Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 15, 1914, Page 11, Image 11

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    TI1K HKK: OMAHA. SATURDAY. AUdl'ST i:. 1014.
11
KOU BKNT
lafarwlskrd Rooms.
CLEAN, tiewty fumtsred. large, J room
ensulte; housekeeping complete; splen
did location; only $4.75 a week. 2&
Parker Pt.
lloaaee ana l ntln(ri.
ITnncno ,n " perta of the city.
"""l3 Creigh Hons Co.. Hoe Bldg.
FOU RENT
We have a complete lint of all house
r.partment and flats thnt are fnr rent.
Tli la liat can be Been free of charge at
Omaha Van ftorBge Co.. 806 S. into, St.
6-room, part mod., attractive cottage. $30;
to adults only. 24th and Capitol H. 4'.2.
$..t. 6-KOUM, modern cottage. 6f3 North
30th -t.
$9, 3 large rooms, part modern flat. 1915
Kim 1st. Phone I). 694, or 11. 4.56. evenings.
4 Omaha National.
lloiin and ( oltagra.
Ill s. MTU AVE, 13 rma.. modern. 4R.
222 N. 25th 8t., 7 roomi. modern, $42 50.
8'f 8. ISth St., down. & rma., mod., $27 50.
4540 Nicholas St., rma.. mod., new, $25.
f2 S. 29th St.. rma., mod. ex. heat, $18.
W2i Emmet St, 7 rma., all modern, M.
2M28 S. ISth St., rma.. modern, $-'1.
i 635 S. 24th Ave., 6 rma., modern. $;V
2422'i 8. 16th St.. 6 rma., part mod., $12.60.
M CAUl'E INVESTMENT COMPANY,
l.vx; podge St. P. 415.
NOKB to compare, all modern 7-room
house, alao 4-room flat, 220 No. 23d.
114 So. t.nh St., 8-r., all modern. $-'2.5u.
Hasp Proa. Douglas Vw.1.
612 So. 22d St., 12 rma., all mod., $45.00
514 So. 2?d St., 13 rma.. all mod., $45.00
615 No. 27th St., I rma., all mod., $K50
2206 So. 11th St., 9 rm, all mod., $;.(i0
846 So. 23d St.. 4 rma.. part mod., $10.60
NATHAN SOMBERO,
4?3 Bee Bldg. Pouglaa KB.
Free Rental List
Complete Information about every va
cant house und apartment In the city.
This service is free. Tel. Douglas 4477.
Fidelity Storage Van Co.
2701 Davenport St., j) rma., all mod.. ..$-17.50
2529 Cass St.. rma., all mod $35.00
1422 No. 39th St., 10 rma., all mod.. ..$'10.00
3-UO Jones St., 8 rma.. all mod $30.00
5 So. 'Id St., 6 rim, all mod $23.00
1008 Paclflo St. 4 rma.. part mod $lo.00
BIRK.ETT & COMPANY,
453 Bee Bldg. Doug. 6,13,
$30 7 ROOMS, parlor extending across
the entire rront of the house; oak fin
ish, colonnade openings; four bed rooms
and bath; fine neighborhood; near car.
AMERICAN SECURITY COMPANY,
lTth and Douglaa Sta. Pouglaa 601 8.
Fidelity Storage Co.
Storage, moving, packing and shipping.
16 & Jackson Stir Phone. Doug-, 1511
Maggard's
. Van and stor
age Co. Reduced
rates for SO daya
Large van. 2 men. $123 per br. : dray, t
men. $1 per hr. 1713 Webster- Doug-. 1481
9-ROOM. house, all modern, free water.
',04 N. 30th. Tel. D. 1530.
J. C. Reed
Exp. Co., moving,
packing & storage.
1207 Famam. D. 6146;
Mores avna Offices. .
Fine coot' room with vault, elec. light
and water free; 14x27 ft partitioned
for 2 private rooms and reception room.
Opens directly on beautiful court, .W
floor. Apply room 103, Bee Bldg.
2364 South 23th St., partly modern, $35.
BIRKETT & COMPANY,
423 Bee Bldg. Dour. 633.
FOR RENT An office with reception
room, reasonable. 614 State Bank Bldg.
A FEW,
VERT .DESIRABLE .
OFFICES
FOR RENT NOW.
THE BEE BUILDING.
OFFICE ROOK 103.
GOOD barn, room for t or M horses.
1917 Webster St. Call Douglaa 43.
REAL ESTATE
FARM A RANCH LANDS FOB SALE
Iowa.
167-ACRE FARM
7 miles of Council Bluffs. All suitable
for farming. About 15 acres alfalfa, 10
acres meadow; good cottage house, small
orchard. Splendid barn. A cheap place
at $126 per acre.
. M'GEE REAL ESTATE CO.,
106 Pearl St.. Council Bluffs.
Several good farms for sale cheap:
65 acres improved upland farm with
some fruit, good water, small buildings,
near Council Bluffs. Price $76 per acrs.
52 acres northeaat of town, all good
land, near school, fair buildings. Price
$LriO per acre, no trade considered.
M) acres about 8 miles cast of center of
city, fair buildings; good orchard, running
water. Price $125 per acre.
213 acres 6 miles north f city post
office on L,lme Kiln road, well fenced and
watered, splendid blue grass pasture;
some timber, 10 acres of corn. Pric $t0
per acre.
DAY & HESS CO.,
123 Tearl Street. Council Bluffs, la.
Hlsacwti,
150 beautiful southern Minnesota farms in
the heart of the corn belt in Watonwan,
Blue Earth and Brown counties; well im
proved and located, rich soil, sure crops;
writ for our list and beautiful booklet,
' Southern Minnesota." c. E. Brows Land
and loan Co.. Madella. Minnesota.
NO FAILURES hi Pine county, Mlnne
sota; close to best niarkois; choice
lands, easily cleared. $20 per acre; easy
FoR SALE W0 acreo 4A miles from Mln
neapolis, one mile from town; lwj acres
undr cultiv-tlo, bal. used for pasture
can practically all be cultivated; neavy
soil; good set of buildings, consisting of
-roo u house, large baru, granary, corn
cribs, etc.; the land will produce 60 bush
els of corn per acre; telephone Jn house;
country thickly eettled; complete set of
machinery; 27 head of stock, consisting of
11 cows, balance 1 and 2 years old; good
horses, 25 hoga, chickens; Vi of this year's
crop and everything on the farm goes at
tiO per acre; half cash. Schwab Bros,
gy.'t Plymouth Bldg., Minneapolis. Minn.
Mebraika.
FOUND 320-acro nomeetead In settled
neighborhood; fine tarni laud; not sand
tiUlsj oost you $200 filing lees and all. J.
A. Trocey, Kimball. Neb.
owth Dakota.
PERKINS and Harding county land,
northwestern South Dakota; natural
stock and dairy country. Corn and al
falfa grown. Good schools, water and
cheap fuel. J. D. Franklin, Sorum, 8. I).
Wisconsin.
UPPEH.
WISCONSIN.
Best dslry and general crop state In the
union; settlers wanted: lands for sale at
low prices, on easy terma. Ask for book
let 34 on Wisconsin Central Land Grant
State acres wanted. Write about our
grasing lands. If interested in fruit
lands, ask for booklet on Apple Orchards
lr. Wisconsin. Address Land Dept. Soo
Line Ry . Minneapolis. Minn.
Allacellaaeoos.
FARM BARGAINS.
1S9 seres. Dawson county. Neb., good
Improvements. $0 per acre; want resi
dence In exchange.
1x0 acres ix miles south of Council
Bluffs, worth $150 per acre; $125 takes It.
320 acres Stanley county. South Dakota;
want eastern Nebraska farm or Iowa
farm.
1 acres Aitkin county. Minnesota; want
residence In Omaha or auto.
WESTERN REAL ESTATE CO.,
Phone D. 37. Omaha.
REAL ESTATE LOANS
W ANTEP City loans Peters Trust co.
OMAHA homes. East Nebraska farma
O KEEFE REAL ESTATE CO.,
1014 Omaha Nat. Douglas I71A
MC.N'KY en hand for city and farm loana
- w. ninaer. city ml b. eiai
GARVTX BROS u
T IJAVV-'O. omaha Nat, Ran.
nv.h KST.VTK LOANS
rJfZ, CITY LOANS. Bemls-Carlberg Co.,
" 110-312 Brandela Theater Bldg.
WANTED City loana and warrant.
W. Ftrmm Smith Ik Co.. 1370 Fsrnam.
CI'l'Y property. Liirae loans a specialty.
W. If. Thomas. 223 State Bang Bldg.
$)' to IIO.uim made promptly F. D.
weed. Weed Bldg.. 1Mb and Fsrnam.
CITY and farm loana. 6, 51. t per ctnt.
J.H.Dumont Co . 1H0.1 Farnam, Omaha
HARRISON MORTON. 916 Om Nat
SEE us first If you wsnt s farm loan,
United States Trust Co., Omaha, Neb.
HKAL ESTATK KOK KXCllANtii:
FOR EXCHANGE Several good Missouri
farms for Nebraska farms Writ what
you have. Ouy R. Stanton. Lebanon. Mo.
Pianos for other musical Instru ta L W.
ABSTRACTS OK TITLE.
KERR Title Ousrantee and Abstract Co..
a modern abstract office. $o So. 17th
Pt. Phone Pouglaa 64S7.
RKEU Abstract Co.. oldeat abstract of
fice In Nebraska. 306 Brsndels Theater.
HKAL KSTATK NORTH 81 DK
Taken In Trade.
Price Cut to $2,275,
, Worth $3,000
2418 Larlmore Ave. Six rooms, strictly
modern but furnace; In first-class repair
in every way. Full south front lot ; con
siderable hearing fruit; Just off 24th St.
car line. If you want a homo, we doubt
if you can find a better one for $2,775.
Terms very easr.
HASTINGS 11KTPEN, 1614 Harney St
Eight-Room House,
$3,200
Eight rooms and bath: lot Wx127: high
and dry. New garago. aultable for 3
machines or team and one machine ce
ment floor, water and sewer. Not one
dollar need be spent on house or garage.
This la greatest snap in city. Owner liv
ing In same. Inquire Charles Koran, 221S
Grant St.
NEARLY new. 2-atory house; 8 lurge
rooms; best corner In Kountze I 'lace;
$4,700; payments like rent; owner out of
city; must sell. 2101 Pinkney St; faces
Kountie Park. Call H. M. Johnson. Web
ster 6002. O
New Bungalow
This is the place you have been looking
for. It Is an attractive, rough cast, white
stucco, two-story bungalow, with oak
floors and finish, modern plumbing, elec
eric lights, large closets and furnace. All
ready for you to move into. It is all mod
ern and on the Ieaf Institute car lint,
paved street, cement walks. Address
1705 N. 45th St. Thla Is worth seeing to
day. Can be bought on easy payments.
Key at our office.
Creigh, Sons & Co.
Pouglas 200.
608 Bee Bldg.
New Fine Home
On Florence
Boulevard
In Norwood
Large living room, fire place, book
cases, open stairway, beam ceilings; din
ing room with high built-in sideboard,
quarter-sawed oak wainscoatlng five
feet high, and beautiful wall decorathma,
I8-1"8" butler s pantry and large kitchen;
three fine large bed rooms and bath on
second floor, nicely decorated; full base
ment with laundry nnd toilet. Investi
gate and you will find this an excep
tional bargain. Price $4.S60. Terma. Lo
cated 6218 Florence Boulevard.
M Norris & Norris
400 Bee Building. Phone Douglaa 4270.
Kountze Place
Bungalow
Corner Lot
Located at the northeast corner of 18th
and Evans Sts., facing south on Evans,
having five good-sized rooms, consisting
of large living room, dining room, kitchen,
bath and two bedrooms, one of which
may be used for den or library. Liv
ing room is 12x22 feet, having a very
artistic fireplace and bookcases occupy
ing one end, also beam celling. Beautiful
plastered pedestal opening with columns
between living room and dining room.
Dining room 12x15 feet with beam celling
and paneled walla. This bungalow Is
decorated throughout In excellent taste.
Tile bath with exceptional attractive
plumbing fixtures, plumbing and heating
guaranteed. Very attractive combination
lighting fixtures. Full basement arranged
for laundry, exceptionally large attic,
floored throughout, where three full
rooms could be finished if desired. Full
set of window shades and screens. Is
ready to occupy without further expendi
ture. It will necessitate a persona Inspection
to appreciate the beautiful interior ar
rangement and artistic exteriur design.
Can arrange reasonable terms.
Hiatt-Fairfield Co.
231 Omaha Natl. HanK Hldg. Doug. 4hR.
NEW, TWO-STORY BUNGALOW, 6
rooms and sleeping porch, oak finish, full
cement basement, furnace heat, lot 00x124
feet, paved street; large auto garage, lo
cated H block from Kountze Park. Price
tl.MW; terma, or smaller house or vacant
lot as first payment.
Rasp Bros.
10s McCague Bldg.
Douglas 1U3.
REAL ESTATE SOUTH BIDE
A 5-Koom Home,
$1,100. Easy Terms.
30U g. 28th Ave S rooms, close to west
end of Vinton St. viaduct. Iot not wide
but regular length. $125 cash will handle
this.
HASTINGS A HETDEN, 1014 Harney St.
5-R. Cottage Home
Near U. P. Depot
N. E. corner 7th and William Streets
brand new bungalow, 6 f.rge rooms, full
basement, stairs to altlc. Houae Is
thoroughly modern In every respect; nbe
corner lot. This property can be pur
chased on easy terms mid Is worth you
time and attention. Price $3,KjO; $30v or
4io cash, balance monthly.
Payne & Slater Co.
tli Omaha Nat l Bank Bldg.
REAL ESTATE WEST SIDE
BKALTIFl L home in exciusiv West
Farnam district. Owner will be In town
for cne week only and must sell Immedi
ately. Burroughs Adding Machine com
pany, 309 Jsouth I3tl St., city. Doug-72yL
REAL ESTATE SUBURBAN
Benson.
Modern Benson
Home, $875 Cash
Balance $35 and Interest monthly; three
to" '"' Irnt 'U' hlhet of
teTTot blocka ouUl of car: hou on een-
Nlne rooms, very modern, nearly new.
big furmvee, flM floor,, all ln tt
ordrr; built only 4 years; auto houses with
cement floor; barn, chicken house and
yard, shrubbery, price $.( fr ,11 or
will take $y less for place with I l" U "r
Jl bOO less with 1 lot. Today Is the t" me
here is your home. A.k us to show von
KKEFE REAL ESTATE CO.
101b Omaha National Bank Iouglaa2715
Sundays or Evenings Harn.y oii.
HKAL FSTATE stni'RRAN
t'nanrll lllaffa.
piah'k of u uvrs.
$1.?oo, easy terms. Council Bluffs, 4
Nocks of Omaha ear line. Nice high
ground These lots are very cheap.
They are within about a mile of the busi
ness part of Omaha. They will grow In
value every year and meantime will
make you a rood homo where ou can
have a garden, fruit, chickens, a cow,
etc., and hava room for your children
to play
M'GEE REAL ESTATE CO..
l'W Pearl St , Council Bluffs.
Dandee.
Dundee Stucco
Home
8 rooms, all modern, hot water heat.
I-ocated on south front lot x!l5 ft.
blocks from car line. Irlc only $4.7.Vi.
$1,750 cash, balance per rent straight
loan. House cost about $4X exclusive
of lot and Is finish d In ok w ith onk
floors. Price reduced for quick sale. Key
at our office.
George & Company
903 City Nat I Bank Bldg. Phone D. 7M
1 ! K A 1 1 KSTATK --M IHCKLLA N KOI S
T-ROONi houae, rente for $18 50, must be
sold at once: t will handle It H. 471L
A
-Small Home
Must sell at great sacrifice; small cash
payment; balance long time; mortgage;
neany new; everything right. Address B
Ml, Bee.
TRACKAGE Seven trackage lota An
Ideal location for a cement block factory.
You may buy one or more of these lots
on terms of $.1 down and $ Per month
w ithout Interest. Price, $125, $24. $20, $200.
$275, $, $2!w. Phone Pouglas 2;1.
H. H. HARPER.
1013-14 City National Bank Bldg.
$X.iW FOR quick cash sale. Income prop
erty. 12 per cent Call ownei, liar-
ney 611".
No Commission Realty Co.
318-330 Paxton Block,
Douglas 1940. Omaha, Nab.
Is being syatematlsed to meet the re
quirements of efficiency In selling or ex
changing every kind of property located
anywhere with NO COMMISSION TO
PAY. Call, writ or phone today
REAL ESTATE ACREAGE
Two Acres
Splendid View .,
$20 Cash, $15 a Month
Adjoining Benson, one block off paved
road. An Ideal home site. Land slopes
off gently to the south and west. An
Ideal -place for raising fruit and poultry
and near enough to work In town.
ITIce $1,200.
HASTINGS ft HT3YDBN, 1614 Harney Bt
A Little Farm
On Military Ave.,
$25 Cash, $20 a Month.
2.34 acres; a nice corner on paved roAd;
lays well and Is a dandy piece. Paving
all paid. Paved all the way into town.
Will divide Into 13 nice east front lots.
Price $1,500.
HASTINGS HEYDKN, 1814 Harney Pt
LEGAL NOTICES.
SALE OF BONDS.
Notice la hereby given that sealed pro
posals will be received by the Board of
Ii rectors of the Alliance Irrigation Dis
trict at its office In Bridgeport, Morrill
countv, Nebraska, until 10 o5clock a. m.
of Tuesday, Heptemoer 1, 1114, for the
Purchase of Its total Issue of district
onds In the sum of Forty-five Thousand
Dollars ($45,000), payable In series from
eleven to twenty years after date as pro
vided by statute with six per cent
net from July L 1914.
Dated Bridgeport, August 4, 1914. Alli
ance irrigation District.
Attest: FRED D. BREYER,
President.
(SEAL) R. B. O'NEAL,
A-. Secretary.
DUN'S REYM OF TRADE
Further Progress Hade in Meeting
Serious Problems ,
CONDITIONS DAILY IMPROVING
Opejilna; Made in ForelsTO Exchange
by Which It is Possible to
Move Some Wheat for
Export.
NEW YORK. Aug. H.-Dun'g Review
will say:
Further progress has been made In
meeting the serious problems of money,
exchange Insurance and trade, arising
out of the Euroiean war. The govern
ment is co-operating with bankers and
merchants In dealing with the unpre
cedented situation and an Important
conference was held In Secretory Mc
Adoo's office in Washington, to which
many leading business men were in
vited. While many exchanges remain closed
and the foreign exchange embargo con
tinues, conditions are dally Improving
and courage Is displayed ln meeting each
new emergency. An opening has been
made In foreign exchange, by which It
la possible to move some wheat for ex
port. Failures In the United States for the
week were 313, against 272 last year. In
Canada forty-five, against thirty-eight
last year.
BRAOSTllKKT'S TRADE REVIEW
War's I'naettlement Felt In All
Lines of Business.
NEWYORKT Aug 14-BiHdstreets
will say tomorrow:
War unaetlempnt runs broad and deep
throughout nearly all lines of American
trade and Industry and commodity prices
fluctuate sharply, though generally tend
ing higher. Btlll many features are evi
dent which seem bound to bring about
an ultimate restoration of now greatly
disorganised forces.
The Federal Reserve board has begun
work, the possible strike of western rail
way men has been averted and sub
mitted to mediation, the railway freight
rate situation haa been to a certainty
eettled, banking and currency conditions
are settling down to an approximation
of normal, considering existing condi
tions; popular uneasiness as to financial
matters has been largely conspicuous by
its absence and the arrival of much
needed rains has helped cotton, late corn
and other late planted crops. Efforts
to restore the foreign exchange market
to something like normal are found In
the attempts toward an approach to a
system of payment for goods exported
U other countries.
Bank clearings for the week ending
Auguat 13, at $2,216,IM.QU0, a decrease of
19.4 per cent from 1U13; failures at ?K,
against 272 in 1913; wheat en ports at
3.it.313 bushels, against 7,517.f4.
Connell Quarantines
Three Mail Carriers
Three employes of the Omaha poatof
floe have been quarantined by Health
Commissioner R. W. Connell, for failure
to be vaccinated. All others hava pro
duced certificate of vaccination, either
"regular" or homeopathic. Although the
latter have not been declared acceptable
by Dr. Connell. be has taken no action
against the men who hold them, and it
is thought that the "homeo" powder
treatment will be satisfactory in the pres
ent smallpox situation. In which no new
cases have been found. The men quaran
tined are: II. II. Schrelver, special de
livery carrier, 2221 South Seventeenth
street; Rsy Short, 1223 South Twenty
seventh street; James Cavsnaugh, Hi
North Twentieth street. South Omaha;
tilt latter two being postal clerks.
GRAIN AND PRODUCE MARKET
Foreign Msrkfii in Mood to Buy
Flour Only.
CORN OFFERINGS ARE LIBERAL
Heavy Rains lanace Many Farmers
to Offer to Rell Off onie of
Their Reserve fork at the
Present High Trices.
OMAHA, Aug II. l;U4.
The J. Rosctihaum Oraln company re
ceived a special cable from Liverpool
yesterday raying that It was difficult to
sell wheat owing to the number of rgr
goes diverted to that market; that the
trade la not inclined to buy additional
wheat In America except on the usual
payment terms.
Flour Is wanted In the old world, a
was shown bv the action of all Importing
concerns yesterday. The Mar and Cres
cent Milling company sold a lot of flour
for shipment to the old world several
W'eoks ago, or previous to the breaking
out of the war, and shipment was refused
unless the flour was paid for In advance.
Wheat closed VulV' lower yesterday
and the volume of trade was exception
ally small. k-rger commission houses
were free sellers, while the buying was
led by shorts and those who believed
that prices are likely to do better with
the. export moverm-nt under way.
A late rally In oats carried prices close
to the previous closing mark. A message
from New York stating that oata had
been taken for export at that market
waa largely responsible for the late firm
ness. It is pointed out by tha bulls that
where Canada snld us large quantities of
oata last year there waa a probability of
Ha buying from us thla year.
Trading in provisions waa smaller.
There were only a few trades In pork and
It closed unchanged with Wednesday.
Eard and ribs opened a little higher ln
aymnathy with the better feeling at the
yarda, but they quickly reacted and re
mained almost stationary around tha
bottom levels.
Wheat waa le lower. Corn was to
IH cents lower. Oats were unchanged.
Winnipeg reported hedging sales there
.gain on new wheat which is expected
to move early. Fears there, however, are
entertained of losses by frost.
Kneouraged by the recent rains' and by
the high prices prevailing, the country
was disposed to sell more corn yesterday,
Particularly those farmers In Illinois and
lowa. The sales of cash corn to arrive
were very liberal yesterdlar and local
receivers said that much grain was of
fered above the market. This weakening
tone In the cash market naturally had
Its effect on corn futures. liquidation
waa quite heavy and new crop months
suffered the brunt of the attack. There
was a notice about decrease in the eastern
demand for cash com here yeeterdav.
Liverpool cloaed: Wheat Hd lower;
oorn, Hd higher; prices nominal.
Primary wheat receipts were 1.824.000
bushels and shipments of 43,0uO bushels,
against receipts of 1.470,000 bushels and
shipments of 464,000 bushels last year
Primary corn receipts were f.23.000 bush
els and shipments of 4M.0U0 bushels,
against receipts of 381,000 buahela and
Shipments of 215,000 bushels last year.
Primary oats receipts were 1.489,000
bushels and shipments of S76,0iO bushels,
against receipts of 1,247,000 bushels and
shipments of 4M.O0O bushels lsst year.
, CARLOT RECEIPTS.
. , Wheat. Corn. Oals.
Chicago 2;4 xtj joj,
Minneapolis 16S
Duluth 23 ... ...
9mah 68 f.S 48
Kansas City STS 1 25
St. Douls J4H &1 ;i
Winnipeg KS
These sales wera reported todav : Wheat
No. 2 hard winter: cars. 87c: No. 3
hard winter: 3 cars. 8Sc: 1 car. Wic; 3
cars, S7o; 4 cars. 86c; 2 cars, Slc; 2
cars, M V. No. 4 hard winter: 7 cara, 84c;
2 cara, 2c; 1 car (smutty). 84c No. 3
spring: 1 car. 92c. Corn No. 1 white: 1
car, 7c; 6 cars, 7Mic. No. S white: 1 car,
7sc. No. S white: 1 car, 78c. No. 1 yellow:
1 car, 79e; 1 cars, 78Vkc No. S yellow:, 2
cars, 78Wc. No. 6 yellow, 1 car, 774c No.
yellow; 1 car. 77Hc; I car, 774c; 1 car
77c; No. 1 mixed: $ cars. 78c. No. 2
mixed: I car, 78c; 1 car. Tic. No. 3
mixed: 1 car. 77c. No. 6 mixed: 1 car,
7t4c; 2 cars, 76c. No. t mixed: 1 car, 77c.
Hample: 1 car (yellow), 77c; 1 car, 76c; I
car, 71c. Oata Standard: 1 car, 3dc. No. S
white: 1 car (choice), 3S&o; 16 cars, 3hc;
4 cara, 31c.. No. 4 white: 6 cars, 37c.
Omaha Cash Prices Wheat: No. 2 hard,
RtVSHOc; No. 8 hard, s4HGc; No. 4 hard,
82'uk;; No. 2 spring, 8'iilc; No. (spring,
hK-gWc; No. 4 spring, 84fnXNc; No. 2 durum,
8IX&H2C; No. I durum, 79ro81c Com: No.
2 white, 7778c; No. 3 white. 77Vv&'77ir;
No. 4 white, T!&7!ic: No. 2 yellow, 781
78c; No. S yellow, 78",g7SHo:. No. 4 yel
low. 78fr78ic: No. t mixed. 77W8o; No.
3 mixed, 77(8T7'4o; No. 4 mixed. 7(&77c.
Oats: No. 2 white, ft&SftK'ic; standard.
3M43Se: No. 1 white. JN&SS'c; No. 4
white. 37VWe7c. Barley: Malting, RW
00c; No. 1 feed, 4R-?r60c. Rye: No. 2, 73V4y
74c: No. 3. 7373Wc.
CHICAUO UHAM ANU FKUVISIUNS
Featnres of thet Trading; nnd Closing
Prices on Hoard of Trade.
CHICAGO, Aug. 14. Trading on 'change
today waa the lightest since the begin
ning of the European war. Buying almost
ceased at times owing to bearish Elver pool
cables and because of discouragement re
garding tha lack of exports. Wheat closed
heavy, l(&2c under last night.
Corn finished Slc down, oats off He
to Vo and provisions varying from 2bc de
cline to a shade advance.
Resting orders to buy wheat on a de
cline could no longer be traced. One of
the reasons was a general belief that a
cargo seized and diverted to British ports
had a good deal to do with the lowering
of quotations at Liverpool and with a
break of U'Ac a bushel at Winnipeg.
Boneflclal rains and tha fact that re-V
celpta here wera larger than expected
contributed to weakness In the corn mar
ket. At one stage prices rallied owing to
the rumors of large export sales of oats,
but the effect on corn failed to last. Oats
were better sustained than other cereals.
It was persistently declared that both
England and France had been buying oe.is
today and yesterday In New York.
Provisions averaged lower, notwith
standing that tho hog market had an
upward slant. Large holders seemed dls-y
posed 10 unioaa ana mere appearea to be
no active support except a little from
packers and shippers late In the day.
Grain prices furnished oy Logan Si
Bryan office, 315 fciouth sixteenth street:
Artlclol Open. High. 1-ow. (1ose.Yes y.
Wheat- I I ' i I
Bept ii214ffl2) 90-; 0'4 93j
Dec..9M?n7'i ! ti H
May. I 1 06 I 1 05 1 0JV 1 07
Corn- 1 1
Kept. 78-W-sl ' 77H 77! 80
Dec.. tWWul y 8 68 I 72
May. 70Vusl 7U W tHI 72'
Oats- I I I I
Bept. 4IHI 42 1 41H 41Vif 42
Dec. 4d I b 44H 44 4f.'B
May. 47!r48 4814 47 4fHB
Pork
Sept. i2 25 22 25 22 15 I 22 IS 22 25B
Jan.. I 21 25 21 25 21 25 21 25
Lard
rpt ' 5M?46 lit I 42S 50 $60
Oct.. H 75 i 75 8 60 ( SO
Jan..10 i.i2 10 05 10 00 10 00 12 12'.
Bibs
Hept.l 12 60 12 75 12 60 12 67V 12 72H
Oct.. 12 30 12 35 13 26 13 30 12 4.,
Jan JlO 97-11 11 07H 10 96 11 00 11 16
B, bid.
New York 4ienrral Market.
NEW YORK, Aug. 14. BUTTER
Firm: creamery extras. ZSej'JU'v'; firsts,
25-26'V: seconds, Si'2."; proves ex
tras. 23'ar24Vic; ladles, current make,
firsts, 2JVo; seconds, 21H832c; packing
stock, current make. No. 2, aotf'SOc.
E(K .steady; receipts. H.8&J cases;
fresh gathered extrss, 27Q28c; extra firsts,
25&2bc; firsts, 23324c; seconds, 2022c,
stale, Pennsylvania and nearby hennery,
while, IMJUc; gathered, white. 2rV(a2c;
western gathered, white, tWC7e; stats,
Pennsylvania and nearby hennery
browns, !(vo)c: gathered, brown and
mixed colors, 2327c.
.
Minneapolis Grain Market.
MINNEAPOLIS. Minn.. Aug. 14
WH EAT 4ptemher, 6i,p; No. 1 hard,
IL11V; No. 1 northern. $l.u2Wl 0H4; No.
2 northern. toc'uil.U6.
Metal Mnrket.
8T. IJt'IH, Aug 14-METALS-Lead
asler at 1170m 3. 73. Bpelter, easier at
$j.37'u5.jO.
Omaha Mil Market.
OMAHA, Aug. 11-HAY-Pralne. No. I
choice upland. tU.Ma 12 uO; No. i $V.(xKf
11 uO; No. 3. $7(0cu0; No. 1 choice mid
land. $10 50011.00; No. Z, tvOugiOM, NJ,
$; v,,i ,m: Xr, 1 rholre. lowland. $i ftvp 60;
No. 2, $imj8.fln; No. 3, f 1 U'ri on straw:
Choice out or rye, l.iti.Yt; choice wheat,
tuoii4.",0 .Mfaiia: Choice, $ SMVil4H; No.
1. $1. 5 w'13 j0; No. J, $u.0v 12.W.
. . 1
OM4II4 .K.NKII4I. M 4 It K KT
RCTTER No. 1, 1-lb. rartoons. i:c; No.
1. 60-lb till. 27c.
CHEESE-Imported Pwla. 54c; Ameri
can Swiss. 24c. block Swiss. '-'-V; twins,
17c; daisies, 17'.c; triplets. ITSc; Young
Americas. 1lc, blue label btlck, 1iV
llmburger, I-IK. IV; 1-11... 20c; New York
White. 1!V.
Klsll White, lie; trout. 1Hc; large rrap
ples, 12c; shad roc, er pslr. ,'k-, salmon,
lie; halibut, Hc: buffalo, 10c: channel
catfish, 1 c; pike, 1.1c; pickerel, c
l"OCl.TRY Broilers. 2c; liena. 12c
rocks, 8ic; ducks. So; geese, 8c; turkeys
16c; plrgona. per doien. WV; ducks, full
feathered, kc; goose, full feathered, 8c;
squabs, No. 1, $1 W; No. 2. 50c.
HOUS Receipts, $1,000 hcud. tnsrket,
liull; bulk, $V25MV.; light. IS aHiNMH
mixed. t.Wfl.; licavv. soili8 70; rough
$mm8I0, pigs. $:.2."is .
HEEFCl-T8-KIIs, No. 1. 19',c; No. I.
17V; N 3, 14V loins. No I. 21V;
No. 2, 17c; No. S, KV Chucks, No. 1.
12iC; No. 2. 12'c; No 3, IOV4C Rounds.
No. 1. 15V; No. 2. l.'tc; No. 3, 13V.
Plato. No. 1, 8V; No. S. 7V: No. S. 6W0.
1'iices furnished by the Ollllnsky Fruit
company:
FIll'ITS OranRa: Extra fsncy Olen
dora Valenclae. !'. ll-'s, IJria, 150a. 17iis,
iocs and Z'r, $3 75 per box; Red Ball
Valenclas. all allies. $t U) per box. leinonn:
Extra fancy Uoklrti How I, 3ia. $ViO
per box; Fancy Hllvrr Cord. 300s. 30s,
$7.j0 per box. Orape Fruit Extra Fancy
54s, $4 50 per box; extra fancy 4ls, $4 00
per box: extra fancy S6a. $3.50 per box;
Indian River 64a and 8o, $6.00 per box.
Apples: Duchess, 4.0 per bbl.
CALIFORNIA FRl'lTS Black Dia
mond plums, $1.7T per bbl.; Red plums,
$1 t per bblj California peaches, fc&c per
box: California Hartlett pears. 50-lb.
boxes. $2.2.'. per box; Washington Hart
lett pears, $2.25 per box; Colorado Carmen
peaches, 6ic per box.
VEGETABLES Cnhliagp. !',c per lb.;
ft. tons, IV) per lb; poppers, 0O0 per basket;
fancy tomatoes, tc per basket; cucum
bershot house, (2 dos. basket), 75c per
basket, new beets, carrots, turnips, 25o
dos; celery Michigan, 35c per dox; celery
Denver, large Jumbo', $1.00 per dos; head
letuce, 50c to II.IW per doi; leaf lettuce,
40o pr dos; onions, home grown 16o per
dox; radishes. 5V per dos; garlic, Italian,
20c per lb; horse-radish, $i.t6 per case;
shelled pop corn, 4o 4rr case;, asparagus,
home grown, per dos, market price about
30c per dox.
PAT ATOES New, 75c per husheU
WATEHMEUlNS-lV per lb
CANTAlAid'E.1 Arlxona standards,
$250 per crate; Jumbos, $2.00 per crate;
ponys, $1.75 per crate.
BANNASi$l.75 to $2.60 per bunch.
N UTS halted peanuts, $1.50 per esse;
No. 1 California walnuts, 18V per lb.;
pecans. 12V per lb; filberts, 15c per lb;
almonds. 20c per lb; pop corn, 4c per lb.
MISCELLANEOUS Sugar walnut
dates,. $1.25 per box: limes, $1.75 per
basket; erackerlark, $.150 per rase; half
case, $1.16; checkers, $3.50 per esse; half
case, $1.76.
Torn nnd Wheat fieajina Balletln.
Corn and wheat region bulletin of tha
United fcStates Department of Agrtoultun.
weather bureau, at Omaha, for the twenty-four
hours ending at 8 a, m , 76th
meridian time, Friday, August 14, 1914:
OMAHA DISTRICT.
Temp.- Baln
Hlgh. Low. fall. Hky.
Ashland 85 63 .00 Clear
Auburn 88 M0 .00 Cloudy
Broken-Bow ... 84 60 . 07 It. cloudy
Columbus 83 6 .00 It. cloudy
Culbertson 92 67 .16 Clear
Falrbury 88 62 . 78 Cloudy
Fairmont 87 62 .00 Pt. cloudy
Orand Island .. 82 62 .(0 Cloudy
Hartlngton 84 o .00 Cloudy
Hastings 82 62 .no Pt. cloudy
Holdrege 94 63 .00 It. cloudy
Lincoln 84 64 .00 Cloudy
North Platte... 86 62 .00 It. cloudy
Oakdale 80 60 .44 Cloudy
Omaha 83 63 .00 Cloudy
Tekamah 85 M .00 Cloudy
Valentine 80 62 .04 Clear
Alta. la m 63 . Clear
Carroll, la 83 62 .) Clear
Clarlnda, la.... 90 60 ,0ft .Cloudy
Hlblev, la 78 4 .00 Clear
Sioux City, la.. 82 56 .00 Cloudy
Minimum temperature for twelve-hour
period ending at $ a. m.
DISTRICT AVERAGES.
No. of Temp. Rain-
District. Stations. High. Low. fall.
Columbus. 0 18 86 62 .00
Louisville. Ky... 22 86 66 . 30
lndlapolls, lnd.. 13 88 62 . 40
Chicago. Ill 24 86 56 .60
St. louls. Mo.... IS 94 62 . 60
Dea Moines, la.. 24 66 62 .00
Minneapolis 62 76 46 .no
Kan. City. Mo 34 92 64 . 30
Omaha, Neb 17 6 60 ,W
Cool weather prevails throughout the
corn and wheat region. Appreciable rains
occurred In all except the Minneapolis,
Des Moines and Columbus dlsalcts. Rains
of one Inch or more occurred as follows:
In Illinois Olney, 1.80: Decatur, 1.10; Chea
ter, 1. ln Indiana Notre Dame, 1.40.
L. A. WELSH.
Local Forecaster, Weather Bureau.
. Price of Refined Oil Red need.
NEW YORK, Aug.. 14. The Standard
Oil company of New York today an
nounced a reduction of fifteen points In
the price of refined poiroleum In barrels
for export, making the quotation 8.10
cents per gallon.
' Dry tioods Market.
NEW YORK. Aug. 14 DRY GOODS
Fine cotton good sold more freely today
for spot and future delivery. Print cloths
lower. Foreign wool easier. Domestic
wool firm, l-arge. cotton goods house
placing cotton goods in whih dcye stuffs
are used largely at value. Several lines
of men's wear withdrawn from aule ami
others advanced because of the acute dif
ficulty in securing dye stuffs.
Rank Clearings.
OMAHA. Aug. 14-Bank clearings for
Omaha today were $2,607,341.72, and for the
corresponding day last year $2,690,336.77,
C HICAGO MVK B TOt K MARKET
Cattle Firm Hons Ten to Fifteen
Cents Higher.
CHICAGO, Aug. 14 CATTLE Re
ceipts, 1.500 head; market firm; beeves,
$7,2iV(4l0.50; steers, tti.WqV.Xi; stockers and
fredets. $5.5u4iK. 10; cows and heifers, $3.75
49.30; calves, 50ft 11.7.').
HOGS Receipts. 9.000 head; market 1049
15c higher, but closed weak; bulk of sales,
$9. 10419.60; mixed, $x.80diJ.of; heavy, $S.60ia
9 50; rough, K.0..: pigs, $7. 0 en 6. 85
HHEEP AN DLAMBH Jiecelpta, 14.0U0
head; market firm; sheep, $530ij6.1&; year
lings, $0.25 7. 15.
Kansas 4 Ity Live Stock Market.
KANSAS CITY. Aug. 14. CATTLE-
Receipt 1, 1,700 head: market higher; prime
ted steers, $9.6UM 10 25; dressed beef steers,
$ Wiri.50; western steers, $7.(Moi SO;
stockers snd feeders, $6.0tKU8.30; bulls, $5.25
tlibV; calves, $6.5X0'1O.75
HOGS Receipts, 2,6ii0 head; market,
higher; bulk, $9.2f.ft9..'.',; heavy, $9.4.Vfiy.55;
Packers and butchers, $9.259.55; light,
9 .'n9 50; jiigs, $8 .OKaS 75.
hllEr.P AND LAMBS Receipts. 1,500
head; market strong; lambs, $8 OMtH 4",;
yearlings, $5.75gti.65; wethers, $i.25tfj6.8j;
ewes, $j.O0Uij.6o.
Mt. I.onls Live Mtoi-k Market.
ST. I)C1S, Aug. 14. CATTLE Re
eel ils, 1.400 head: market steady; nstive
beef steers. $7.504110.10; cows and he.lfers,
$.0t(i9 60; Blockers and feeders. $5,0117.511;
southern steers. $6.(kiiN.25; cows and heif
ers, 40"476.50; native calves, $6 (H-y'l 1 .00.
HOGS Receipts, 3 509 besd; market
higher; pigs and llglita, $7.Ui'.60; mixed,
and butchers, $9.3C,0O.76; good heavy, $9.46
ij'.i v,.
SHEEP AND I.AMB-Re.elpts. 1.100
head: market strong: native muttons,
$4.61X46.25; lambs, $7.0iV465.
Mens (II r Live Htork Market.
SIOl'X CITY. Ia.. Aug. 14.-CATTLK-
Rac..oIS Mi head' rtiMrWet .lu.u' mul..
steers, r.fta9 ; butchers, $5. 757.00; bulls.
lass, en ., t "(Ti.ipr
HtGS Receipts. 4.500 head; market, 15o
higher; heavy. $.fl04i9 06; mixed, $8.Hfy!( 00;
light. $8i-K08.; bulk. $A95i(i9O0.
SHEEP AND LAM Bal Receipts, 101
head; no quotations
OMAHA BOY MADE CHIEF
OF PHILIPPINE POLICE
Colonel Wallace C. Taylor, son of Cadet
Taylor of Omaha, has temporarily been
made acting chief of the Philippine con
stabulary, according to word Just re
ceived by his father. The appointment
waa made by the secretary of war on the
recommendation of Governor General
Francis Burton Harrison of the Islands.
OMAHA L1YE STOCK MARKET
Cattle Receipts Light and Fricei on
All Kinds Firm
HOGS TEN TO FIFTEEN HIGHER
Fat heen steady to Strong and Fat
I .a nibs steady to Ten tents
lllaher All old In
tiood Season.
SOI'TH OMAHA. Aug II. 1914
Receipts were: Cattle. Hogs. Sheep.
Otlicial Monday 6.ii 1..WI 15.441
Official Tucrdsy 2,34j 4.J51 14. 467
orriclal Wednesday.... I.7H2 7.760 12.6W
Official Thursday .... 1,421 7.VH 8.4!M
Estimate Friday 5.0 7.0H0
Five days thla w eek .11.955 25 .J
Same days last w eek. . 0 4 9,Vi
Same daya i weeks agvll.5i 3.r,6
Same days $ weeks ago 11.245 40.046
Same days 4 weeks ago. 7,167 JH.fiX
Sumo days last year... l.aiji 37.H5N
58,0,12
64.I9S
.!
66.357
42.511
51.020
I lie following tablo snows the receipts
of cattle, hoga and sheep at the South
Omaha live aiock market for the year to
date as compared with last year:
1914 1913. Inc. Dec.
Cattle 4M.577 h S6.232
Hogs 1.6110.8:41 1.7IW.618 l.7iJt
Sheep 1.387.483 1,218.149 169.3M
The following table shows the receipts
prices for hogs at the South Omaha live
lock market for the last few days, with
comparisons :
Date. I 1H14, im.U9H.II91l 11910. l.llaus.
July W.l 8 44S 8 561 7 731 6 69 I 7 44 41
Aug. 1..I $ l $ 6J. $ 761 64, 7 60 $41
7 60
1 60
Aug. 3..1 I 4S T m 691
Aug. 1 t 04l I 7 Ki 761
Aug. 4. 7 6SI I 41 I 6 92
Aug. 6. T 7u' 8 2.t Ml 7 041
Aug. 6. 7 85 171 7 981 I
Aug. T.. 8 22 8 19! T T 161
Aug. I. , t 6.'V I 1 T 83 : 7 281
Aug. .. $ 18 7 891 7 27
7 49
7 54
( 3$
7 521 38
7 681
7 711
7 641 t 33
7 58
7 19
45
$6
30
7 90
7 79
7 49,
Aug. 10. 8 904i I 7 961 7 23
Aug. 11 I (CV S 1!I 1 7 Si
7 811
7 4ll
6 40
7 ml 1 34 6 10
Aug. 12. 7nw 7 96 i 04 T 11
T 9fl 7 tl
6 051 7 471 6 22
I 7 4ft, 6 17
Allg. IX. I K " j k t ID.
Aug 14.1 17 7t! 8121 7 10(
Receipts snd disposition of live stork
at the In Ion ftock yards, Bouth Omaha,
for twenty-four hours ending at t p. ni.
yesterday.
RECEJ1PTS CARfl.
Cattle.Hogs.Sheep.H'r's
C, M. & t. P 11
Wabash 1
Missouri Pacific
I nlon Pacific 1 14 26
C. N. W., eaat 6 .. ..
C. A N. W.. west.... 4 22
C, St. P.. M. O.. 3 10
C, B. A Q., east.... 4 12..
C, B. A west.... 6 6
C, R. I. & P.. east.. 1 4 1
Illinois Central 2
Chicago Ot. West 4
Totals 2 79 28 1
DISPOSITION HEAD.
' Cattle. Hogs Sheep.
Morris A Co n 1X6
MuMft A I'o 1U 1.0S S,4oS
Cudahy Packing Co 99 Ml 7ii6
Armour r Co 1 1," 2.K2
Sch wai ts & Co )"
J. W. Murphy 4
Lincoln I'acKing to i
uinaha l'ai:aina Co. 6 ...
O. K. Serum Co
Corn Mate Serum co
Swift, K. C i" ,
Hill el Son 11
I.' It Lewis 2
J. B. Root st. Co 14
3. II. Bulla
BcCrcary &. Kellogg.... SI
Miiiian Bios A
Christie 3
lllggins
Ituinuan 1
Tanner Bros 1
John Harvey
D. & F '
.Kr Kitwara 64 .,. SOS
VMIV, . .............
Totals 682 Ow 7-9M
CATTLE Only sixteen cars of cattle
were reported In the yards this morning,
making :ha total for the five days this
woek 10.966 head, being slightly larger
I,.- in. k hut a little smaller than
the two previous weeks and smaller than
a year ago by over 6,000 head.
'lha few beef cattle on sale commanded
good, strong prices and everything In
sight changed nanus In a very snort ilme
alter th market opened. There was
nothing choice with which to make a top
un the mark 31, Dili mere were came nam
,oou enough to bring $9.70.
,,' iii.u heiluia -uie in light supply
and they too commanded good firm
yi ices.
nine were no stockers or feeders of
any consequence In sight but what there
.,e sold fully steady with yesterday.
For the .. ,, m safely
2.V't4ic higher, with feeders 25c higher.
Quotations on cattle: Good to oholoe
cornfod beeves, $9 6xdl010; fair to good
corufed beeves, $8.769.60, common to fair
cornfed beeves, $8.0O'at.76; good to choice
range steers, $8.25lj8.7u; fair to good range
steers, $7.5Ki8.25; common to fair range
steers, lrt.6on7.60; choice to fancy corn
fed heifers. $8 604i.6(); good to choice
grass heifers, i7.07.75; good to cholct
grass cows, $6.2,5t7.2$; fair to good grades,
$5 5hq6.25: common to fslr grades, $3 60
6 50; goon to choice stmkers and feeders,
$7.764i6 26; fslr to good stockers and feed
ers $67517.75; common to fair stockers
ami feeders, $,V0O'rt4i5; stock cows and
heifers. S6.0mu4.76; stock cslves, $8 001(18.00;
veal calves, $7.0010 50; bulls, stags, etc,
$4 .75H77. 24.
Representative sales;
BEEF STEERS.
No. . Pr. No. At. Pt.
Illn I 70 70 IU 70
li M I loau u
II H30 40
STEERS AND HEIFERS.
t 607 i 15
COW.
4 W 4 10 I I'd i 4
I KltO 4 40 1 0 It
6 Vtt 6 1 107 t 7
1 1121 (0 $ ! I 00
1 iW 1 00 1 1040 T IS
IM 4 00 1 1)40 T it
1 1 "30 4 86 I 1 N
t H 4 I. I H Til
I w lit
HEIFERS.
4 4 U 4 IM TS
1 70 4 Tfc 1 TiO 6 116
1 U0 I 76 1 470 I M
BULLS.
1 1 1 l 1210 oo
i liso 4 o i i::o is
l into t oo
CALVES.
a x I oo l in im
J 30 it 1 Tn io o
1 2 00 14 10 M
STOCKERS AND FEEDERS.
i 711 4 16 TO 7 00
3 lot I 00 I T6I T 40
14 M7 I 76 10 46
4 41 t 00 070 I 00
3 6M 7 00
HOGS There wss a very moderate run
In sight this morning, something like
eighty cars, or 5, HO head, being received.
For the five days supplies total 26.962
head, being a gam of mora than 16,0u0
over last week, but nearly 12, uou short
of the corresponding day ot last year.
Advices from other points were encour
aging, and local shipper buyers bought
such hogs as they needed during tha
early rounds on a l'xul6c higher basis.
Shipping pun bases were hsrdly ao large
as on some other days of the Week, but
at that they tc k over a very fair share
of the supply. Packers were slow In get
ting stsrted this morning, and their early
bids were little If any better than stesdy.
Hellers had priced their holdings at fig
ures tbst were anywsy 16c ana In many
cases 20c better, and as packers wera
slow about raising their early offers, the
killer trade wus during the earlier hours
vny draggy. Along towards 10 o'clock,
however, offers wei.i gradually raised,
and when the aupiV started to move
values looked all of b316c higher. Trade,
which was so dull early, became fairly
lively, and pretty much everything had
been sold by shortly after 10 o'clock. The
genoral trade can he quoted as KK3I6C
higher, although a number of Individual
salea looked flat 16o up.
Su far as the packers were concerned.
It was largely a $9 00 market. Bulk landed
at a spread ot $8.9039 Hi, with a very fair
sprinkling as high as $0.80, and a top of
$9.35. tha highest cash price of tha year
to date.
Prices have " now recovered all of
Wednesday's break, and are just about
steady with Tuesday, the high day of tha
year. Today's figures look 4jj0c higher
than the close of last week.
No. v. bh. Pr. No. At. Bh. Pr.
4 lol ... 00 41 Ill ... 0 00
to 24 140 0 el HO 40 I 00
II 4 60 I 60 I lit ... I to
60.. HI ... IK 0 214 130 0 01
40 S-) ... I tl Xll . . I 04
.7 U 140 I M 11 :ki to i as
II I.I H tl lad UI0,
61 M IM I 00 W Il ... 9 0S
OS 161 1J0 100 64 - IN I Ot
41 str . . o w r 40 0 ot
0 1b M IN SO -Jut 61 I H
60 Ml SU 0 00 11 1L-0 ... 0 0ft
i.i. no 000 44 aao ... 00
1 jlV M tl Jul M I 04
H . It IM
om .. t ei
W (16 ... (00
M '.'44 1 H
All ;u Ifft I o,
61 JT M on
r i" . . p 00
(. ; ,nt
. M( Ml
II 117 40 ( (W
77 BH 40 ( OS
7a ! 40 I OS
r jf.2 no on
4 JT ... I 10
61. 571 1W ( 10
M fM 34A (00
n 1 ln ISO 7.1 144 100 110
Ml 140 I 00 t J1 ... I 0
ti (M ... oo m. ni ... t la
! I' 0 I 00 II ... 0 10
: s 1:0 00 in 111 ... 1 11
1 .r4 ... ( 00 in jm ... ( 1
o mi 00 i in ... 1 11
Jt in ( 60 240 ... 111
27 o (On tm ii ten is
M -HMS to 1 on 7 im . . 0 it
' !"1 ... M JlO ISO I 14
7" ... (On M IIS ... ( is .
4 1 ... ( 0" 75 ill 4 ( IS
1 1 ... I 00 7 n m
(" ' . (01 no 00 (
-1 J'1" ( o 4 ... 1 in
l.w (00 3 jm ... 1 in
1 3i t . . ( oo 43 .iso ... 0 m
40 ( 00 10 114 ... 0 U
SHEKP-lt was largely an SX.STvf 45
market for most of the lambs today,
w ith range ewes at S6.60ifn an, prices on
lamhs being steady to a dime higher and
those on ewes steady to strong There
were few If any veartlnas nr weiher. nn
sale to speak of. Trade waa a little
siow at nrst in getting under wsv, hut
once a break waa made everything was
soon weighed up. Early reporta from
ether outside points Indicated slow trade
snd prlcee no better than steady at
those places. The receipts were very
(air for a Frldav, being estimated at
some 7,000 head, against 10.262 head a week
ago, 5.IM two weeks ago and 4.3JO a year
ago, and the general quality waa verv
similar to that of yesterday, thla apply
ing to both sheep and lambs.
Feeding sheep and lambs were badly
wanted this morning, but very few of
ferings of Importance were to be had.
due t tha fact that the packer took
practically everything on sale. Prices
wera quotably steady to strong.
For the week the receipts wera rather
liberal, as they foot up In the neighbor
hood of 68.0S2 head, compared with 64..
lit head last week. 33.949 head two weeks
ago and M OJO head a year ago. Notwith
standing tha tolerably liberal supply ot
lambs st the disposal of buyers prices ad
vanced lnti25c over the close of the
previous week and on most days the
packers furnished an outlet for the culls
and seconds. Aged sheep and yearling
offerings were abnormally scarca all tha
week, consequently much sought after,
which resulted In values showing as much
advance aa In the case of lambs and in
some Instances more.
It waa a light trade In feeders all tha
week, caused by the meager supply of
anything In the line of feeders coming In.
What lew feeding sheep and lamba
changed hands during the week Brought
prices generally l(f)20c higher than last
week.
Quotations on range sheep anS lamba:
Iamhs, good to choice, $H.363.46; lambs,
fair to good, $7.8686.26: lamba. feeders,
$6 75ff7 2J; yearlings, good to choice, $H. 164JI
640; yearlings, fair to good, $.fcVirU6;
yearlings, feeders, $f.75'(6.1i; wethers,
good Io choice. $5. 9014). 15; wethers, fair
to good, $5.6&C(i 90; wethers, feeders, $4.60
4 90; ewes, good to choice, $5.304r&.M; awes,
fslr to rood, S5.10iu4.S0; ewes, feeder, $J.5
34 00.
Ar. Pr.
66 Native lambs 56 60
10 Nstive ewes 112 I 25
36 Nstive yearlings 76 S 75
f.51 Idaho lamba 76 S 40
1.026 Idaho lambs 76 S 40
83 Natlva ewes 9S l
69 Idsho ewea 131 5 60
210 Idaho yearling M 66
28 Idaho yearlings 91 05
233 Idaho yearlings 92 S 05
1.441 Idaho lambs M S 25
49 culls 64 T 25
14 culls (4 T In
785 Idaho lambs 69 S 4.1
83 Idaho ewes 106 S 60
Grain for Export
is Not Yet Moving
The Omaha Grain exchange hat received
notice that tha guarantee of safe deliv
ery of flour and grain at European ports
In the war gone haa been made from At
lantic seaboard. It provides for guar
antee up to SO per cent of the value ot
the cargo. It haa not etarted any export
business and In the opinion of Omaha
grain dealers It amounts to little.
The Omaha market waa steady Friday,
with light receipts, there being; aixty
eight cars of wheat, fifty-eight of corn
and forty-eight of oats on sale. Prices
on wheat were ti to 9 cents, $S to 2H
cools under Chicago. This waa for caah.
The options were couple of cents or
so below yesterday.
LARRY LEJEUNE HAS SEVEN
COUSINS IN BELGIAN ARMY
Larry Lejeune. stsr outfielder of the
Western leasue. and the heart and soul
of the Sioux City club, has seven conslns
In the Belulan army, fighting In the
present war with Germany. One of the
cousins la a lieutenant, the. other of
lesser rank.
Lejeune himself Is American born, hut
his father and mother were born In Bel
glum, the father In Liege, where the
present fighting Is in vogue. Lejeune 1
more than casually Interested la tha
warfare In Europe a result, and,
while he Is pulling for Belgium to hold
Its own with It big neighbor, Larry be
lieves It fsr more genteel to fight P
Rourke, Jim McOlll end diver other
Western league magnates than to mix
In a brawl with a bunch of Kaiser Bill'
cohorts. Lejeune also like to rob Marty
Krug and Fred Schttebner of hit, a
both are German born.
HOPKINS AGAINST DEWEY;
WITHDRAWALS CLEAR DECK
Although four started In the rc. the
contest for the republican nomination for
county clerk has gotten down to a. two
cornered competition between the present
Incumbent. Frank Dewey. nd LouH D.
Hopkins, the well known real estate man.
This has been brought about by the
withdrawal of Leonard O. Holmberg and
Thomas J. O'Keefe In favor of Hopklne,
rather than atay In to split the field be
tween them, which la eald to make It a
real fight.
The official ballot till how M. T.
Black as a candidate against Leul BL
Adams for county surveyor, although
Black ha announced hie withdrawal and
tried In vain to have hi name erased.
DEPUTY COMPTROLLER
QUITS TO MOVE TO WYOMING
Deputy City Comptroller W. T. Cham
ber has resigned, the resignation to date
from September 1. He will go to Casper,
Wyo. where he Is Interested In a large
Ice and cold storage proposition.
City Commissioner Dan B. Butler will
promote George Clark and Chief Clerk
C. E. Stenlcka. who will Jointly do the.
duties of deputy comptroller.
The aalarles of Clark and Stenlcka vrlll
be lnrreased. Chamber drew $1,80 a
year and had filled the office of deputy
comptroller for two years. He ha been
In the comptroller office for vj year.
TEf'NIS BANQUET AT THE
CARTER CLUB SATURDAY
About lxty ar expected at a banquet
to be given at Carter Lake club Saturday
evening at 7 o'clock, when those who par
ticipated In the recent tennis champion
ship matches will be dined. A big spread
ha been arranged. There will be hort
speeches and presentation ef the prise
won after the feast
Harvard l a ( Shew.
Umpire Lincoln, the now man en the
National League staff, will be tried eut
some time this month. He ts a gradual
of Harvard and ' now a teacher In the
classical High school at Worcester, Mass.
He ie summering with hi faruily 14
Uaine, ready for the oail to r04-b
I 1 1