one house of as much mm 95 Oil) shares were reported. Sell ing of this kind looked as though the heavy operators, recently leader, ot tne aavance, were tine ones that were taking their prof Ite. Notwithstanding the sentimental in fluence of thla seeming? fact, the sbsorptlve powers of the market wore good ana the downward movement gave every indication of being In good condition. Buying and bidding up or separate stocks waa empioyea to sustain the list and to act as a drag on the decline. The sensational Stage at which the csmna an for the rise has arrived and the advertising devices used to foster It Were the cause of some uneasiness ana aroused suspicion of the artificial nature of the strength of stocks of late. The fact that I h, reaction eaneplsllv aharn In storks most exnloited in the advertising campaign waa pointed to as evidence that attempts were being msde to dispose of speculative holding to meet sucn demands as It attracted by the tumult. There was the same Informed discussion of the speech of accentance bv the democratic nominee for the presidency as was the case with his opponent s speecn, and tne same weigntng of its Dosslble effect on the soeculstive po sltlon. Some of the selling of stocks waa ascribed to this cause. One of the festures of the more recent sneculatlon from which excess snd bad conseauencea are feared Is the number of obscure and low grade stocas which have come Into activity. This Is especially true of operations In the outside market, wnere me acene on recent aays haa come to resemble the period of sensa tional speculative episodes In the past. The reactionary tendency was round in tnat ae part men t of the market today as well as In the prominent listed stocks. London Joined In the selling. Money marketa of fered no new feature except for a recession in the discount rate at Berlin In response to the stronger positions In the imperial bank. Crop advices were mixed. but In the main were favorable. Bar silver to dav receded to Sltc. the nrlce touched In April, 1903. and riot alnce then. Closing prices were at the lowest of the day uonan were irregular. i oiai saiea, par vali-e. I4.162.0f0. Cnlted States bonds were unchanged on call. Number of aalea and leading quotation, en stocks were as follow.' him. H'fh. low. Close. 84 58 T 80 68 . 40 84 60 T 84 8 .48 90 66 .14 84 62 . .24 84 58 .06 86 62 ..24 86 64 .02 V"' I. .eo on the 1 n iifui" ' -', A' distant future, and preveniea m,,y . i .HArlllVll ?racmllr to recover all of the earlier eP tern a'tr77Tcn.ndVi?n .a'nc'ed TOS?" . Tho Mi Smber Wrd h'lC f higher at tomorrow i 77 cars; oats, 181 snd Beptemner rin led teoelnts for wheat. li' csrs; corn Wheat Sept. aDee. bDec.' May Corn Sept. Dec. May Oats-- Sept, Dec. May Pork Sept. Oct. L.rd- Sept. Oct. Oct. 1 W0 i oohI I 1774-3 ! 64SVI I JW4 4Vi'iT'V93Mi,H 1 uH! I I 7841 6V C4l ',48'4ttH! l48Hil ISOHflHl t I 16 50 I 15 67 47 9 67 S 'l 9 00 I 4$V 48V - 6tV 16 56. I 15 115 I 941 9Mi 1 (.14 I I 77HI 64 I 47ii! 474 9RV WM 1 01411 0'a I 1 0wi 74 66Vi 44 M4 filr, 41 48'''a 4m1 f 67 62 1 8 96 I M 15 42 16 66 9 47 9 56 IS i 96 I 15 52 16 62 47 9 57 8 87 8 97 15 37 16 60 47 ) 62 5 85 6 '.& tNot Included In average, received lata. Minimum temperature for twelve-hour period ending at S a. m. DISTRICT AVERAGES. No. of Temp. Rain, Central. . Stations. Max. Mln. Inches. Chicago, HI 26 Columbus. 0 18 De. Moines, Ia 14 Indianapolis, Ind.. 13 Kansas City. Mo.. 15 Louisville, Ky 19 Minneapolis, Minn. 30 Omaha. Mety....... 16 St. Louis, Mo 13 Shower, occurred In all portion, of the corn and wheat region within the last twenty-four hour, and ware generally heavv In the ea.tern portion. Tha weather Is slightly warmer throughout the corn belt L. A. WELSH. Local Forecaater. . "St. Lonla General .Market. . . BT ' LOUIS, Mp... Aug. Jl.-WHEAT- Lower; track. No. 2 red caah, 4HJiv.4e; No.' 3 hard, 94fj98ci September," 9SS'93.c; rwcemhr. flfAi966a. CORN Firm; tiack. No. 2 ca.h, 78c; No. 2 white, 7879c; September, 77c; December, 62He. OATS Firm; track, No. 2 caah, 47H'548c; No-2 whit. U$6140; September, 47Va47c; May, 49c. kVF Iwer: 81c. FIOl'R Stewdy ; red winter -p'nt. 14.50&4.86; extra fancy and straight, 3.ft.4f 4.40; clears. 3.16(M ol. . ,., SKKD-Tlmothy. firm at 13 5064.00. rvDMUVililiMilv at ift.80. BRAN Higher; Backed, east track. $1.06 CHAY Steady;' timothy. $8.00 12.00; prairie, new, 7.&ttji.&o. . IRON COTTON TIES 11.00. BAGOINO-7Ttc. uruD TWIKK-If. cpovlsmNA-Rteadv: - ' lobbing. I!6 00. Lard steady; prime ateam, I9.05tj9.30. Dry aalt meats steady; boxed extra shoris. nn: clear rlba. S:.76: short clear.. 110.00. Bacon steady; boxed extra short, ll0.62Vs ri.ar rlhs. I10.62V.: short clears. 10.8iH- POl'LTH'V Firm: chickens, 9c; springs, 13c turkeys, 14c; ducks. 8c; geese, sc. BUTTEiR Steady; creamery, 17S21c EOOa-Steady; 14Hc case count. Recelnts. Shlnmnts Flour bhls ll-OOO MM Wheat, bu .. M.OOO 75.0 0 Corn bu .. .0 47 ' Kansas City Grata -and Provisions. KANSAS CITY. Aug. ll.-WHEAT-Un-changed to lc higher: September 89c- De cember. 91Hc;. May. c Cash: No. 2 hard. J aioW: No. hard. 8sVo94V.c; No. 2 red, i-.a.?- V,. a red. 24i0. iber, to; ma: Amslsamstei! Copper : 41.300 Am. C. P 2.600 Am. C. A F. pfd Vi American Cotton OH 3.40O Am. H. 4 L. PM 1 Amaiiran Ice iecuHtles l.tvQ American Llnaeed Oil 1IM Ameiiran Leromotlvs I.lft) Am. Locomntlve pf(t loo Am. i. A K 1. 68,100 Am. S R pM Am. Sur Rstlnlns 4. fro Amcncan Tobacco ptd 400 American Woolan Ion Anaconda Mining Ce I too Atchlaoa 1,0V) Atchlaon pfd 100 Atlantle Coaat' Line ' 40) Baltlmort A Ohio . Pal. A Ohio pfd 10 Brooklyn Rapid Tt I0.2O0 Canadian Pacific Central Leather ........ Central Leather pfd Central of New Jersey.. Chtsapaake A Oblo Chicago at. W Cblraso A N. W C , M. A St. P C, C, C. A St. L Colorado! r. a I. Colorado A So Colo, a Bo. lat pfd Colo. A So. :d pfd...... Cenaolldatad Oas Corn Produeta Delaware A Hudaos Denver Av Rio Oranda... D. A R. O. pfd .. Dlstlllara' Secarltles i.100 3H Brie 8H Krle 1st pfd " 40 Brio Id pfd to General glactrte H 14 Ot. Northern pfd M.4i0 1H Ot. Northarn Ore ctfa. Illinois Central Interooroush Mat Int. Met. pfd International Paper ... Int. Paper pfd International Pump ... Iowa Central Kanaaa Clir So K. c. Bo. pfd Loulavllle A ft Mexican Central Minn AV St. L, M..,8. P. S. 8. M I.aoo lit" Miaanurt Parlflc l.l) n't M . K. A 14.000 il u . K. A T. nfd 41 l'B'i 3 n W'4 13H bh I0i lnv, n 13'4 24 4S ' 4 ht 2 M 83 57U 1,10 17J U.aoo 8)S 1,000 41 00 T t.600 134 U,9) HIS Sal 200 "37 4 t.100 14 i 30 J 300 63H t.40O 13H 3.6") ) in 700 sol, 41S 101 if 23 30i 1SH 57 IK J) 136 it'-, e ' M 414 n loai "'4 :i'i t'tt t)4 mva 4S M4 mt 174 17H 173i lt:'4 2i4 !9a 7V ;oo 3 Hi lit us too 1.300 (.500 3,000 . 600 100 4, MO 100 400 300 a 13a us 174 17 1UH 17 43 t 141 141 ' II 24 W4 13Mt It" 17?4 37 Vt '74 MV l4 S 14S' IMS Vi 13 1M4 3 11 H4 14 IIS As you read tho following, romomber; tho people as a whole aro rich beyond computation. The ew bears hundreds of millions each, the many a few dollars each. The few got their hundreds of mil- Ions from the many through the working of the "Gtock Came." If doubt arises recall last October's panic. Farmers could not get their few dollars on the bank to move their wheat. Rockefeller and Morgan could get hundreds of millions to buy for 50 cents, stocks which they had sold to the people a short time before for a dollar. National ba4 New York Central... N. Y., O. W Norfolk A W North Am.rican 14.400 W 4,V 110S4 10, 100 44 MOO 00 46 58c; ky. 69Hc. Cash: No. t yallow. white. No. i.. add. bNew. fss- flotations wee aa Ol"' MOl,. ' V I OCR Btesdv: winter patents. 4" a i stralahts 3.8Ka4.25: .(.ring Pent r,5 4ot .rriifhl..l4.U5 ; ".. 1170 CAT-No. 1 erln,. $1.10; No. . fl.K 1 i ; No. S rea. wsuvrH-corn-No. I. 79Vr3 "??Cv- . ivr48T.c: No. I 440; No" wlilH. 47VBx:. ELKY-W't0 choice maltln. TOCo. RKElii-r-lax. No. I northwestern, 11.31; prime timothy. IS 75. rinnra PROVISION S-Bhort ribs, ai dea 1"' M 75.C. Pork.- mesa, per bbl. 'l Lard, v-er U Ibe.. 9.45. Short clear aides FoUowlr were tha receipt, and shipments ol tlour snd ir.lnr Shipment. btkla ?B.fO0 18.000 Wheat, bu Corn, bu Oats, b.i Rve. bu er market aa steady.; teamerles. l9 Sc- clClrfa IjtXV. Frs. firm: st mark. rVn'e. included. UAIW: ";rVj! Prlmt firsts. AV.. Cheese. tady; UMUjc. UAV; YORK GENKRAL H4RHIT per, li'-BC. rariiiuri. p; No. 3 white. 74Wc; No. I white. 74c. OATS I'nchanged; fo. 1 white, 48Hc; No. ! mixed. 4Wc. RYR 713V. HA V Steady; choice timothy, 89 60S 10.60; choic prairie. 87. BITTER-8teady; creamery extra, He; racking .tock. Uic. KcWS-Bteady; tre.h extraa, I9c; current receipts, UVkc. Receipts and shipments of grain were aa follow.: Receipts. Shipments: Wheat, bu 170.0HO lW.Onn Corn, bu 17.000 20,000 Oats, bu 11.000 4,000 Options at Kansas City: Articles. Open. H!h. Low. Close. .845.000 .Ml.OOrt 4.t4. M . 6.0CO a.ouo iii.t') 348. OHO 4 lOtiO 16.000 Qaatatlauta of taa Day aa Varloaa Cam ! ties. . vs-w tork. Am 11 rLQl'R R- colDts. S.l bbls ; erporta market - 'Ulltet and .iraithts. S4 10O4 2S: tl 401i i 60; inisr winter low gradea 1.20u bbl steady; winter winter extras. patents. I4 4U04 7: t3K(8.5a Bye flour. lieady; fair to ' M ,V44 W;: cht,' tJ fancy, $ iitfH.tS. fine white and yel- lf bu.: exporta firm: No. 1 -rd li (iiunl.Oi. elevator; No. 7 rea. i . RVE-Dull: No. western, 4c; nominal f o. h. Nsw York. W H RA T Rectfl pt a. a.ifti bu. Spot market w K7.. a nrmern Liuiuin. h inniii: No, 1 haid winter 11.-4.. . i w. a. v nrtnl in Wheat to day. due to lower cables, waa .oliowed by a ' aharu rallv on bulilsh northwest news- After . s.n.4 dx-iina ik market had a final ipturn en covering of shorts, bulilsh Rus sian beas and export buslnras. rioting l k. net hi. her: AeDteinber closed at lis1; December cloaed at 104Si May olnaed at II Of.' 4 UKN Keceittia.: none. B9i - irarari Wheat Beptember December Corn Uecerroer May 8ff89H I9V.I 8T4J IS", til, W.90SWH 56Mia4l6H9Vl lH Jlaaeaaolla Urals Market. MINNflKPOLlS. Minn., Aug. 11. u iiifiT-Nii. 1 hard. II. 28: No. 1 northern. tl $ No. J northern. H.ld'VOl l; no. 1 northern, ii.iwoi.n; lin"' . cember. II QOH- ... nmv in rilllK. lls.tsva.isou. FLOUR Frrst patents, W.ifyS: second patents. 6.0Ofl.U; first clears. 4.Mri-4.4; second clears. 11500 60. rearta Vsrket. PEORIA. 111. Aug. 1L-OORN Steady; No. 1 and better, 10c; No. all colore. Tec; no !Vli IHZI'- No. ' 1 whIU. Mwc: new. No. t white. HtJc; No- ". 48c WH1SKT 117 for finished goods. a.Trat Urala Market. LIVERPOOL. Aug. ll.-WHEAT-8pnt, inn Kr 1 red weatern winter, sa, iso 1 Cailfornla. 6s; futures ateady; September, 7s 4"d: December. 7s 4d. CORN Spot strong; prime American mixed. 7a 4d. futurea quiet; September, t. d. Hllwaakaa Urala Market. MILWACKEE. Aug 11. WHEAT No. 1 northern, $1 lfcp1.1; No. I northern. H I I. 17; September, 4SC. CORN-Cssh, No. x. TSfltOe; September, TS'hO bid. Dolata Grala Market. PCLl'TH. Aug1 U.-WHEAT No. 1 harl, II. 19; No. 2 northern. 11 18 bid; No. 1 nor.h ern, newv ll.wiL, bid: No. 1 northern, 11.11 bid; Septeqiber, II 01V. December. bid. Northern Pacific 77. 4W hm Pairift alall 3) MS pMn.yl.anla 000 13S Paooi.'a Oas r., c. t. a at. u.... Preaaad Steal Car Pullman Palace Car... Rallwar Steel Spring.. Reading Kepublle Steal Republic Steel pfd Rnra laland Co Rock laland Co. pfd .. St. Ia AS. F. Id pld. St. Uiula S. W St. I. 8. W. pfd Sloaa-Bhefflald S. A I. Southern Pacific So. Pacific pfd So. Rallwar So. Rallwar pfd T.nn.aaee Copper .... T.iaa A Paetftc T.. St. L. A W A.. St. LW. pfd.. t'nlon Pacific I'nlun Pacific pfd U. S. Rubber V. S. Rubber lat pfd.. 11. S. Steal V. B. Sia.1 pfd tub Cop par V a. -Carolina Chemical .. Va.-Caro. Cham, pfd Wabaeh Wabaah pfd Waatlnshouae Electric .. Waatorn t'nlon Wheeling L. tt Wleconaln C.ntrml Tout tales for the day. l.toe 7S 1,VW MS J. IMS 700 44 IMS us 7S . 1.300 . 2. I'M 700 . I.IO0 ! "'io TOO 00 . eO.OOO 1S 40S St MS im ius l." v no .... 11. .... 1.7'W .... I.IOrt ... .lll.ioo 700 0rt .... i.ont ....10. ion 4.100 .... 4. 300 oo .... " eio .... I.am 400 .... too 1.M0 41 40 36 S ITS SOS 1S Bl 34S 103 41 111) 4S 2S 'iss s T7 MS 10 13 rt4 JSS 2S l 414 lan. i: 1 57 7S ii 7 l'i ,4 29, II '."4 wS n 4'4 lot u -74S MS 144S S 12."S It 3lS 1U 44 124S li t'i x-. ;S 17S 4S HI fc.S lit 4S S 24S s MS 147 S US iaS 11 Mi los 1"S 44S 44S 110S lS . 111 7S 3IS S MS lf 4?S TS to J44 126S t4S 'iss 14 4S 124 34 S tos 1S us "it'' 43S SS 1IS 30 60 11 LS 2fS MS 157S 33 3iS 101 4 Ut,00 aharas. 3S 'iss 17S 7t s 10 MS 106 13 H "i ' 10 Read- LaatlaB Slock Marttat. fivnov. Auc. 11. American aecurltie. opened quiet and ateady today. During thl first hour prices generally were to H be. ,low yeaterday a isew tors ciram. rjt advanced S- London closing stocks: X. I. HM .. Mt-ltu.. K A T t'-ai W I. .VRirmi.... KS Norfolk A W rt 4. pfd 7 Oatarto A W,.... Il'i P.anaylanla .... i:t4 Rand Mlna. 4a Reading Southern Railway 1MS do pfd ISS Southern Pacific 2aS Union Pacific ... es do pfd UV. S. Steal . 41 S da pfd 1 Wabaeh US do pfd 144 Spaniak 4s ... il'i ...HIS it ... MS ... 44 ... US ... tl ... alS ... M ...1 ... 44 ... 4T4 ...114 ... 14 ... IS .. !, mill. A N l' Amal. Copper a4 LVFR Bsr. steady. U 18-16d per o. OMAHA Aug H Rank rleartnga for to day were l aixus n and rr t.ie cor Uruaj Ko. 8. Wo. nominal eliaior, a id eso, I rponding. date laal yar II, 53,64. Jl. d. account Aaaoooda Atchlaoa 4 ptd Baltimore A Ohio.. Canadian Pacific ... Cheeasaak. a Okie Chicago Ot. W C. st St. r .... t Baers D. A O do pit grt. da 1st pfd 4. U pfd Grand Trunk Illlaola Central Lou I Bl vi r. v b' V ner cent. The rate of discount In the open market for ahort bllla is lk-l&alH Pr cent; for three months' bills. 1H$T 7-16 per cent. 5few Tark Moaey Market. NEW YORK. Aug. U.-MONET-On call: Easy. laiS) psr cent; ruling rate, 1 per cent; closing bid. 1 per cent; offered at li per cent. Tlma loana: Easier; sixty daya. Wfji per cent; ninety days. If per cent; six months, 3i'S t' cent PRIME MIl RC Ai TILE PAPER-JHtjH VrVftLINa EXCHANOE Steady, with actual business in bankers bills at 14 8610 for eixly-dav bills, and at 14 8a5 for de mand. Commercial bills. 4 84S,j4 8&V 8ILVKR Kar. 51Sc; Mexican dollars, 45c. BONDS Government, stesdy; railroad, Irregular. Closing quotations on bonds wsre as follows. If g ret te, rg. . . .iS Hoc. vl 4sa lt d. coupon loiSlnt. Met. 4Sa 49 C ta. eag :ii0S L A N ual 4a si da ceupoa 1"" Man a g V S. 4. rcg l.'OaM-a Central 4s J ta cew?os US do lat lac .a To the American People: It my facts have bftefi groAyed together aright. I have made absolutely plain your powerlesanesa agaloat the System. I have shown how a few men have fashioned out ot the honest joists and timbers of your civilisa tion an ingenious machine that enables them to siphon into their own cof fers the profit of your labor. I have shown these men becoming billion aires by the manipulation of this proceas; how one by one they have cap tured the innermost stronghold of goverment until the very Conatitutlon which twr fathers believed would infallibly bulwark your liberties has be come the Gibraltar of special privilege. Today the American Government is the System's, aot yours, and the laws devised for your protection are construed for the Justification and defense of their usurpations. If further proof of your Impotence were necessary, the failure of Roose velt, the acquittal of the big life Insurance grafters, the grabbing of the Equitable Life Assurance Society by the boldest of all the System masters Tom Ryan, and tht- reversal of tha Standard Oil $29,000,000 fine, and the skinning of the public and pickling of the people's Judge who dared decree) it by some other Judges, who, whei. President Roosevelt proclaimed their action an outrage of Juatlce, contemptuoualy replied, "Roosevelt oh, he doesn't count," must have proved to you that neither in the law nor in the government 16 the virtue to banish or punish these vultures of finance. If the Government la poweriesa to check or alter the conditions that have left you prostrate beneath the clawa and teeth of the plunderers, and If the law licenses the plunderer and his plundering, then there must be found some new way to cope with the enemy of the common weal. The weapons of the System must be turned against the System, and the propo sition I shall fully disclose to you in my tomorrow's advertisement Is the one to accomplish this purpose. To recapitulate: These were my conclusions in 1890 after 20 years of bouts with the System bad convinced me of the facta: 1st That any band of men who could control the banks and trust, companies, thereby for all practical purposes controlling the money of the country, would be able to fix and sway the value of the stocks and bonda of the country now 70 billions. 2d That the power to fix and away prices of stocks and bonda would give such a band the power to make take from the people unlim ited money. 3d That with the power to make unlimited money, this band must absolutely control all the affairs of the people and make business "good" or "bad" at will every kind of business. In 1890, with a full knowledge of existing financial conditions, I con cluded that through the creation of a certain type of corporate Instrument a way could be found to enable the people to do these very things for themselves. I planned an Institution directed to accomplish the purpose I had in mind, but as I added ono by one the factors requisite I despaired of uniting the combination Jn one Institution. My plan palled for a corporation, with a perpetual charter, allowing it to engage in any business, own banks and trust companies and railroads, operate manufactures and mines, buy and sell stocks and bonds, that it should have a large capitalization, expandable to any degree and free from taxation, and that It should already have complete corporate existence with a large list of stockholders, and Its stock established on the, leading American markets. To perform the functions I had designed for my Institution It was ne cessary that the System be In Ignorance of Its possibilities and plans, so at Its inception the grantor State should not Insert prohibitions tending to null ify the latitude of those using It; without freedom from taxation It would be impossible to pay taxes on its great capitalisation; If there were not a large body of stockholders it would be possible for the System to pur chase a majority1 of the stock once Its menace was realized. Above all, the complete control of the affairs of this Institution must be In the hands of some one man in whose ability and honesty of purpose the stockholders should have sufficient faith, to vots aa he saw fit at Its meetings, and that this one man should be fully empowered to Issue and sell to the public any amount of stock., to It would have In Its treasury At All times any amount of caah independent of the System's banks and trust companies, or of the Government itself. My conception was an ideal one. It did not seem possible that any' corporation In existence met all these requirements. In 1894 I found that there actually was such an Institution in being, tup Bay State Company of Delaware. . v This corpdUftion was the offspring of an tip to that time unheard of combination oT conditions. J. Edward Addlcks, controlling the State ot Delaware, for purpose of his own. In no way related to my plans, had procured from he Legislature of Delaware just such a charter as my plans called for. I entered Into a business alliance with Addlcks, and he delegated to me the financial management ot bis institution. At.no time up to the publication of this statement has Addtcks or anyone other than Standard Oil Rogers had any idea of my plans, and Rogers was acquainted only with a part of them. When I took charge of Addlcks' company's affairs, and while I was Boston, August 12, 1908. This advertisement will be continued here tomorrow. still in ignorance of his character, I Inaugurated a widespread and far reaching svstem of disposing of its stock. BylS96Bay State had becomo one of the most active properties on the New York and Boston Exchanges, and It had. through the sale or its stock, become possessed of some $10,000,000 of cash and valuable holdings. At this stage I was planning to acquire Its absolute control when two peculiar coincidents Junctured. -i Addlcks conceived the Idea of Joining with Rogers and Standard Oil. and Rogers determined to corral the Bay State Company. ---'The result was the now historical warfare between Addlcks snd Standard Oil. Out of this war and because of it, I entered into an alliance with Rogers and Rockefeller with the Intention of ultimately acquiring through them the control of the Buy State Company, holding out to Rogers and Rockefeller that through it we could consolidate the entire copper com panies of the world. The following figures present an instance of the possibilities for money making of such a corporation as my plans had called for, because if such a corporation handled the Amalgamated deal it would not only have made the profits named, but much greater ones, because It would have handled the entire deal falrlv. Notwithstanding double dealing and the smashing or the Amalgamated Copper project at Ita very beginning, the Bay State Company made over $4,000,000. Addlcks over $3,000,000, Rogers and Rockefeller over $50,000,000 and I over $10,000,000 in a short time, and with never over $1,000,000 risked. In the working out of this deal, Rogers, Rockefeller and myself, as Is known to the world, fell out, and as part of my punishment Rogers swore I should never secure control of the Bay State Company. The world is familiar with tht fight which grew out of Rogers' de termination to balk my plans. Rogers and his Standard Oil Associates used every means known to man and possible to money to first crush me. and railing In that, to com pel me to Join with them. I used "Frenzied Finance" and my following amongst the people to maintain my existence and position. The rirst step in the fight was the throwing of the Bay State Com pany, with Its then twelve to fourteen millions of assets, Into the hands of a receiver, the Intention of my adversaries being to wind up the company and thereby destroy Its charter, well knowing that such another could probably never again be secured. For five years and up to 1908 the Bay State Company remained in the hands of the Federal Courts of Delaware, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and New York, and in the kicking of Its affairs between pillar and post Its assets were shrunk to $1,750,000 cash $750,000 of this amount was eaten up by the lawyers, the Receiver snd the expenses of the courts and legal processes. Rogers at the beginning of the fight had become possesed of knowl edge enough of my plans to realize how badly I wanted the Bay State Com pany that I was prepared to pay millions for its charter, provide its or ganization and fifty and odd thousand stockholders were kept intact, and he directed all his efforts to the end that the charter would be destroyed and the organization scattered. At the beginning of the fight I caused It to be known that I waa through with the Bay State Company and wanted nothing more of It, and trained all my. guns against the copper Interests of Rogers and Rockefeller and their Standard Oil associates. The public and everyone Interested, excepting Rogers, accepted as fact the Idea that I had given up all hope of acquiring control of the Bay State Company, and after a tortuous career in the courts, the Bay State Company, shorn of all Its assets but $1,000,000, and apparently all of its power, was about to be wound up by the Courts, and its chr rter killed. Had this been accomplished, the only Instrument In America today capable or opposing and destroying the System's machinery for plundering the people would have disappeared. At Just this stage came the day I had waited for so long the Sys tem' deviltry had culminated In a disastrous panic and the American fi nancial structure was swaying like an oriole's nest in a nor'west gale, and IC is not my Intention or desire, nor Is It at all necessary to my work, to tell what "happened" between the System masters and myself during th conflagrated days and nights of the panic, or how It "happened." It is sufficient to say that tt was in my power to dictate terms, and I did so, foreswearing things vsry dear in me that I might be in the position I am today to carry to a successful completion the result I have been planning a lifetime for. - ' 1 'In Winding op the general educational part of my work, as I do with this third advertisement, I would say to the public: Don't fool yourself Into the belief that I am any more fascinated with this many-worded effort than you are. I'm not. This sort of advertising means lots of work and heaps of money to print It. I much prefer the kind of advertising you will read after tomorrow, brutally brief and merrileaaly to their point of "business Is business," but It was necessary- absolutely necessary for me to show at length and in detail, as I have done In these three advertisement. Just how the people's billions have been tricked Into the hands of the few, be fore I set forth In my final one tomorrow how the people can regain the billions of which they had been plundered. THOMAS W. LAUlfSON After you have the above and while waiting for the next chapter, remember; that the "Stock Came" Is the one game which never lets up in its milking of the people's savings. In the reign of Republicans it was good; in the Cleveland Democratic times, which followed, it was better; in McKinloy times better still, and in the Roosevelt Digstlck period stock exchange seats, the infallible barometer, sold at the highest price since the Stock Exchanges were created. The volume of business of the stock exchanges will net be lessened a fraction during the coming four years by the election of Bryan, Hisgen or Debs instead of Taft; prices will be Influenced, of course, by the election of Bryan, Hisgen or Debs, but the same ups and downs will be applied to the seventy billions of stocks It is the ups and downs that do American people out of their savings. Am Tnbacce 4a.... de aa Atrhlaon gen. 4a... o adj. a do ev. 4a de tr. (a Atlantic C. L. 4a., Bal. A Ohio 4s do IHa Bra. a. T. er. 4a.. rmral of Oa. Is. do lat Inr do Id Ine do Id Inc Cliaa. a O. 4Ha T4 ... j4 ... 40 ...13 Chicago A. Ii4a... T C. B a Q. n. ... C. S. I. i r. aa... do eel. aa da rfdg 4a. etc. a t. u g. to Colo. Ind. la Colo. Mid. 4a eols. a So. 4a ... rial, a H. cr. 4S... O. a R. O. 4a Erla p. 1. 4a do gen. 4a Japaa 4a do 4Sa 4. Id aarlaa Bid. MOffared. 7i M. a St. L. 4a M M . K. & T. 4a N JW do !a M't N. a. R. of II. e 4a H N. T. C. g. 14a .4i l.N. 1. C. g. la in Msa No. Pacific 4a lotti do la 7! 4, n 4 n. a w. t. 4. T'iC. S. L. rfdg. 4a 10 Pens. er. IWa IBIS. . . i do con. 4a 10 Raiding gn. 4a J it Rep. at Cuba ta.....lMV S. I a 1. M. e ls..l( st. u a I. r. ig. 4.. n . aa st. l a. w. e. 4... la , 17 Mboerd A. U 4a... M . 7-o. Pacific 4a It . KiS do lat as 4 . ', Rallwar ta....,..l'llt . 71- Ttiaa a P. la 114 . 4! T., St. L. W. 4... o . tl'tVnlon Pacarle 4s tot .14014 d. ct. 4s H . M U. S. Steal Id la.. .100 . IT4 Wabaah la 104 V . waatara aid. . 71 4 W. L. B. 41 . aWla. Central 4a. . al menta on Wall-street. Ttie close waa eaav. BERLIN, Aug. 11. Trading on the Bourse today was firm. PARIS. Aug. 11. Trading on the Bourse was Irregular. '4 Boatsa Stocks amd Basal. BO8TON, Aug. 11. Money, call loana, per 1 per cent: time loans. 354't per rent. Closing quotstlons on stocks and bonds; Atchlaon ad). do 4a Atchlfon R. R .... do pfd Baaton a Albanr.. Snatoa a Kama... Soaton Elrvatad Pttchburg pfd .... Mai lean Cantrsl .. N. V.. N. H. a H...144Ial. Royala M Amalgamated . 1 4 Atlantic . Bingham . M car. a Hacia. .Ill Ontasntal .lia'4 Coppar Range .U Pair Wast .... .144 franklin IS1 Qranbr I nlon Pacific Am. Arga. Cham. da pfd Am. Pacu. Tuba. Amer. Sugar do pfd Aa. t a T Am. Woalaa do pfd rMmlnion I. A S. tdlaoa Elee. Illu. Ganaral Ilactnc . liaaa. Elacuio ... do pfd Maaa. Gaa lallad fruit .... I'nttad S. at do pfd r. S. Steal da pfd Adranture Ailon.a Bd. .HIS Maaa. Mining ... ....la Michigan .... U Mont C. a C... .... -IS Old Dominion ... ....lli'4 Parrot . ...Ite Qulncr ... .llt-t Shannon . .. . 14 - Tamarack .. 91 Tnnlt .;. . 1 l' S Mining.... ....no r. s. 011 ltol'tah .... 11 Victoria .... 47 Winona .... 'Mi Wolrartn . ...H North Bntte .... Butte realities . .... il Narsda .... cl A Aiiasaa.. .. . .Ite 4 Atitona com ... . ... I Graane Cananaa .... ... 14 ..." ...IM ... UV, ... 7 ... 10 ... lit ...HI ... it 4V ... 71 ... 4614 ... U ... M ... lai ... Si ... H ...44 ... 4'i ::: 1 ... 4Si ...It. ...14 ... V ... I4S ...ir ... n ... u Treasnrr Statement. WASHINGTON. Aug. ll.-Today a state ment of the treaaury balances In the general fund, exclusive of the i&0,oOu,uuu gold re serve. Shows: Avallahlai caah kalan. a ti-in . 877,880; gold coin and bullion, 44.248,8S6'; gold uvriiiiueies, Sdt. l.59,HbU, Available Sapplles of Grala. NEW YORK. Aug. U.-8peclal cable and telegraphic communications . received by Bradfttreet'e show th following changes in available supplies as compared with prevt oua account: Wheat, fnlted States, east of Roc It lea. Increased l,"W,O0O bushels; Panada, de creased 387,000 bushels; total T'nlted Ptatea and Canada Increased 1,178.000 bushels. Afloat for and In Europe, decreased. SOfl. 000 bushels. Total AmerUan and European supply Increased. 878,000 bushels. Corn, I'nlted States and Canada, da creased 18100 bushels. Oatg, t'nlted States and Canada, Increased 392.0UO bushels. The leading Increases and decreases re ported this week follows: Increases, Newport News, Ml .000 bushels; Louisville. ;i,000 bushels; Chattanooga, W'.ooo bushels; Knoivllle, flO.ooo bushels: Omaha. 6. 000 bushels. Decresgeg. Manitoba. JOO.OO) bushels; Nashville. 75.0(0 bushels. Haw Yarat Miaua St rata. NEW YORK. Aug. 11. Closing quotations en mining storks Alice Braece Bruaavlck Cos Cam. Tut)1 stock-.. Com. Tunaei bond... Con. Cal a Va liar Sllnr.... lraa ailoar .... offered. . 4 .' 4 . it . i . M I m tadtlle Can Lull. Cktal ... Mnlca. Ontario Ophlr Small Hoses .. Standard Vtilo Jacket . I . K IV. lie . il .lie . -4 . Korelca riaaarlal. IjON'DON. Aug. 11. Money was abundant on the market today and discounts wer essy. American securities opened steady arxut parity, but they scarcely m"ved In the forenoon, deaiera awaiting devtlop- Bfetal Hin.il, NEW YORK. Aug. 11 METALS There waa quite a aharp advance In the Iondon tin market, with apot closing at U and futurea at 131. los. The local market was easy at lM.37ia S0.7S. CoDner was lower In London, with spot quoted at 61 6s and futures at 62. The local market was firm and unchanged. Lake waa quoted at 118 75 t14 X; electrolytic, til 6i3i2.R7,t: casting, f 13 37 M 13. Lead waa higher In the English market, with spot quoted at 11 las. The lorsl market was quiet at (4 .87Vj I.el'H. Spelter advanced to 1S 12s d In London. The Iocs! market wss steady, but unchanged at t4.70i&4.7S. Iron waa un changed at V (d for standard foundry, but Cleveland warranta were lower al tig d. The local market was quiet and un changed ; No. 1 foundry northern. Ild.&otrj 17.00; No. J. IIS 7Tyfj Ib id; No. 1 southern, nd No. 1 southern soft. fl.(0fil7.. 8T. LOI'18. Aug ll.-MKTAI.S-I.ead. etoedy at 14.30: spelter, tulel at 14 tJVaij 45. Kraparate Appieu sad Dried Fralta. NEW YORK. Aug. 1 1 EVAPORATICU APPLES Market It quiet for both spot and futures, with prime fruit for Novem ber delivery quoted hi ic; ferny are quoted at 1 0 tr 10Hc on apot; cholre, t ye; prime, 'a&7lc; common to fair, i f?i,c DRIED FRL'ITB Prunea are quiet, with quotatlona ranging from 4c to 11c for California and from Wc to 7c fur Oregon fruit. Apricots are quiet and with out further change, choice being quoted at IVtjae; extra cnoice, PMBitic, r.ncy. Ktlic. rrat-'ltM arc some nai vn,ii- with cnuite quoiea at eitra choice, 7, 8r: fancy, 84rHe; extra fancy, t&10c. Raisins are firm In tone, with loose muscatel quoted al 8V4C; choice to fancy aeeded. 7'c; seedless, 6 6 c; Londan layers, $l.Oi1.65. Cotton Market. NEW YORK. Aug. ll.-COTTON-Market opened barely ateady at a decline of 4ij points. Spot closed quiet. 10 points lower; middling uplands, lO.ooc; middling gulf, 10 54V; no sales. NEW ORLEANS, Aug. ll.-COTTON-Sprt eaey, H point down on all grades; middling, 10c; sale were 190 bales. Cotton futures closed: August, 8.71c; September, 8.82c; October, 8.10c; November, 9c; Decem ber, 8.99c; January. 8.08c; February, 8.06c; March, 8i;v. ST. LOCIS. Aug. ll.-COTTON-Dull; middling, lSc; stock. 17,661 bales. Will Market. Aug. 11. WOOL- BOSTON, Aug. 11. WOOL The wool market shows some Improvement especially In fleece wools. There Is a fairly active demand for one-quarter blood with a rather amall supply of Ohio sell able. Manufacturers report an Increase In orders and thla Is reflected by fresh con tracts for wool and several sizeable sals, one transaction In Oregon staple being at 18c, or 80c on a scoured basis. ST. LOCIS. Aug. 11. WOOL Firm medium grades combing and cloihfng. 19IOc; Tight fine. 16lHc; heavy fine. 11011c; tub washed. 0S2,c. 10 V tied. Philadelphia Prodoce Market. PHILADELPHIA. Aug. 11. BUTTER Firm; Sc higher; egtra western creamery. 14 He; western nearby prlnta. 26c EGGS Pennsylvania and other nearby firsts, free cases. Sic. at mark; cuui-nt receipts. In returnable rases, 20c, at mark; western firsts, free cases, 21c, at mark; current recelpta, free case. 20c, at murk. CHEESE Steady; New York full creams, choice, 12161! tic; fair to good, UVsOlic. i litn, 12 Vic; No. 3 loin, Sc. No. 1 chuck, Hc No. 2 cnut-k, lc; No. 3 chuck, 4c No. 1 round, 8Vc; No. il round. 6i,c; No. 3 round, t-c. No. 1 plate, be; No. i ptate, 41o; No. d plat, 3c. VEGETABLES Celery, ftlluhtean. par dos. Ibe. Beans, new wax ana airing, one third bu. basket. i.M; navv, per bu.. No. I, 83.70; iir.ia. Vo per lb. Cabbage. 2o pet lb. Potatoes, new, per bu., ;i.lu. Toma toes, per i-basket crate, Sue. Walarmalons. 3"O-30o. Car.talopes, California, 8.6vua08 I per crate. Asparagus, per dos., loo. cu I cumbers, per dos., toe Onlona. Bermuda 81.60 per crate; Texas yellow, (i.a per orata! Usui wuuia, v davvaxu, rw Iv.g jUO lrT- luce, per aos., 26a Peppers. ouiberSL L per crate. FRESH. FRUITS Apples. l 76418.00 per bu.hel box. Lomona, I4.boi3t.ot. oranaVa tt.Wt6.90. Bananas, 4c per To. PlumaTT t-baskel crate. Pouches. California. 4u&Ta boa; 'i'esas, 4-bsakat orate. f6&7uc. ptajV 81.60 4-bask.t crate. Blackberries, li. Rmd berrlM. 84.00 Cherries. fct-. Currant, a . ,J Iocs I 1 Gooseberries, t.UO. toUUAK-coarse gran, la ted. l.iOo; flna granulated e.Joc; cubes, auwc; powdaredT uaoo per lb. Ll ai POULTRY Hene, t0; broilers. 17u; roosters, 8c; capons, Ho; ducks, tteel geeee, c; turkeys, 14c; plgeous, doa.0.1 auuaus. i 0l dozen. , bKEtfoUD POULTHt - Squabs. 2 U DRIED FRUITU-Raialns. loosa MuaeitaL 8Vkc; fancy aeeded, l-lo. carton. 10a Cur. rams, uncl.sii.tl. to; cleaned. 80; carton, to per lb. Prunes, so) pr wck; Ud per lb. Apricots. 2s-lb. boxes. 80 per Ul id Aug. sialassca. II SUGAR Raw, It .k.. . . 1 , , 1. u , " 'I llo per lb. Peara. Calllornla. ilo. Dalai Perelan. V4c. Firs, laysrs. cholcs. iJZZ Citron. lnuc. Lemon peel, 1.10. Orania peal. lie. FISH-Halibut. he; trout. 14; pickerel 10a Plke. Uc; bullheads, skinned and dVaaiS' Uc; white perch. 8c; white bass. 17e; black 1 base, 26c; crapptes. 18c; white fish, lloj red snapper. 14c; flounders, l-'v; raaokarai! lie; codllah. fresh, frogen. lc; shad roa, taZi ! suielts. lit; frog legs. 46c; gram aea turtle 1 meat, 4c; cattlah-les. I Dia--.uta4iong by J. S Smith A Co.; ! Oreen sailed. No. 1. iOc; No. 1 c; bull ru. I. at:. jo. x. ,u; norae hid lagir K" C-XIT TAD If steady; fair refining. 3 82 Vic; centrifugal. sncep pells. JIc to 11.60; dry pelta. 10c -; ntoiaaaes sugar. i i.;tu " f' , aiy mm ttuicner hides. Uc: a ........ .j ....... I n rv fallen h.Mm li.. jk . . . ... - $17 Sc. refined, quiet; rruahed, powdered. 5 Joe; granulated, a 20c. d.voc; vHAHi wnoi,riM.r itarkkt. Caadltlaa af Traae and Qaatatloaa aa Staple asd Faaey rrodara, BUTTER Creamery, No. . dellveied ta retail trade In nr'M. 23c; No. '. la 8i-'-b. tubs. 21 Ho; No. I. In 30-lb. tubs. iJc; No t. la 80-lb. tubs. 0Vo; No. t ta 8t lb. tubs. al; N't. - 1-lb. cartoss. 31c; No 1, In carload lata, llVfco; No. J. lu ear load lots. l)18Hc) vouotry. fancy, tuba, lie: common. lc. EGGS Fresh candled. Uc dosen. . CHEESl Flaeat Wi.conaln t til crsaea. twins, 14 Vie; Young American. . In houp. lie, I aver ft. 6 la hoop. Ue; Daisy, ti ir hoop. USao; crca-u brlolt. full caae, 134e; half case, lttc; hnif uosen oricaa. 14e. N" quotations on 6ias aor iimtarrf ers un'll sfte Oclobar. ' BEKF CL'T-No. 1 rltsi 17c; No. I ribs, 11c; No. 3 rlLa. 7c No. 1 loin, llc; No. 3 ary fallen hides, he. dry salted hides.' t. UP-TO-DATE REPORTS COBtalBlog lata authentic information on Uncle Sam FREE Ccppsr, Curb and IVIining Outlook 7 at 'irtiilif 1'Ish.c. Aaw .ork 4 flatuple Copies 7ree (1.00 per 1111 31 rag-as Cov.ra Vonupnh, Goldflel.l, Ely, Butte, Coball, Yerlngion. T'ntic. binsnatu. Park Cuy. iieaver Cuunty and Itawhtda. Cor. 18th and Harney x)ia