:IHE-bJSJS: O&AttA. TUESDAY, NOVEMBLii 27. lil 7. 11 4 fit REAL ESTATE IMPROVED North. tUii fa ALL, cheap, an 8-rooru house, all modern. Sec owner at 1801 Locust St. L 0T 'y National lijink. South. SHERIFF'S SALE The Holdreee home. 2118 S. 32d Street, Hansconi park view, ground measures 1 30x200 feet; 10 hue large rooms, steam heated. To be SOLD to the highest bidder at the east door of the court house at 10 a. m. precisely. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27 X o w Open for I n spection. FIELD CLUB HOME. 8-room strictly modern home, one half block to Field club. Living room with fireplace, dining room with built In features, nun rottm and kitchen on first floor; three largo bed rooms and sleeping porch, second floor, floored attic, full base ment, shower bath, cistern, etc., furnace heat, oak throughout, south front lot 50x 128. Price reduced to $4,600 and must be 10M at once; one-half cash; shown by ap- pointmei.t "only. HIATT COMPANY, 245-7-9 Omaha Nafl Bk. Bldg. T. 60; HANSCOM PARK DISTRICT, 13,100. 2810 8. 34th St., just In the course of completion, 6 rooms, living room, dining room with built-in buffet, kitchen with pantry oh first floor, two bedrooms with closets and bath on second floor, full ce ment " iement, permanent walks, good -vot; price 13,600; 1200 down, balance terms. C. O. CARLBERG, 310-312 Brandels Theater Bldg. ONE 6-roora and one 4 -room cottage, both on one lot: fine condition; live In one and rent the other. Price for both, 12.760. Very easy terms. No. 2433 8. 20th St. NORRI3 A NORR1S. 400 Bee Bldg. Phone Douglas 4270 J-ROOM modern house at 2703 Woolworth Ave. very cheap this week only. W. H. Gates. Omaha Nat l. Bk. Bldg. I). 1294. Miscellaneous. LET me show you my brand new atucco bungalow: finely finished, excellent lore- ' tlon. A real birrgaln at 13,860. Res-H aonable term. Call owner. Douglas 1723. W. FARNAM SMITH A Co.. ' Real Let ate and Insurance. 1130 Farnam St. Doug. 10(4 J. J. MULVIHILL. Realtor. 300 Brandels Theater Bldg. Doug. 96. B. S. TRUMBULL, .S06 lit Nat Bk. Bid. D. 1734 REAL ESTATE B'ness Pr'pty YOUNQ it DOHERTY. City Real Estate, Ponglaa 1671. 32J Brandels Theater fa. A. WOLF, Realtor. Ware Blk. Specialist In downtown business property. REAL ESTATE Investment BRICK STORE BLDG. Price $10,600 Rents 31,260. An Ideal investment; permanent ten ants, no trouble whatever and a good corner, on 24th St.; must have $5,000 cash for equity. GLOVER & SPAIN, 10-20 City National. Doug. 392. CUMING STREET. In order to close an estate, I offer at a "ery low price 44 or 23 feet near 29th St. fou cannot lose on this proposition. See ne for price and terms. C. A. GRIMMEL (Realtor), Ph. D. 1616. 849 Omaha Nat'l. Bk. Bldg. REAL ESTATE Unimproved Miscellaneous. LARGE Garden Lots near car line, paved street, 1126 to $195. II down. Doug. 6074. REAL ESTATE SUBURBAN Dundee. DUNDEE PROPERTIES. i Well located lots on easy ' ms: mod ern, attractive homes. Bef buying be sure and" sew " - GEORGE & CO., 902 City National Bank Bldg. TWO new five room Dundee bungalows on one floor. Seward Bros., 678 Brandels Building. Acreage. ACRE AGE. SNAP WHY PAY RENT? $500 DOWN AND $25 PER MONTH C-room house, modern except heat; Vt acres of ground, near 36th and Curtis, facing on boulevard; barn, chicken house and other necessary buildings; close to school; not far from car line. Priced at $4,000, what the Improvements are worth. PAYNE INVESTMENT CO., (Realtors) .37 Omaha Nat'l. Bk. Bldg. D. 1781. 50 ACRES i2 Mile From Dodge St. The J. H. WIESE FARM Lies nearly level, considerable valley ground. Part of land never broken. No waste ground, (-room house, good barn, large cow barn, suitable for dairy use, at $23,600, or $460 per acre, this Is the cheap est buy between Dodge St. and the Benson Main St. road, within 7 miles of Omaha postofflce. . HASTINGS & HEYDEN, 1614 HARNEY BT. PHONE TYLER 60. FlVE very fine garden lots, close to car line, close to school, lust outside the city limits, where yon do not have to pay city, taxes; an Ideal place to raise pigs, poultry or garden; the owner has moved to Call fornia und says sell at once: price $92 each; terms, 60c a week on each lot. Call Walnut 3466. today or in the evening. REAL ESTATE SHERIFFS SALE 4 THE HOLDREGE HOME, 2118 South 32d Street. Hanscom Park view. Ground measures 150x200 feet 10 fine large rooms, steam heated. Tq be sold to the highest bidder at the east door of the Court House at 10 a. m. precisely. ' Now Open for Inspection Tuesday, Nov. 27. REAL ESTATE WANTED WE HAVE several good reliable buyers for i and 6-room houses and bungalows with 6200 to 1606 down. Call Osborne Realty Co.. Tyler 496. 701 Oma. Nat. Bank Bldg LISTING bouses to rent or sell on small cash payments: have partite wailing Western Real Estate. 413 Karbach Blk. D. 3607. REAL ESTATE To Exchange LOUISIANA Lands., Nllsson. 423 Rose Bldg. FINANCIAL Real Estate, Loans and Mortgages, FIRST MORTGAGES SECURED BY OMAHA REAL ESTATE. 31,600 at 6 pet value of security. . .34. 000 $2,200 at 6 pet. value of security... 6.300 $600 at t pet. value of security.... 1,400 $1,800 at 6 pet. value of security.... 4.000 $1,700 at 6 pet. value of security.,.. 4.000 $2,300 at 6 pet value of security.... 6,600 $2,600 at 6 'pet. value of security 6,000 FIRST MORTGAGES SECURED BY NEBRASKA FARMS. $5,000 at 6Vs pet value of security $10,000 $9,006 at ihi pet value of security.. 19,600 $10,000 at 6 pet. value of security 26,000 $3,300 at 6 ret value of security.... 8,900 E. H. Lougee, Inc., 538 KEELINE BLDG. CITY AND FARM LOANS t, $H and ( per cent Also first mort gages on farms and Omaha real estate for sale. J. H. Dumont 4 Co.. 416-418 Keellne Bldg., 17th and Harney. FARM and city loans, running from five to twenty years; interest 6 per cent, 6H per cent and 6 per cent. PETERS TRUST CO.. 1622 Farnam St. Omaha, Neb, SHOPEN A CO.. PRIVATE MONET. H. W. BINDER. Money on band for mortgage loans CI' i National Bank Bldg. .$1,800 MTGE. bearing 6 pet. semi-annually; secured by mortgage valued at $5,600. Talmadge-Loomis Inv. Co.. W.O.W. Bldg. NO DELAY IN CLOSING LOANS. W. T. ORAHAM. 604 Bee Bldg C Of CITY GARVIN BROS., Om. Nat. Bk. Bldg. LOANS. EG MONEY HARRISON A MORTON. v 916 Omaha Nat. Bank Bldg OMAHA HOMES EAST NEB. FARMS O'KEEFE R. E. CO., 1010 Omaha Nat'l $100 to $10,000 MADE promptly. F. D Wead, Wead Bldg., 18tb and Farnai:i Sts. MONEY to loan on Improved farms and ranches. Rloke Investment Co., Omaha. LOW RATES C. G. CARLBERG. 313 Bran- del Theater Bldg D, 686 LOAN8 ON CITY PROPERTY. W. H. THOMAS A SON. Keelln Bldg. MONEY TO LOAN Organised by the Business Men of Omaha. FURNITURE, pianos sna notes as security. $40, 6 mo., H. goods, total cost $3.60. 40, 6 mo.. Indorsed notes, total cost $3.60. Smaller, large am'ts proportions! rate. PROVIDENT LOAN SOCIETY, 431 Rose Bldg.. 16th and Farnam. Ty. 666. LEGAL , RATES LOANS $24.00 . J $340.00 or more Easy payments. Utmost privacy. 740 Paxton BWg. Tel. Doug, 2296. OMAHA LOAN COMPANY. DIAMOND AND JEWELRY LOANS. Lowest rates. Private loan booths. Harry Malashook. 1B14 Dodge. D 6619' K 1801 DIAMONDS and jewelry loans at 1 and 24 per cant. W. C. Flatau; estao. muz, 6th floor Rose-Securities Bldg. Tyler 960. FARM AND RANCH LANDS Colorado Lands. HOMES FOR 100 FAMILIES, Several thousand acres, located one to four miles from Crowley, Ordway. Sugar City and seven miles from Rocky Ford, Colo.: main lines Missouri Pacific and Santa Fe. This land produces large yields alfalfa, corn, wheat, oats and barley. Cat tle and sheep feeding, dairying and hog raising very profitable. The 1917 crop un der the Twin Lakes system, alfalfa, about 30,000 acres; corn and other grain about 7,000 acres; sugar beets. 6,000 acres, and other Intensive and general farming. Spe cial Homeaeekers' Excursion the first and third Tuesdays of each month. Soil sur vey report on this land by N. A. Bengtson of the University of Nebraska and Mis- ..-1 I, 1 . 1 hnnlrlata nn thin fafmlnff ilia. BUUlt 1 .WUIV uuunitio ...... . n - trtct free. . IX you are looking for a home do not delay, but phone or see' us at oflce for full Information and rates. Liberty 1 bonds accepted same as cash at 106. We own this land. Phono Tyler 2862. B. H. Talmage, Vice President The Twin Lakes Land anil Water Co.. or H. R. Follmet Co,. 936 First Nat. Bank Bldg- Omaha. ' AGRICULTURAL LANDS ALONG MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILWAY. Crops raised include large yields of wheat, oata, corn, alfalfa, sugar beets, cu cumbers, potatoes, squash, pumpkins, can taloupes, melons, tomatoes, onions, apples and cherries. Cattle, sheep and hog rais- Ing profitable. Market facilities admlr able. Land one to four miles fronr ship ping stfttlons. Beet sugar factory, alfalfa mills, pickling plants, canning factory and creamery at Crowley and Ordway, Colorado. Electric light and power, and pure Olney spring water, all available for farm use. Churches all denominations, good schools and roads. Write us for spe cial excursion rates, prices and terms. AgontB wanted. Twin Lakes Land and Water Co., B. H. Tallmadge, vice presi dent, or H. R. Follmer Co., 936 First Na tional Bank Bldg., Omaha, Neb. Phone Tvler 2862. FREEJIISSOURI PACIFIC BOOKLET. FOR SALE Good level section wheat lnnd 10 miles south of Julesburg, Colo., $37.60 per acre. Will consider small residence property In good town. B. J. Bates, Lodgepole, Neh. FOR SALE 480 acres level black soli, wheat land, near Julesburg. E14 22-10-46 and s. w. 18-10-46. Good terms. Will F. Sledentopf, owner, Council Bluffs. la. Missouri Lands. ' SMALL MISSOURI FARM. $10 cash and $5 monthly, no Intereat of taxes; highly productive land; close to three big markets. Write for photographs and full Information. MUNGER, A-119. N. Y. Life Bid g Kansas City. Mo. GREAT bargains. $5 down, $6 monthly, buys 40 acres good fruit and poultry land near town, southern Missouri. Price only $220. Address Box 282, Springfield, Mo. Montana Lands FOR SALE 400 acres of strictly first class alfalfa hay and grain lano. Two miles from railroad and 16 miles from county seat. This is also a No. 1 stock ranch. Price, $40 per acre. For particulars 1 ad dress E. G. Farnawnrth. Dillon, Mont. Nebraska Lands. LIST your lands for quick results with C. J. Canan. 310 McCague Bldg.. Omaha. REAL ESTATE FARM AND RANCH LANDS Nebraska Lands. RAIN BELT RANCHING. 1,040 acres east aide Brown Co 26 miles south of Long Pine, In sec. I. twp, 76, range 31 and sections 36, 34 and 36, twp. 36, range 31; selected by Rev. Dil lon In early days and widely known as Dillon ranch and as one of the best In the county for lay. soil and Improvements; tenant's name Ed Dillon; over half la beat of corn, alfalfa and hay land; balance well grassed hills; 106 acres corn, 6 acres alfalfa, garden and some fruit; all fenced and cross-fenced, 20 acres hog tight; 6-room frame house, barn, out buildings, sheds fur 100 cattle. 3 wells and windmills, small lake; will sacrifice for $19 per acre net: easy terms, but no trades. W. F. Sledentopf, Council Bluffs, Iowa. 1,000 ACRES of land nine miles from Atns worth. Neb., 360 acres broken, balance hay and grating land. Liberal terms can be made for this place, as it must be sold by March first. Write Marlon Foster, Live Stock Auctioneer, Alnsworth, Neb. TWO sections In Loup rountyT 94.00 per acre. One has Improvements, one is fenced. This is the last of tho cheap land up there. INTERSTATE REALTY CO.. 913-14 City Nat l Bank. Doug. 2819. 65-ACRB' farm for sale, 4-room bouse, barn and hay shed, corn crib, hog ted and other outbuildings, S miles south of Plattsmouth, Neb. Write or call on A. u. Hach & Co.. Plattsmouth. Neb. SMALL Nebraska farm on easy payments 6 acres up. We farm the farm we sell you. The Hungerford Potato Growers' association. 16th and Howard Sts., Omaha Douglas 9371. 40 ACRES irrigated land, every acre first class; all fenced and In crop. Will deal for a new clear residence. Price $4,000. Box 30$. Oakland. Neb FOR SALE Best large body high-grade medium-priced land in Nebraska. Very little morey required. C. Bradley, Wol- oacn, -eo. Oregon Lands. NEW JoRDA NV A LLE YPRO J ECtT" HEART OF THE RANGE. Get on the ground floor with 80 acres irrigated land In connection with open rang.. You can grow stock successfully and cheaply Excursion Dec. 4. Send for bulletin. ' HARLEY J. HOOKER, 940 1st Nat. Bk, Bldg.. Omaha. Texas Lands. SEE us for Texas land. We furnish cattle. You pay from profits. Thomas Olson, 407 Karbach Bldg. GOOD corn land. East Texas. $26 an acre. Get my free book. W. 8. FRANK. 201 Neville Block, Omaha Wyoming Lands. WHEATLAND -Wyoming farms. $60 per a., including paid-up water rights. Henry Levi A C. M. Rylander, 364 Omaha Nat'l. Miscellaneous. PUBLIC SALE. Reed Bros, farm 4 miles northeast, Crescent, la., milch cow,. 30 head of other cattle, 10 head of horses and mules, 60 brood sows and shoats. All kinds of farm machinery. Salo begins at 10 o'clock Wednesday morning, November 28. For further Information call A. H. REED, Douglas 651. FARM LAND WANTED ' FARMS WANTED. Don't list your farm with us If you want to keep It. E. P. SNOWDEN A SON, 423 8. 16th. Douglas 9371. WA1 TED 30 acres Pierce county, Neb. Owners only, hi tillable. Give good de scription, price and terms, 301 Karbach Blk., O taha, Neb. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS J. J. Melick and wife to Michael Hcln, Hlnney street, 611 feet east of Thir tieth street, north side, 42.62x269$ 1 J. J. Melick and wife to Michael Heln. Binney street, 663.82 feet east of Thirtieth street, north side, 40x269.. 1 Rose L. Kelly and husband to M. G. Hubbard, Fowler avenue, 208 feet east of Twenty-second street, south side, 60x133 6000 Michael L. Clark, sheriff, to Bankers , , Realty Investment Co., Harney street. 118 feet east of Fifty-fourth street north side, 60x126 6400 Harrison Barnea to Mary M. Tucker, Grebe avenue, 160 feet east or Thirty-third street north stde, 60x122 300 Freeman 8. Tucker and wife to Martha Armstrong, Twenty-eighth avenue, 66 feet north of Tucker, West side, 66x132 2600 Hastings A Heyden to Daniel A. Son- neland, Leroy avenue, Benson, 194 feet south of Main street, east side, 100x12$ '. 2000 William F. Eitner and wife to Frank II. Eltener, Twentieth street, 364 feet north of Clark street, west side, 36x140 1 Frank II. Eitner and wife to William Eitner, Twentieth street, 294 feet north of Clark street, west side, 30x140 1 John H. Tebblns and wife to Jens Pcd- ersen, Pine street, 260 feet west of Fifty-fourth streeet, north side, 160x129 1 Earnest O. Bugh to Harry H. Miller, Fort Omaha avenue, 226 feet east of Twenty-fifth avenue, north side, 45x120 1 Augusta A, Paktcscr to Margaret H. Pakicser, et. al.. Fowler avenue, 184 feet west of Thirtieth street north side, 60x128 1 Omaha Hay STket. Receipts fair, demand good on all grades of prairie hay and alfalfa. Market firm and higher on all grades of prairie hay. Alfalfa continues stesdy. Hay Choice upland prairie 133.00; No. 1, $21.00021.00; No. 3, $17.00 18.60; No, S. $14.00015.00. Midland No. 1. 63I.00O23.00; No. $17.00011.(0. Lowland No. 1, . $16.001317.00; No. $13.004914.00; No. 8. $11.50012.50. Alfalfa Choice, $31.00: No. 1, $28,009 80.00, Standard $26.00i928.00: No. 2. 24.0025.00: No! 8, $21.00033.00. Straw Oat $9.60: wheat, $9.00. Chicago Live Stock Market Chicago, Nov. 26. Cattle Receipts, 36,. 000;. weak. Native steers, ' $7. 31(8 14.86; western steers, $6.15013.66; ' stockers and feerlsr, f6.00ll.16; cows and heifers, $5.0001175; calves $7.00913.00. Hogs Receipts, 65,000; weak; bulk $17.60 W17.90; light, $16.8017.85; mixed, $17.30 17.95; heavy, $17.3017.95; rough, $17,300 17.50; pigs, $13.00 16.25. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, $27,000 head; market unsettled; wethers,; $8.76(12.90 ewes, $7.60!!. 40; Iambs, I12.25S17.10. Minneapolis Grain Market. Minneapolis, Nov. J6.--Flour Market un changed; In carload Iota, fancy patents. $10.30, wood; first clears, $9.50, lute; sec ond clears, $5.75, Jute. Barley $1.0801.35. Rye ll.7701.79. Bran $36.00036.00. .Corn No. 3 yellow, $2.0003.05. Oats No. 3 white, 7014 7114c Flax $3.20 14 03.2314. New York Metal Markrt. New York, Nov. 26. Metal exchange quotes tin nominal, $80.00 bid. Lead, quiet; .'pot, $6.8714. Spelter, quiet; East St. Louis delivery, spot, $7.7508.00. At London Spot copper, 110: futures, 110; electrolytic, 125; spot tin. 283; future.-, f 281 15s; lead, spot, 30 10s; futures, 29 IDs; spelter; spot, 54; futures, 60. New YotU Nugar Market. . New York. Nov. I6.Sugar Raw, steady; centrifugal, 6.90c: molasses, 6.02c. Refined, steady; cut loaf, 9.85c; crushed, 9.60c; mould A. 8.85c; eubtM, 9.10c; XXXX powdered, 8.66c; powdered, 8.50c: fine granulated, 8.85c; diamond A, 8.25c; confectioners' A, 826c; No. 1, 8.20c. New York Dry (ioods Market New York, Nov, 6. Cotton goods mar kets here today were strong with demand forcing prices higher. Yarns were firm. Raw silk was quiet with prices unchanged. Dress goods were firm. Kansas City Grain Market. Kansas City, Mo.. Nov. 26. Corn No. 2 mixed, 81.8891.90; No. 3 white. $3.0002.03; No. 2 yellow. $2.0503 07; December, $1.37; January, $1.22H0123. Oats No. 2 white. 741474c; No. i mixed, 75073 14c St. Loots Grain Market. St. Louis, Mo., Nov. 26. Corn No. 2, tl.78fl-I.80; No. 3 white. $1.8714; December, $1.26: May, $1.2014. Oats No. 2, 7475c; No. 3 white, 750 7614c Dvluth Unseed Market Duluth, Minn., Nov. 26. Linseed On track, $3.2603 3614: arrive, $3.1814; arrive November, $3.3614; December, 5, arrive, $3.2414; November, $3.23 H ; December, $3.1814 asked; May, $3.17 bid OMAHA LIVE STOCK Big Bun of Cattle Finds Mar ket Slow; Shippers Bid Lower For Hogs; Lamb Trade Slow. Omaha, Nov. !6. 191T. Receipt were: Cattle. Hogs. Sheep, Estimate Monday ....16.000 6,600 16,000 Snme day last week ..31,648 Same day 3 wks. ago.. 33,274 Same day 1 wks. ago.. 14. 666 Same day 4 wks. ago.. 13,766 8,413 5,168 6.414 6,793 4,860 18,748 3.147 16.961 Same day last year ..13,143 14,435 19,740 Receipts and disposition of live stork at the t'nilon Story Yards, Omaha. Neb., for 24 hours ending at 3 o'clock yesterday; , RECEIPTS CARS. Cattle. Hogs. Sheep. II r s C. M. St. P 8 t Missouri Pacific 19 1 Union Pacific 1 68 10 19 C. A N." W., east.. 11 7 4 C. N. W.. west.. 175 44 6 6 C, St. P., M. A O. 6 9 14 1 C., M. & Q., east.. 6 C, B. & Q west. . .216 16 1.1 2 C, R. P., east. .. 6 1 C., R. I. A p west. 3 Illinois Central 3 3 1 .. Chicago Ot West.. 4 6 Total receipts 617 109 63 9 DISPOSITION HEAD. Cattle. Morris & Co 6333 Swift & Compuny.... 1,115 Curtahy Packing Co.. 1,634 Armour & Co 1,304 J. W, Murphy Lincoln Packing Co.. 44 S. Omaha Packing Co. 3 Wilson Packing Co.... 173 Swift, Fort Worth... 76 Benton, Vansant L. Ill Hogs. Sheep. 1,041 990 1.979 2,019 301 105 996 1,96$ 1,429 F. B. Lewis 788 J. B. Root & Co 2 J. H. Bulla 292 Ro.enstock Bros 696 F. G. Kellogg 174 Werthelmer & Degen. 743 Sullivan Bros 78 Rothschild & Krebsi. 18 Mo. K. Calf Co.... 6 Christie 29 Huffman 7 Roth -25 Baker, Jones A Smith. 153 Banner Bros 78 John Harvey Dennis & Francis... Jensen & Lungren.. Pat O'Day Hunlnger & Oliver.. Ellis A Co Other buyers . 339 . Ill . 35 3 . 63 ' . 118 .1.331 9.294 Total ;9,866 6,830 13,791 Cattle Supplies of cattle were a good den) heavier than anyone was expecting, around 608 cars, or 16,000 head being reported in. The market was pretty slow on all kinds of cattle though medium priced beef steers as well as the decent to good medium weight feeders open at about the same prices they were bringing on last week's close. The feeling In the beef market was bearish, and early steady sales resulted only from scarcity of fat cattle. In the feeders there wan a pretty decent demand for everything except the real high priced kinds, but buyers were all trying to fill their orders a little lower, and there was every probability that beef and feeders would sell lower before the close. Beef cows opened about stesily with the latter part of last week, choice Montanas reaching $9,2$. Movement of stock cows and heifers was active and prices were- If any thing stronger, being In fact about the high est of the season. Quotations on cattle: Prime heavy beeves, $14.00015.00; good to choice beeves, $12.60013.60: fair to good beeves, $10.60ift 12.60; common to fair beeves, $7.00010.00; good to choice, $14.00015.00; fair to good yearlings, $13.000014.00; common to fair yearlings, $6.50011.00; prime heavy grass beeves, $11 60013.00; good to choice beeves. $10.00011-60; fair to good, grass b.eves, I9.0010.00; cpmmon to fair grass beeves, $7.0008.50; good to choice heifers, $8,000 9.35; good to choloe cows, $7.76 0 9.16; fair to good cows, $1. '607. 50; common to fair cows, $5.2606.00; prime feeding steers, $11.60012.60; good to choice feeders, $9 75 011.25; fnlr to good feeders, t8.00O9.S0: common to fair feeders, $6.6007.00; good to choice stockers: $8.76010.60: .tech heifers, $6.508.50; stock cows, $6.0007.60; stock calves, $6.00010.40; veal calves, $9.00 13 60: bulls, stags, tt.50OS.00. Hogs Receipts of bogs were liberal for a Monday. The market was slow and draggy, and tip until a late hour "but few loads had been sold. Both packers and shippers were bidding from 15o to 20c lower. A top ot $17.70 was paid by an outside buyer, the bulk of the hogs moving at $17.66017.65, There was a heavy run of stock trigs this morning and the market on these was slow and around 6075o lower. Representative sales: No. Av. Sh. Pr. ' No. W. 8h, Pr. 63. .160 ...$17 60 29. .848 70 $17 66 27. .826 ...17 60. 60. .290 110 17 65 68. .266 ... 17 70 PIGS. 45.. 113 ... IT 00 Sheep A liberal run of sheep and lambs was here today. Trade was generally a lit tle1 draggy, particularly killers. Arrivals were somewhat late In getting to the barns, and opening trade showed little activity up to 10 o'clock. Weighty comeback lambs went to feeders at steady to stronger prices, best selling around $17.00017.60. Short mouthed breeding ewes sold about steady at 112.50. But one load of fat lambs want to killers on the early rounds, and they looked fully steady at $16.75. Feeding and killer sheep were nominally steady, with supplies rather limited. New York Provision Market, i New York, Nov. 26 Flour quiet; spring patents, $10.56010.66; winter patents, $10.55 010.76; winter straights, $10.20010.50; Kansas straights, $11.00011.65. Cornmeal Firm; fine white and yellow $4.6604.90; coarse, $4.7504.85. Rye stesdy: No. 2i western, $1.89; cost and freight New York Barley quiet; feeding, $1.0601. 10; wait ing. $;.25 01 36; California, $1.40; cost and freight New York. Corn spot, firm; yellow, $3.02; cost and freight New York, ten-day ship nent; I Ar gentine, $2.05 2.10; f, o, b. cars New York, to arrive. Oats spot, firmer; standard, 7907914c. Hay firm; No. 1, $1 70; No. 2. $1.60; No. 3. $1.4501 45, shipping, $1.1601.26. Hides steady; bogota, 41c; Central America, 40c. Leather firm; hemlock sole, over weights, No. 1, 5' ; No. 2, 49c. Pork strong, mess, $51.00; fam'Iy, $64.00 055.00; short clear, $53.00057 00. Lord easy; middle west, $27.91 $28.00. Woolfirm; domestic fleece XX Ohio, 7c. Rlce nominal; fancy head, 80'c; blue rose, 84814o. Tallow steady; city shipment, loose, 18c. Butter Market firm; receipts, 2,880 tubs; creamery, higher than extras, 4714048c; creamery, extras, (92 score), 47c; first, 4304614c: seconds, 4006214c. Eggs Market stesdy; receipts, 4,88$ cases; fresh gathered, extras, 67058c; extra flrnts, 66066c; firsts, 62064c; seconds, 45 0 56c; refrigerator, special marks, 343414oi re frigerator firsts. 4214 08314c Cheese Market steady; receipts, 2,626 boxes; state, fresh, specials, 2314c; same, average run, 2302314 c Poultry Dressed, market strong; chick ens, Si 1486c; .fowls. 171402714c; turkeys, 25037c. St. Louis Live Stock Market. St. Louts, Nov. 26. Cattle Receipts, 12, 700 head; market, lower; native beef steers, $8.00016.76; yearling steers and heifers, $7.00016.60; rows, $5.00O'l00; stockers and feeders, $6.5010.00; Texass quarantine steers, $6.75ifrl0.60; fair to prime southern beef steer". $9.00012. 76; beef cows and heif ers, $8.005? 10.00; prime yearling, steers and heifers, $T.6010.00; native calves, $3.71 " 13.25. jlogs Receipts, 16,800 head; market, lower; lights, $17.36017.65; pigs, $16.00 17.00; mixed and butchers, $17.46017.76; good, heavy, $17.66017.80;, bulk ot sales, $17.36017.76. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 7,700 head; market, steady: lambs. $13.00017.60; ewes, $10.00011.00; wethers, $11.00012.60; can ners, $5.0009.60. , Slonx City Live Stork Market. Rloux City, Nov. 26. Cattle Receipts 10, 000 head; market 10c to 15c lower; beef steers, $8.00016.00; fat cows and heifers, $8.75 9.50; cannera, $5.26jji6.60; stockers and feeders, $8.00013 60; calves, $7.60 11.60; bulls, stags, etc.. $6.2508.50; feeding cows and heifers, $5.7509.06. Hogs Receipts, 18,000 head; market 10c to 20c lower; light. $17.40017.66; mixed, $17.60017.70: heavy, $17.65017.80; pigs, $16.00017.60; bulk of sales. $17.65017.70. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 3,600 head; market steady. Liverpool Cotton Market. Liverpool, Nov. 26. Cotton Spot In mod erate demand; prices unchanged; good mid dling, 22.6.84; middling, 22.16d; low mid dling, 21.63d; good ordinary, 20.63d; ordi nary, 70 lid; sales, 4,000 bales. London Money Market. London, Nov. 26. Silver Bar, 424 per ounce. Money 4 per cent. Discount Rates Short bills, 444 per cent; three months' bills, i per cent GRAIN AND PRODUCE! Trade in Cash Corn Slow and 15 Cents Off; Demand For Oats is Lively Here. Omaha, Nov. 2'., 1917. Arrivals of grain today were moderate, a total of 233 cars showing tip over Sun day, and Included 53 wheat, 60 corn, 108 oals, t rye and 7 cars of barley. Trade In rash corn today was unusually slow and up to 12:3$ only two cars of new corn had been sold, one ot these graded No 6 white and sold for $l.6 while the other graded No. 6 yellow and sold at $1.60, tho moisture content In these samples be- ing 13.80 per cent and 31.4 per cent re ipeetlvely. Bids were several conts lower while these actual sales showed this cereal to be all the way from 10c to 20c off. Buv era show no Interest at all for this soft corn, being very leary of it because of the severe losses sustained by some. Shippers in tne east are taking no risk and buy practically nothing but kiln dried corn for safety. No old corn was sold here today, these samples being very scarce, while buy ers offer a good premium for any variety. A few cars of new corn were disposed of later on and sold at $1.40 for the No. 6 white and a couple cars f No. 6 yellow urougnt ii.&s. Receipts ot oats were fairly good and the demand for this article qutte active. Spot quotations were Vtc to l'o up. tho bulk of these offerings selling up a half to a cent, while the extreme advance was paid for tne bulk or the No. 3 white, No. white sold at 73o and the No. 3 white at 7214o and 72 Ho, while the standard grade sold for 731c and 72 14c The commercial grade of 3 white brought 72a and 721aa and the 4 white, 72 Ho and 72c. Sample grnrie oats went at 71U and. 72c. Rye and barley were In good demand, rye quotations were unchanged, while the spot on barley ranged from lo to So higher. Practically all these offerings were dls posed ot, none being carried over. No. 3 rye sold at $1.74, while the No. a gn.de nf mailing nariey som at 1.34 ana the r 3 at (1.30 and $1.31, The No. 1 grade of feed liurley brought $1 28 and $1.25. Clearance were: Wheat and flour equal to 708.000 bushels: corn, 239,000 bushels; oats. 601,000 bushel. Primary wheat receipts were 1,450.000 bushels and shipments $92,000 bushels against receipts of 1,644,000 bushels and shipments of 938,000 bushels last year. Primary corn receipts were 912,000 bush els and shipments $16,000 bushels, against receipts 'of 1.737,000 bushels and shipments or 664.000 bushels last year. Primary oats receplt were 1,846,000 bush els and shipment 908.000 bushels, against receipt of 1,340,000 bushels and shipments of 1,148,000 bushels last year. CARLOT RECEIPTS. Wheat, Corn. Oat. 163 Chicago 26 Minneapolis 608 Duluth , ...66 Omaha 63 Kansas City 146 St. Louis 86 Winnipeg ..1.159 160 60 109 133 lilt 83 49 These sales were reported today:1 Wheat No. 1 hard winter: 6 cars, $5.15, No. 2 hard winter: 10 cars, $3.12. No, $ hard winter: 8 cars, $2.09; 1 bulkhead, $2.09. No. 3 yellow hard winter: 1 car, $2.05. No. 2 dark hard winter: 1 car (3 per cent com mon red durum), $2,16. No, 3 dark hard winter: 1 car (.06 per cent heate dam aged), $2.13. No. 1 northern spring: 2 cars, $2.15. No. 3 northern spring; 2 cars, $2.12. No. 3 northern spring: 1 car, $3.09. No. 3 durum: 7 cars, $3.12. No. 2 amber durum: 1 car, $3.18. No. 3 red durum: 1 oar, $2.05. Rye No. 2: $ cars, $1.74. Barley No. 2: 1 car. $1.84. No. 3: 4 2-3 cars, 31.31; 1 car, $1.30. No. 1 feed: 1-3 car, $1.26; 1 cir, $1.22. Corn No. 6 white, 1 car (19. $0 per cent moisture), $1.60; 1 car (21 per cent mois ture), $1.60; No. 5 yellow, 2 cars (30.80 and 21 per cent moisture), $1.56; 1 car (31.40 per cent molBture), $1.60. OaisNo. 1 white. 1 car, $1.78: No. 2 white, 6 cars, 73 K I 3 cars. 7214 c; standard, 6 cars, 7214c; 1 car, 73 14c; No. S white, 12 cars, 7214o; 6 cars, 72 Vie; 3 cars, 73o; No. 4 white, 1 car, 72a; 1 car, 7164c; 1 car, 7114c; sample white. 8 cars, 72a; 1 car, 7114c; No. $ mixed, 1 oar, 73c . Omaha Cash Prices Corn: No. white, $1.6001.66; No. 6 white, $1.6601.60; No. 6 white, $1.26OL40; No, 3 yellow, $2,160 3.20, old; No. 4 yellow, $1,6001.62: No. 6 yellow, $1.6001.55; No. 2 mixed, $2.1002.11; No. 4 mixer, $1.4601.60. Oats: No, S white, v2HQ72o: standard, 721407214c; No. I white, 7207214c; No. 4 white, 7114072c Barley i Malting, $1.260?. 34; No. 1 feed, $1.1501.28, Rye: No. 2, $1.7301.74; No. t, $1.731401.7314. Local range of options: ' Art. Open. High. I.Low. Close, ISat'y. Corn. i May 1 10 1 JO 120 1 20 120 Oats. ' Deo. 70 . 70 70 70 TO May 6814 6814 68 H ,6814 6814 Chicago .3.-30 prices, furnished The Bee by Logan A Bryan, stock and grain 'brokers. 316 South sixteenth street. Omaha: Art. Open. High. I Low. Close. iSat g. Corn. Jan. 1 21 1 21 130 1 21'4 121 Dec. 1 2414 1 2484 U3 1 24 124 Muy 118 1 19 118 11914 119 Oats. Dec. 70 71 69 70 7014 May 6914 70 68 6914 t 1 Jrk. Jan. 46 45 46 77 4t 15 46 70 46 60 Lard. Jan. 24 70 24 90 24 65 24 90 24 to May 24 60 24 70 24 60 24 70 24 60 Ribs. Jan. 24 76 25 07 24 65 25 07 34 S3 May 24 60 24 87 24 60 24 88 24 6!t CHICAGO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS. Increasing Supplies Have Bearish Effect on Corn; Oats Form Counter Poise. Chicago, Nov. 26. Increasing supplies had a bearish effect today on corn, but talk of big export sales of oats formed some thing of a counter poise. Corn finished un settled. $1.21 January and Sl.lt H May with the close as a whole ranging from decline to advance compared with Sat urday's latest figures. Oata gained la to lo net. The outcome In provisions varied from a setback of 12c to a rise of 27c. Notices ot heavier ahlpments from rural sources gave the corn market a decided downward slant at the outset, and there was evidence that cars were beginning to b morevreadlly available than has been the rule for some time. In thl connection, it was said that Omaha wn turning con signments to Chicago, Besides, weather conditions showed a little Improvement and tne visible supply wa only 41,000 bushels less than last year's total. During the last half of the day, however, rallies took place. especially In the January and May de liveries and they climbed to the highest prices yet this season. Uerslstent buying apparently for the sea board, forced the advance of the oats mar ket. Receipts continued light and the vis ible supply, total sharply depressed. Liberal receipts of hogs made provisions easier until offset by grain strength. Corn No. 2 yellow, nominal: No. 1 yel low, 31.93; No. 4 yellow, $1.75 ff 1.S0. Oats: No. 3 white, 72073c; standard, 72? 73e. Rye: No. 2, 11.79. Barley: tl.lOO 1.41.' Timothy: $5.0007.60. Clover: $20,000 26.00. Pork: Nominal. Lard: $27.25. Ribs: $37.60. New York Cotton Market. New York, Nov, 26. December cotton crossed the 30-cent mark on the floor of the New York cotton exchange this morning and .later sold for 30.20c, the highest price ever recorded on the exchange. The big jump was caused ny neavy government and trade buying and by further purchases, for Liver pool accounp ow iorK, nov. cotton Futures opened steady; December, 20.00c; January, 29.00c; March, 2S.70r; May, 28.60o; July, 28.32c Cotton futures closed unsettled: Decem ber, 20.28c; January, 29.54c; March, 29.10c; May, as. sue ; July, zj.bsc. spot cutton, quiet; middling, 21.26c New York, Nov. 26. Tthe cotton ix.arket closed steady at a net advance of 45 to 61 points. Evaporated Apple and Drl.d I'ruits. Nov York. Nov. 28. Evaporated apples. quiet; choice, ,1601; prime, 14H6c. Prunes, firm; California, 813c; Oregons. 1314c. Apricots, scarce; fancy. 20c Peaches, firm; standard, 12c; choice, 12c; fa..cy. 13c. Raisins, firm; loose muscatels, 7Otc: choice to fancy seeded, 10 Wile; seedless, 10O10c; London layers, f 1.80. Turpentine and Kosln. Savannah. Ga., Nov. 26. Turpentine, steady 48c; sales, 177 bbls.; receipts, 337 bbls; shipments, 573 bbls; stock, 23,584 bbls. Kosln. flru; sales, 405 bbls: receipts, 1.697 bbls.; shipments, 800 bbls.; stock. 78,773 bbls. Quote: V. D, , F, G, II, 86.62: I, t6.70; K, '6 96: M. $7.15; N, $7.56; WO, $7.66; AVW, $7.75. Kansas City Prodnre Market. Kamsi City. Nov. 26. Butter Creamery. 41c: firsts, 9c; seconds, 37c; pack ing. 31 c. Eggs Firsts, 44c: seconds, 32c. Poultry Hens, He; roosters, 14 c; broilers, 23c NEW YORK STOCKS Rails Hesitant and Uncertain, Proposed Fooling of Eastern Roads Giving Rise to Uneasiness. Now York, Nov. 26. The sloek market wan In a receptive mood today on the amount of operations. Kails were tho hesitant and uncertain features, the proposed pooling of the east ern roads us a wr measure eveldontly Riving rl to linens In ess. Western Issues and Pacifies were no less Influenced, how ever, than coal dealer and trunk lines. A sharp rally In llres accompanied the news that tho Italian force were continu ing their stout resistance. Latest advices from the western front received favorable Interpretation, while the receipt by the Stste department of the so-called proposals of the Russian radical was Ignored as a market factor. Reactions of the morning ranged from tit to $4 point In General Electric, Gener al Motors. Pullman, the latter falling to 123H, It lowest quotation In many year. Many other equipments and specialties lost 1 to 2 points during the same period, but rallied smartly with oils, tobaccos and sun dry war shares In the final hour. Catted State Steel featured the more active deal ings of the afternoon, advancing from 96 to 99 4, within a fraction of Its best thl" mouth. Profit tskln? reduced this advantage by half a. point, Steel closing at a net gain ot l point. Other leaders also yielded part or their extreme advances. Totals sales amounted to 460,000 shares. Rond were decidedly firmer, although In ternationals showed som Irregularity. Lib erty Issues were active, the fours st 97.88 to 98.02 and the 314s at 98.90 to 99.03. Totals ales, par value, sggregated $3, 435,000. I'nlted Slates bonds, old Issues, were unchanged on call. Number of sale and rang of prices of the leading storks: Sale. High. Low. Close, Amer. Beet Sugar 300 75 74 H 7414 American fan ... 14,400 374 American C. & V. 1,000 66 V. 36i 64 64 97 76 37 C5 66 98H Amer, Locomotive 2,800 56 600 99 4,100 774 Amer, Sugar Ref., Amer. . & R..., Amer, T, & T.., Amer. 25., L. ft S, , 7714 1,900 1094 10744 108 14 Anaconda Copper.. 3,600 59 H 68 86 99 61 6814 86 99 61 Atchison 1.400 86 Si 8.606 100 1,200 6214 800 17H A.. O, & W. I. 8. I. Hal. Sz Ohio liulte A Sup. Con. 300 17 1714 1714 Cal. Petroleum..., 300 13 1 Canadian Pacific. Central Leather.. Ches. ft Ohio..., 6,300 136 135 136 8,900 68 66. 67 1,200 48 47 47 C M. St. P 2.300 38 87 Chi. N. W 1,000 86 95 37 95 18 43 36 29 66 39 R. I. & r. ctf. 24O0 19 18 Chlno Coppor 400 42 41 Colo. T. ft If,... 900 86 36 Corn Products Ref, 8.700 80 29 Crucible 8tel . .... 6,400 67 65 Cuba Can Sugar. 3,600 3014 39 Distillers' Seo 1.200 37 86 86 Erie L600 16 14 16 General Elec 12.400 139 126 138 General Motors ,. 6,600 93 90 91 (It. NO. Ptd 500 91 Ot. No, Ore otfs., 1,600 27 91 91 27 27 Illinois Central t4 44 97 27 87 17 88 Inspiration Copper 1,100 Int. M. M. pfd... 40,200 9? 43 96, 26 34 17 $3 Internet. Nickel, Internat. Paper. 1.400 37 9,300 27 K. C. Southern... 1.100 18 33 Kennenott Copper. 1,000 Louisville A Nash 116 Maxwell Motors .... 24 78 91 tt 26 1314 3 .... 66 17 17 Mexican Petroleum 6,200 81 200 18 1,000 14 "i'o'a 17' 900 71 Miami Copper . . Missouri Pacific.. . Montana Power . Nevada Copper ... New York Central. N. Y., N, H. & H. Norfolk A Weti:i Northern Pacllio.. 70 70 1,700 284 27 2$ 200 106 105 104 1,600 $7 86 86 33 16 3,300 1714 46 47 46 Paciflo Mall Pacific T. A T.. Pennsylvania Pittsburgh Coal.. Kay Cons. Copper, 1,000 23 2314 23 Reading ., 4.900 72 70 71 Republic J. s 8... 20,600 80 78 79 Shattuck Art. Cop. 800 19 19 19 Southern Pacific. 100 13 8314 13 Southern Railway. 1,000 16 24 24 Studebaker Corp.. 8,300 41 40 40 Texas Co 2,600 146 141 144 Union Paciflo ... 2,300 116 116 116 IT. S. Ind. Alcohol 113 IV 8. Steel 104,100 99 96 98 u. b. eieei pia.... 1,100 101 10s ,109 Utah Copper .... 600 79 7$ 76 Wabaah pfd B".. too, 11 21 21 Western Union .. 800 83 83 It West. Electric .. t.000 19 89 1814 Total sales for the day, 460,000 share. New York Money Market. New York. Nov. 26. Mercantile Piunl S6 per oent. Sterling Sixty-day bills. 14.71: eommer. clal sixty-day bills on banks, $4.71: com mercial sixty-day bills, $4.70; demand, $4.76; cables, $4.7(7-16. Silver Bar, I4c; Mexican dollars. 64c Bonds Government, firm: railroad, firm. Time Loans Easier; sixty days. 6C6U per cent; ninety days and six months, t wait per cent. Call Money Steady: high. 314 tr oent: low, t per cent: ruling, 1 per oent: clos ing, 2 per cent; offered at t par oent; last loan, t per oent. U. 8. 2s, rg.... 96Gt. No. 1st 4 tO do coupon .. t6Ilt Cen, ref. 4s 80 IT. B. Is. reg. 99 Int. M. M. 6s .. 93 do coupon .. 98'K. C. 8. r. 6s 78 IT. 8. Lib. ts 99 L. N. un 4s... 17 IT. 8. 4 reg. .104 1M K AT 1st 4s.. 6T do coupon ..104 Mo. Pac g. 4s.. 64 Am, I'. 8. .6., 94 Mont Power 6s 89 A. T. A T. 6s.. 93N. Y. C. d. 6s.. 93 Anglo-French 5s 90 No. Paciflo 4s .. 84 Arm. A Co. 4s 84tM K A T 1st 4s 67 Atchison gca. 4 8.1'No. Paciflo 3s., 68 H. A O. cv. 4s 78Or. 8. L. r. 4s M Beth, St. r. 6s 89 Pac T. A T. 6s 92 Cen, Leather 6s 95Penn. con. 4s 99 Cen. Paciflo 1st II Penn. gen. 4s 91 C. A O. o. 6s.... 74Readlng gen. 4s 86 C. B. Q. j. 4s 91S L A 8 V a 6s 69 CM8Po4s73 80. Pao. cv. 680 C. R. I. A P r 4s 63flo. Ry, 6s 92 C. A 8. r. 4s.. 72 Tex. Psc 1st 90 tD. A R. Q. r. 6s 60 'Union Paciflo 4s 81 Dnm. of C. 6s.. 90 U. 8. Rubber 6s 76 Erlo gen. 4s., 49 V. 8. Steel 6a.. 99 Gen. Eleo 6s.... 97 Bid. tAsked. $Ex.lnt, Coffee Market New York, Nov. 26. Coffee The circula tion of December notloes estimated at slightly over 20,000 bags, caused a renewal of liquidation and active switching In the market for coffee today. The opening wa 3 to 6 point lower and the more active month otd about S to It points net lower during the early trading, with December touching 6.82o and May 7.26c. The market steadied at this level on covering and scat tered trade buying, however, and later re covered part of Its loss. Deoember rallied to 8.92o and May to 7.34a, with the list closing at a net decline of 1 to t points. December, 6.91c; January, 7.00c; March, 7.16c; May, 7.82c; July, 7.60c; September, 7.66c. Spot, steady; Rio 7s, 7c; Santos 4s, 9c Cont and freight offers were about unchanged,' Including Santos 4s st 91o end Rio 7s at 7.46o to 7.60c, London credits. The cables reported no change In the primary market except Santos futures, which were 25 rel lower to 26 rels higher, later ad vancing 25 to 100 rels. Doll Coupon i 1 Hi RESCUE THREE U. AIRMEN Americans in Search of Foui Enemy Subs Combat Waves 60 Honrs; Are Picked Up Exhausted. (Ily Associated Press.) A French Port, Nov. 26. Suffer ing from cold, exhaustion rnd hunger, three American naval airmen were picked 10 by a French uatrol boal last night, a'tcr having been lost at sea fot nearly 6C hours. The three men, in a huge triplanc hydro-airplane, left a French bast Thursday morning in search of four enemy submarines which w.re re ported operating off the coast. When the men failed to return with in the usual time, fears were felt for their safety and othei machines we're sent out to search ftr them. The searching machines, however, re turned after several hours and report ed that they had seen no trace of the missing plane or its crew. The nava authorities then sent out a general warning to all allied boats oft, the coast and the search for the Americans was continued throughout Thursday night, all day and all night Friday and throughout Saturday, with naval air machines a-sisting in the search during the daylight hours. About dusk Saturday a French patrol boat saw the missing machine drifting helplessly several miles out at sea. A boat's crew rescued the three men, who included Ensign Ken neth Smith, a former Yale student, who was tl.e pilot; Frank J. Brady of Newark, N. J., observer and gunner, and I. F. Wilkenson, mechanician. The three men were virtually ex hausted when picked up. They were given first aid treatment on the boat, which rushed them to this port, where the men were transferred to a relief hospital. v TWO INJURED AS TRAIN AND AUTO CRASH0N TRACK A milkman named Sorenson, living at Giliat, six miles east of Council Bluffs, sustaind serious Injuries, and 17-year-old Louise Truscott suffered several painful Rashes as a result of the collision of the automobile in which both were riding with a Chicago, Mil waukee & St. Faul , train, Sunday morning, on the White Pole road. Miss Truscott was walking in to Council Bluffs to take part in a church entertainment at Epworth Methodist church. Sorenson drove up with a load of milk which he was hauling to town. . He invited the girl to ride with him, and she did so. 1 Sorenson, who is quite1 deaf, did hot hear the train as they'neared the tracks, and the machine was struck by the locomotive of an eastbound train, going at the rate of 45 miles an hour. The auto was. badly damaged. Sorenson was carried home un conscious. Miss Truscott suffered ' several cuts and was taken to the home of friends in Council Bluffs. : Kansas City I4ts Stork Market Kansas City, Nov. 26. Cattle Receipts, 36,000 head; market steady; prim ted steers, I16.60O16.76; dressed beef steers, tll.00O16.00; southern steers, t7.00Oll.00; cows, $5.60010.60; heifers, $1.60012.00; stockers and feeders, $6.75011.00: bulls, $6.2607.76; calves, $6.20011 00. Hogs Receipts, t,000 head; market lower: bulk ot sales, $17.30017.70; heavy, $17.60917.80; packers and butchers, $17,400 17.71; light, $17,30417.50; pigs, $16.25. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 8,900 head: market, steely: lamb, I16.00O16.86; year Hags, I12.60O16.00; wethers, I11.60O11.00; ewes, $10.10013.00. St. Joseph Live Stock Market Kit Tna.nl. f V-n " n . I . celpta, 8,600 head; market steady; steers, fo.nuqfiv.uvi wwi sou nailers, se.jfoiziij.vv, calves, 9.00 01 1.00. Hogs Receipts, M00 head: market lower; top, 117.70 ; bulk, In.40tjfl7.60. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 1,200; mar ket lower; lambs, tll.50On.00; awes, 16.00 OH.60. Chicago Produce Market. Chicago, Nov. 26. Butter Unchanged. Eggs Receipts, 4,669 cases; market un changed. Potatoes Receipts, 55 ears; market un changed. Poultry Alive, market unsettled; fowls. 1601c; springs, 19o; turkeys, 27c. , London Money Market London, Nov. 28. American securities were quint on tho stock sxchange today. Money was In Increased request Discount rates were quiet. From 10c to $5.25 Union Oil of Cuba recently ad vanced from lOe to 16.26 per share. I Cuba is rspldly developing a - high J grade oil field oil is selling at (4.09 per barrel. Writ for Circular "U" containing very interesting informa tion, and list of investment sugges tions. U. S. and Cuban banking refer ences. Cuban SecuritiesCo. Manzana de Gomez 501 HAVANA, CUBA. Members Bolsa Libra dt la Havana (Havana Curb Market Association) TEN DOLLS will be given free to the ten little girls under 12 years of age that bring or mail us the largest number of doll cou pons cut out of The Bee, before 4 P. M. Saturday, December 1. This coupon will be printed in every edition of The Bee until then. Ask everybody you know to save doll coupons for you. You can win one of these dollies if you really want to. Will you try? We want every little girl in Omaha and vicinity to . have one' of these beautiful dolls. You can leave the coupons and . get your dolly at The Bee branch office nearest you. Ames Office, 4110-N. 24th St . Lake Office, 2516 N. 24th St Walnut Office, 819 N. 40th St Park Office, 261& Leavenworth St. . Vinton Office, 1715, Vinton St. South Side Office, 2318 N St .'V Council Bluffs Office, 14 N. Main St , Benson Office, Military Ave. and Main St 5