Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 31, 1918, Page 15, Image 15
I -h. mi iii ii. 1 1 T- II Illl Ii irTrWT'ViiffiT,TlT,Tl,TTTrii .,.,,,!! THL .kEE: 01 OMAHA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 81, 1918. 1ft -3 RE.HI. ESTATE IMPROVED T ' West TVfVO-STORY BARGAIN IN JWEST FARNAM DIST. On year eld. Sli elegant rooms with rub. V parler end classed in sleeping porch Is 1 'addition. Oak floors throughout Oak ftnWan downstairs. Enamel upstairs. Tat iry 'j decorated. Complete In every detail The price is tS.200. at least tl.COO less th in its actual value. $1,000 cash, balance monthly. Let us put our time sgainst yo jrs and show you this. BE!,NS0N & CARMICHAEL , 143 Paxton Block. ( ' Douglas 1723. Ev "anlnfs call Walnut 15S0. NEARLY NEW 7-R. HOME. OAK FLOOR AND FINISH. ALL SPECIALS PAID. 1 500 down, price $4,600, $40 month. CU Ise to J6Uj and Jones Sts. Built (or a Ifpome. A choice location close to Field clu? To and Blackstone hotel. A special bar gain In a fine home, strictly modern. Call Ty ler 49. Osborne Real Estate Co.. 701 On nana Nat'l Bank bide-. 1-ROiOM new stucco, modern house, Dundee. J3tf 7 N. 60th Ave. Three sloeplug rooms, oali floors, full basement. $3,400. Mnnth ly payments. Phone Walnut 1920. STRIiCTLT modern 10-room house, big lot. nlc ua location On car line, close to school ancy, church. Will aell (or 16.900. Located at 29 California Hi.rx.-v is JJOL $3, da ERN oak bungalow In west Faraam, 600; nearly new; large lot. in.. . , Ivs Doug. $140. North lCRES, NEW 5-ROOM COTTAGE Krug Park Road, $4,000. ores on Krug Park road, improved wilth a good S-room cottaitf, barn, pump in1 all nw?ssry outbuildings; alfalfa. frikit, etc. Land lies fine. 3 blocks to good sclliool. S-vrrul fine homes now being crcicted In this district, costing from 18. r.OOJ to $9,000. If ou are looking for a i'onl(ortable little homo and a good In vestment let us show you this as acre age! In this district is sure to Increase in val'iie. J. L. HIATT CO., .W) I FIRST NATIONAL TVI.ERM 1VKK BLDO. M )NTCLAIR STUCCO BUNGALOW. Owlvr if" going to war and must selt Ht unl t Less than year old and In per fect ilondition. Five fine rooms, beauti fully It'lnlshed lh oak and enamel. Oak floors throughout. Large attic and full i nintjed b p r.i t. i uniplete In every d-tu, f l",, - ;i -H-t p 'i t . !." this, rail BENS ON & CARMICHAEL I2 Pavtnn I'1' Ereriintl'S "all Walnut 1 NEAR MILLER PARK" Bungflsow ii rooms ami ..'i mod ern, buillt-ln buffet, goml pininliiiit;. fur nace and! fixtures, paved s"- i. near car line amll sclinnl. Ownr eniuc on furm nd wlllWu M.BftO S'-p llvlv. P. J. JTEBBENS & CO.,; 10i Omahfr .Nat. Hank. Phnn 1 -1 '- FOR SALE--Modern 6-iooni liout,; guod lo ratlon; nnr Omaha university: hot water heat; larg screened, windowed sleeping e screened rear porch; owner leaving clSy; $3,300; bargain. I lemlng. 370S PlnknJey. Webster S9 7. (ROOM newl stucco, modern house. Dundee 1307 N' BOtlh Ave. Three sleeping rooms oak floors, full basement. $2,400 Month ly paymenup. Phone Wa'nut 192 IF you are Kilng to buy humr, see this first; a fiife five-room house; electric lights, gas sVid water. Price $2,000. See owner at 3331 Manclerson. YOUJC, A DOHERTY, REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT. 323 BRANDKISi THEATER. DG. 1671. ill.NNE LCSA 1 omes and lots otfr the best opportunit y to invtst your money. Phone TylerJU l jROOM cottage! practically new. Clifton Hill addition. 1 Walnut 1723. HOME for sale y owner, modern and good location. 2SH6T Maviderson. i South. No Delay Closing Loans. I, ; 1 W. T. GRAHAM. ' 604 Bee Bldg Doug. 1633. Fofe SALE 5i2 ppon. "5V2 ; 364 BRAN'DEIS THEATER BLDO. ' ... LOANS-ON CITY PROPERTY For a good sjx room. strictly modern W H Thomas & Son. Keelfne RMf? house In good neighborhood sue 2615 Pop- pleton ave. A feood home and priced I PAY highest market price for Liberty right by owner. bonds, either fully or partially paid. ' Write 608 Bryant Bldg.. Kansas City. Mo. - ) HW BINDER. BIO JSNAP. Money on hsnd for mortgage loan 40x6$, with -roora Jfouse, on S4th Jns) Cltv Nstlonsl Bank Bldg south of Leavenworth, .only $1,800. OMAHA HOMES EAST NEB FARMS JOHN W. ROBBIN3. 18HI2 FARNAM 6T O'KEEFK REAL ESTATE CO . A. SNAP 8 rooms, electri(l light, oak floors, 1016 Omaha Nat Bank Bldg Doug 2711 garage, cement drive, Ineur Field club, CITY AND FARM LOANS, 1332 80. 32d street. $6.5 00, by the owner. 6. SH and Per Cent. 7- 7. ' J H Dt'MONT CO . Keellne Bldf. Miscellaneous. $io ,o $io.ono made promptly r d' 9 ROOM HOME Wel. Wead Bldg . 18th and Farnam 8ts IMMEDIATE BHQPEN r'oMPANYnCnouglas 42t POSSESSION, ?l8J!?!!l0l PRICE, $6,250. C Q Carlbcrg. 312 Brandels Attractive home, having hall, living Theater Bldg.. Doug 68$ room, music room, dining room and , :rJ kitchen, four large bedrooms, one small bedroom and bath. Oak floors in first and REAL ESTATE OTHER CITIL'S. second stories, hot water heat, large : T ; r porch, full lot with shafle trees, fruit FOR SALE Me tg and grocery business in and shrubs. If you want a well built Neb,r"1k 'own ""J1 ,-4n0 ,po,pula' home in an exceptionally ood neighbor- bu cher,j,,n1 ,ro,:ery ",or e?u J" hood at two-thlrds what It would cost ments: rent building; two acre, of land to build, let us show this to you. slaughter house well equipped: reason for selling. Write Omaha Bee. Box 1866. 416-18 Keellne Bldg. Phone Doug. 690. , , , , , J. H. DUMONT & CO., farm and ranch lands $500 Down and $30 a MintH Arkansas Lands t-room. strictly modern, nearly new SEPTEMBER 3RD. bungalow, located near t'ne .Monmouth Our next excursion to McGehee, Ark Park school, all on one flhor; oak finish W. 8. FRANK. 201 NEVILLE BLK. and bak floors; full basement; furnace Colorado Lands T heat; large lot. on paved street Owner L leaving city must sell. 10 PER ALRb. leaving city, musi mk.ii. . Chblce, level section, Lincoln county, . - , , i . Colorado; lies level as a floor and soil Is PaVne Investment LOmpany, a dark, fertile loam. In the Colorado rain belt Go out and see the crops grow- REALTORS. in.A,re- vWrth Per Pw.10J , v.fi nnnif WAtr Ti 1781 $4,000 cash payment required. Whit A 637 Omaha Natl. Bank Bldg P. 1781. Hoover. 464 Omaha National Bank Bldg. SEE THIS HOME. IMPROVED quarters, half sections or The owner of an almost new 4-room '"; Lincoln county. Colo., bargains, home! with bath. .. drafted and must E"1fr,rm!rlbaJ ""A Wf" JhD U sell. Will sell the furniture. If wanted. Maurer, Arriba, Colo. $250 cash will handle and balance easy Maryland bands monthly payments. East front corner ; j - monimjf v i r.arare on nlace. Maryland water from farm Mild climate lot near park. Garage on place. Caffs Rus-ll Realty Co Baltimore. Md WALNUT 677 EVENINGS OR Missouri Lands. DOUG. 1014 DAYS. GREAT BARGAINS $5 down. $5 monthly 1 ' cdcat BiBPAlM ouy" 40 ores, good fruit and poultry Mu.d. DArvUniiN. near town BOUtnern Missouri: price only $-room pressed brick hous, In good or- 22a Address Box 282 O. Springfield. Mo der. Nice location, for only $4,500. Owner leaving city. Mmnjjota Lsnos t Jf- H.''5S' .... BARGAIN 240 acres: 40 miles from Mlnne- 647 Omaha Nat. Bk Bldg. D. 124, spoils; 120 acrfs cultivated: all good corn ADATjp ATM land; 60 acres fine meadow land; 60 acres D"-"-" pasture: some scattered hard maple In Seven rooms. Paved street. Near street pasture; fair set buildings; near creamery car and school. Price $3,600. Reasonable and store. Price, $47.60 per acre; $2,(00 terms. Walnut 1580. cash, balance flvs years. S per cent. FOURHOUSE BARGAINS m Flyn""lth B'd" M"" Close In. Rental $820 per year. Bargain Nebraska Lands. PriV4T!ORAHAM. BEE BLDO. FARMS ANlTRANCHES -r,,M3OC00,t'gTmlU ,b3'o00Ckc.'hbm...Cnacr; S? tTK par month oasb-bslsnc $a Brown couoet The tr, placel , BENSON & CARMICHAEL. recomrnendPa7bn Snd fo" 84$ Paxton Block tlst an(j photos stating as to. vnur wants FOR RENT AND BALE. Kloke Inv Co. Omaha H7E8ZwABp,rmf EAST NEBRASKA FARM. 103 8 17th Bt Ootiglss $013 0oo(1 qUarttr. I miles from Tecuraseh, WE SelU rent. Inture and make loans on 50 miles 8. B. Llncoli- all cultivated, fine city property, north locality, no buildings, $125 per acre. MITCHELL INVESTMENT CO.. W. T. GRAHAM, BEE BLDG.. OMAHA. - th and Ames Col. 217 WRITE me for pictures and prices of my BARGAINS In homes. Investments, proper- farm and ranches In god old Dsws tie and acreage near Omaha. Harrison county Arab L Hungerford Crawford tk Morton. tl Omaha Nat'l Bank Bldg. Neb W FARNAM SMITH CO ' 80 ACRES 4 miles southwest of Allen. Ne- ' Real Estai and Insurance. brasks. In sura crop country. Pries, $150 182B Fsrnam St Douglas iM per acre; easy terms; will take six- P n wrari sn.lji Rr. i kpt ATE cylinder Bulck uta as part payment. S " - Larson, Clarks. Neb. dadm 1 air in .,-.r. FOR SALE 80 acres In northeast He- e AKM LAND WANTED braska, near Brunswick. Good land, good ' FARUB WANTED buildings, priced to sell. L. N. Brighton " Don l llat your farm with 0 It you Owner. Route 1, Brunswick. Neb. wsnt to ep It MERRICK CfMJNTY Improved com nd E. P 5NOW5l SOr3. sift If fsims st tne right price. . A .110 Ejectr. Blg. Oougla $7L LARSON, Central City, Neb. REAL ESTATE Dustncsi Property SMALL APARTMENT TRADE. Very alee. new. six apartments, close In, well occupied, up-to-date. Rent. $3,100 per year. Owner wants small (arm not (ar (rom Omaha, at right price. W T. GRAHAM. BEE BLPO. WE WILL buy your trnme or business prop erty and pay cash H A WOLFE CO Klertrlc Bldf Tyler It BUSINESS property and investment A P TUKET SON W First National Bsnk Bids W'CAWO: I.WKSTMKNT I'd inoonie. Busiti'as and Trackage 8peciauate tSfh and ridir Sm roiii 4tH REAL ESTATE EXCHANGES. TWO beautlfuf lots Just south of Elmwood. full-sits ' lots. 80x150. To exchange as first payment witb torn cash on modern bungalow. Address T-660, Omaha Bis. FOR aale or trade a retail business, net profits from $4,000 to $5,000 a year; will stand the closest Investigation: good rea son!! for selling. Box 4287. Bee. REAL ESTATE SUBURBAN Dundee. FOR QUICK SALE 4609 DODGE ST., $3,750 Owner of this fine home, consisting of 6 large rooms, finished in quarter sawed oak downstairs, with the latest plumbing and heating and only built a few years, is being offered for less than what the house alone cost The property is aurviy a bargain If one consldeie the future value of the land. Look over the surroundings and you will readily see why this property will be worth a great deal of money n the future on account of the trackage so near to it Owner will take $1,750 cash and the balance in monthly payments. House will be vacant In a few days and ready to move Into. HASTINGS & IIETDKN. lflH HARNEY ST. Phone TYLER 50. DUNDEE, $7,0C0 HIGH-CLASS STUCCO Very well-built home, near 50th and Chicago streets, with large living room, dining room and kitchen on the 1st floor; three bedrooms and sleeping porch on the second floor; two rooms finished In the attic; attractive fireplace, tile bath room: garage and cement driveway. Price right; terms can be arranged. GLOVER & SPAIN, Douglas 3963. 919-20 City National. DUNDEE 2-story frame, 7 rooms, modern house -n Wobster near 60th St. Must be sold to close an estate. Price $5,600. C. A. GRIMMEL. Phone D. 115. DUNDEE HOME $300 down for a strictly modern, brand new. (-room bungalow. Liberty bonds or W. S. stamps same as cash. Douglas 3840 or Colfax 4193. owner fi-ROOM new stucco, modern house, Dundee, 1307 N. 60th Ave. Three sleeping rooms oak floors, full basement, $2,400. Month ly pHmenls. Phone Walnut 7920. FiR property in Dundee, Happy Hollow and Kairacres. call OEOROE AND COM PANY, 902-12 City Nut. Bk Douglas 758. Acreage TEN ACKES uevel garden land, east Omaha, close to car line, clear, want clear rental or home. S. S & R. E. MONTGOMERY. 213 City Nat'l Bk Bldg REAL ESTATE WAN rED HAVE client fur 2".lo0-acre ranch. Write us at nncp. INTER-STATE REALTY CO., 913-14 city National Bank Bldg. UOOD Omaha income property (or clear western land or eartern Nebraska farm Mr. Pease. 211 Brandels Theater Bldf. FINANCIAL. Real Estate Loans and Mortgages OUR 6 per cent first mortgages secured by Omaha residences are safe Investments be cause they are based upon not more than 40 per cent of the actual value of the security and are hacked by 25 years' ex perience without the loss of a dollar to an I N estor. E. If. LOUGEE, INC. 538 Keellne Bldg OMAHA LIVE STOCK Cattle Receipts Are Moderate; Hogs Fifteen to Twenty-Five Cents Higher; Lambs Remain Steady. Omaha, August 30. 1911 Reoelpts were: Cattle. Hogs. Sheep Official Monday 17.183 Official Tuesday 13,445 Official Wednesday ... 9,200 Official Thursday f.i24 Estimate Friday 3.200 Five days this week. .49,051 39,930 134.248 Same days lsst week. .27.143 40.083 123.047 Same days I wks. ago.. 12,310 38,188 74,223 Sams days 3 wks. ago.. 4S. 330 61.600 61.666 Same days year ago 37.742 13.665 97.879 Receipts and disposition of live stock at the Union tfiock yards, Omaha, Neb., for twenty-four hours ending at 3 o clock p. m., yesterday. RECEIFTS CARS. Horses Cattle Sheep Hogs Mules C, M. St. P 6 11 Missouri Pacific 2 1 Union Pacific 32 C. A N. W., cast 2 C. N. W.. west t7 C, St. P.. M. O C, B A east 3 C, B. & Q . fvest 28 C. R. I. P.. east .. 3 C. R. I. & P . west .. 16 31 10 44 14 69 26 4.049 29.853 1.023 S6.05S 9.863 24.665 9.295 21,773 7.700 33,000 Total receipts 119 113 88 1$ DISPOSITION HEAD. Cattle Hogs Sheep Morris Co 618 851 738 Swift & Co 1.4S7 1.449 138 Cudahy Packing Co. . 344 1.421 663 Armour & Co 732 1,26s S.160 Schwarts & Co 750 .... J. W-. Murphy 8,007 .... Lincoln Packing Co. . 76 S. O. Packing Co. .. 44 Wilson A Co 3 Cudahy-Wlchlta 491 W. B. Vansant Co. .. 22 F. B. Lewis 210 J. B. Root & Co 16S J. H. Bulla Hosenstock Bros 3S U9 .14 El IS 8 151 6 3 13 24 11 i 258 23 30 8 K. Ct KellOKC WertlH'Imer .v. Degen. Ellis A Co Sullivan Bros Rothschild & Krohs .. M. & K. Calf Co. .. Christie Hlgglns Huffman Ruth Glaxsberr Baker. Jones & Smith . John Harvey Dennis &. Francis . . . Jensen & Lungren . . Pat O uea .. Other Buyers I.4S9 12.964 Totals 0.427 1,73$ 16,863 Cattle Receipt thl morning were mod erate, 3,200 head being reported In, and trading was strong on beef steer and slow and about steady on the best kinds of butcher stock, with a draggy and weaker tendency on the In-between and commoner kinds. Best western beeves were quotable at $13.5016.00; good to common kinds from $9.60 to $14.00. Best butcher stock was selling at a spread of $9.r.012.00; best beef was fully a quarter higher than' Inst week and good to choice butcher stock fully steady. Quotations on cattle: Choice to prime beeves, $17.00018. 00; good to choice beeves, tl 5.00 S) 16.50 : fair to good beeves, $13.50 14 50; common to fair beeves, $10.0013.00. Good to choice yearlings. $14.0016.50; fair to good yearlings, $11.00f!!14.00; common to fair yearlings. $8.00nS10.00; good to choice grass, beeves, SI 3. 50 15.00 ; fair to good grass beeves, $12 60 14.60; common to fair grass beeves. $.60t12.00; Mexlcsn beeves, $9.0011.00; good to choice heifers, $10.00(912.50; good to choice cows, $8.76 12.00: fair to good cowl, $669.25; 'common to fair cows, $6.75$. 26; prime feeders. $13.50$16.00; good to cholc feed ers, $10.60 13.00: fair to good feeders, $9.0010.25; common to fair feeders. $7.00 ifj'8.00; good to choice stockers. $10.00 11.50; stock heifers, $7.009.00; stock cows, $7.0O8.OO; stock calves, $7.0011.00 ;veal calves, $7 0013. 75; bull, stags, etc. $8.00 12.00 Hogs 7.700 hogs were received here to day, bringing receipts for the week up to 39,930 head. The market wss active nd higher from the start, opening largely at 15c higher and advancing until many hogs old fully 25c higher than yesterday. Bulk of to day's sales was $1S. 90019. 15 with a top of $19.50. The general market 1 1525c higher. Sheep Another liberal run of lamb was received today, 22.000 head, making the re ceipts for the week 134,248 head. Trading began at an early hour with choice lambs, both fat and feeders selling at yesterday's prices. No medium or plain lambs had been sold but the undertone on these was weak with prices decidedly uneven. St. Joseph Live Stock. St. Joseph, Aug. 30 Cattle Receipt. 1, 500 head; market weak; steers, $9.00 18.25; cows and heifers, $6.0016.00; calves, $6.0014.00. Hogs Receipts, $.600 head; market high er; top, $20.00; bulk of sales, $19.26(3119.90. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 600 head; market steady; lambs, $U.0017.75; ewe, J5 00612.00. FARM AND RANCH LANDS. Nebraska Lands FOR SALE Little farm In town, 100x135, modern cottage, fruit, coop, garage. 6326 North 26th St. ieiTACRBS, improved, close In, paved road. Nlisnn. 422 Securities Bldg. Oregon Lands. OREGON LANDS. Irrigation. "In the Heart of the Range" The Jordan Valley Project, Malheur County. Oregon. Au empire in the making, land $1.00 per acre plus the cost of tha water. You can file on grating homestead entries nearly Literature and particular on request Next excursion September 14. HARLET J. HOOKER, 940 First Natl Bk. Bldg, Omaha. Neb Wyoming Lands. FINE level H section "Golden Prairie" dis trict, 13 miles northwest of Pins Bluffs; 125 acre under cultivation; all fenced and cross fenced; well on place; $40 land all sides. My price next 60 days, $30.00 per acre. One crop will pay for it. This Is the greatest wheat country in the U. 8. Write for terms. Address C. E. Beyerle, Pine Bluffs. Wye. WHEATLAND Wyoming farms, $60 per a., including paid up water right Henry Levi ACM Rylander 854 Omaha Nat'l. Horses Live Stock Vehicles. For Sale FOR SALE TEN GOOD DELIVERY HORSES WEIGHING AROUND 1,200 Li:.". Apply afternoon. PETERSEN & PEGAU, BAKING CO. 12TH AND JACKSON STS. $00 OR 400 spring nd summer pigs, sows to have pigs, sows with pigs, and atock hogs: $ Bill full blood Duroc boar; 1 last fall boar; few spring boars. Carl Soren sen, 6th and Grace, East Omaha. 2 IMMUNE pigs South 3486. POULTRY AND PET STOCK BARLEY. $3.50 per cwt.. delivered Wag ner SOI N 16th Phon Douglas 114$ MONEY TO LOAN. Organised by the Busln sa Men of umsba ruKniiuns. piano ana noies as secuni. $40. ( mo.. H good tots I. 11 it Smaller, laiger am'tt proportional rat PROVIDENT LOAN SOCIETY. 133 Securities Bldg 16th Fsrnam Ty 6I LOANS) OR DIAMONDS AND IKWELHV 1 CJ SMALLER LOANS QV IO wo FLATAI' EST tx lO TH KLK 8ECHRITINE3 Bl.lMl I V toti Lowest rate Prlvste losn booth Harry Maleshork. ISM Dod D Mil Eat 111 niAMONDS MI HW!1 UUNK REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Allda A. L. Byrne to Fred Sullivan, Chicago St., 198 ft. east of 26th t.. north side. 33x148 $ 1,075 Louise E. Olsen to Wit, Wlnkelman, Ersklne St., 100 ft. east of 48th st, north side. 66x80 226 Anton Bratda and wife to Frances Rlcan and husband, 12th St., 360 ft north of Hickory St., west side, ZMxiiv 1,850 j NEW YORK STOCKS Market Lapses Into Dullness Owing to Admonition Against Excessive Speculation; French Exchange Up. New York. Aug. 80.- Anticipating the approaching holiday and having In mind yesterday'a umixperted reproof regarding excessive speculation from the chairman of the local money pool today's stock mar ket lapsed Into It recent dullness, dealing being concentrated In less than half a score of Issues. A few leaders, notably United States Steel and Canadian Pacific, both selling ex-dlvldend registered early declines of 1 I to 14 points, but these were largely re gained in the gradual recovery of the final hour. The most Interesting development of the session In Ita significant relation to the en couraging war new was another advance In French exchange to the highest level of the past three years. Liberty bonds. Including SV,'s were re actionary, but most of the issues were slightly higher. Totsl sales par value aggregated $3,625,000. Old United States bonds were unchanged on csll, except for a S reaction In the fours. Number of sales and quotations on lead ing stocks: Clostng Sales. High. Low. Bid H 1,000 47 4V t 500 S5Vi 85 X5S $00 66 H 66 66 400 774 77 77H 900 110H 11 0 1104 1,200 98Vi 87'i 7H 17 4.100 68 67 67 400 $7 86 86 104 300 56 55 65 300 36 36 26 18 Am. Beet Rugar . ,' American Can Am. Car Fdry. . . Am. Locomotive . . . Am. Smelt. & Ref. . Am. Sugar Rrf. . . Am. Tel. A TeL . . Am. Z , L. A S Anaconda Copper . . Atchison A. G. A W. I. S. 8. Bait. & Ohio Butte A Sup. Cop. . Cal. Petroleum .... Can. Pacific .. Central Leather X.600 164 162 163 1.900 69 68 69 Chesapeake A Ohio 400 68 67 68 51 C , M. A St. P, Chi. & North, ...14.300 61 49 93 25 C. R. I. A P. ctfs. Chlno Copper .... Col. Fuel & Iron . Corn Prod. Ref. Crucible Steel ... Cuba Cane Sugar Dist. Securities .. Erie Oen. Electric .... Oen. Motors .... Great Nor. pfd. . . at. Nor. Ore ctfs. Illinois Central . . 900 26 25 39 47 43 67 30 700 47 1.700 43 1,600 68 46 43 67 2.700 $8 68 68 200 16 15 16 700 146 116 145 3.801 136 133 182 S04) 93 93 93 1,600 32 33 83 96 1.500 (3 (3 63 Inspiration Copper Int. Mer. Mar. pfd. 11.500 103 101 103 Int. Nickel 200 29 9 Int. Pspor K. X Southern .. Kennecott Copper Louis. & Nasb. .. Maxwell Motors . Mex. Petroleum . . Miami Copper .. 35 .... 18 3 33 .... 11S 26 16 800 33 $08 37 1,800 100 99 100 28 $.600 24 33 24 '. 68 300 20 20 20 300 74 73 74 8.300 44 43 43 105 Missouri Pao. ... Mont. Power .... Nevada Copper .. N. Y. Central .. N. Y., N. H. & H. Norfolk A West. Nor. Pacific 400 90 90 90 33 32 .... 19 44 60 Pac. Mail 1,600 32 Tel. A Tel Pennsylvania Pittsburgh Coal Ray Con. Cop. . 400 2,500 24 90 24 89 24 90 Reading Rep. Iron A 8toel 2,800 92 91 South. Paclflo . 400 87 86 86 Houth. Railway . .13,900 25 24 35 Stud. Corp 43 Texa Co 900 164 153 168 Union Pacific 3.400 128 137 128 V. S. Ind. Alcohol 123 U. S. Steel 72,800 110 109 110 V. S. Steel pfd 110 Utah Copper 800 $3 83 82 Wabash pfd "B" 28 Western Unian .... 200 85 84 84 Westing. Eelec 43 Bethlehem 3.000 85 53 84 Total sale for the day, 225,000 share. New York General. New York, Aug. 80. Flour Essy; springs, $10.00 1 1.26 ; Kansas, $10.90011.25. Wheat Steady; No. 3 red, $2.34, track New York export to arrive. Corn Steady; fresh shelled No. 1 yellow, $1.87 and No. 3 yellow $1.78, both cost and freight New York. Oats Easy; standard, SO3j8'c. Hay Barely steady. No. 1, $1.60t.l; No. 2, $1.5001.55: No. 3. $1.351. 40. Pork Firm. Short clear, $47.00fl64.00 Lard Barely steady. Mlddleweet, $26.15 27.05. Butter Strong: creamery higher than ex tra. 4849c; extras, 4Sc; firsts, 45 47 c. Egga Unchanged. Cheese Unchanged. ' Poultry Unchanged. Chicago Live Stock. Chicago, Aug. SO. Cattle Receipts, 5,000 head; market steady; beef cattle, $10.76 IS. 90; butchers, $7. 25(14. 50; stockers and feders, $8.00014.00; veal calves, $17.76 13.50; western range beef steers, $14,600 13.00; cows and heifers, $9.50014.00. Hogs Reoelpts. 7.500 head; market high er; butchers, $19.26020.20; light, $19,040 20.25; packing, $18.16019.10; rough, $17,500 $18.00; pigs, $18.25019.00. Sheep and Lambs Receipts. 18.000 head; market steady; top westerns, $18.40; natives, $17.85; fat sheep, steady: feeding sheep, strong to higher: lambs, $16.0018.40: feed ers. $16.00017.50; ewes. $10.60012.25; breeding ewes, $12.5018.25. Kansas City Live Stock. Kansas City, Aug. 30. Cattle Receipts, 3,000 head, including 200 southerns: stesdy: prime fed steers, $17.26018.60; dressed beef steers, $11.00017.00; western steers. $10.00 014 50; southern steers, $7. 50014. $5; cows, $6. 50 12.50; feeders, $9.00014.50; stoekers and feeders, $7.50$15.00; bulls, $7.60010.00; calves, $7.50013.50. Hogs Receipts. 6,000 head: higher: bulk, $19.400 20.00; heavy, $19.5002016; packers and butchers. $19.60020.00; light. $19,250 30.00; pigs. $15.00017.25. Sheep and Lambs Receipt, 2,200 head: lower; Iambs, $15.60017.25; yearlings, $10.60 14.50; wethers. $10.00013.25; ewes, $8.00 012.25; stockers and feeders, $8.60010.00. St. Louis Live Stock. St Louts. Mo., Aug. $0. Cattle Receipts. 5,300 head; slow; prospects steady; native beef steers, $11.60018.25; yearling steers and heifers. $9.60016.60; cows. 7.5U9 13.60; stockers and feeders, $8.60012.00; fair to prime southern beef teers, $10.00017.70; beet cows and heifers, $7.50015.00; native calves, $7.76015.25. Hogs Receipts. 3.700 head; higher; lights. $19.70020.10; pigs, $14.65019.00; mixed and butchers, $19.60020.10; good heavy, $19,95020.10; bulk. $19.70020.06. 8heep and Lambs Receipts, 2.600 heart; steady; lambs, $14.00017.00; ewes, $11.00 12.00; canners and chopper, $6.0099.00. Bratlatreet' Trade Review. New York. Aug. $0. Bradstreet's tomor row will say: With attention focused on th war, with the government Insisting upon getting larger and larger supplies of essentials, and with the drouth-stricken section of th southwest complaining, sentiment tends to become more conservative. Considerable business Is reported and consumption re quirements heavy, but supplies are light, and all round activity would reign were It not for Imperative needs of war. Weekly bank clearings, $6,136,581,000. Slonx City Live Stock. Sioux City. Aug. 30. Cattle Receipts, 1. 000 hesd; market weak; beef ateers, $9,600 13.75; fat cows and heifers, $8.00011.60; canners, $6.0007.60; stockers and feeders. $8.50010.76; feeding cows and heifers, $7.(0 8.75. Hogs Receipt, 8,000 head; market 10c to 16c higher; light, $19.18011.60; mixed. $19.00019.10: heavy, $18.60019.00; bulk of sales, $18.90019.40. Shoep and Lambs Receipts, 2,500 head; market steady. New York Cotton. New York, Aug. 30. The cotton msrket was very Irregular today. Aa early decline of about $3.00 per bale wa almost entirely recovered, but prices broke again In the later trading and the close was barely steady at a net loss of CO to 62 points. After selling at $34.45, October advanced 1 to 8 point and closed at $34.40. New York. Aug. 30. Cotton futures open ed easy; October, 84.75c to 34.45c; Decem ber, 34.10c; January, 83.75c; March, 33.65c to 83.40c; May, 33.50c. Evaporated Apple and Dried Fruit. Now York. Aug. 30. Evaporated Apples Dull'; stats, 130lto. Prunes Firm; California, 8016oj Ore gon, 13 016c. Apricots Unsettled; choice, 16c; extra cholre, 16c,; fancy, 19c. Peachx Firm: standard, 1212c; choiee, 13e; fancy. 14c Raisins Steady: loose muscatels. 9c: choice to fancy seeded, 10 011c; seedless. 9011c; London layers. $2.00. Kansas City Grain. Kansas City, Mo., Aug 80. Corn September, 11.61; October. $1.61. GRAIN ANDPROD(JCE Corn Generally Unchanged to Three Cents Off; Balk of Oats Quarter Cent Down; Wheat Half Cent Up. Omahs. Aug $0. Receipts of grain today were 129 cars of wheat, 79 cars of corn. 78 cars of oats, no rye, and 13 cars of barley. Corn prices ranged from unchsnged to 3 rents lower. Good white grades showed s decline of 3 to 3 cent.. Off grndes In the several varieties generally brought shout yesterdsy's figures, quality considered Sample yellow sold higher. Oats were unchanged to rent lower with the bulk of a cent off. Wheat prices wore cent up. OMAHA GRAIN MOVEMENT Receipts (cars) Today. Wk.Ago. Last Tr. Wheat 129 81 9 Com 79 80 31 Oat 76 47 5 Rye 0 4 0 Barley 13 1 $ Shipment (cars) Wheat 60 93 1 Corn 34 44 VI Oats 71 16 40 Rye 6 1 0 Barley 3 6 5 RECEIPTS IN OTHER MARKETS Wheat. Corn. Oats Chicago 321 211 o29 Minneapolis $94 Duluth 13 Kansas City 279 77 134 St. Loul 317 51 63 Corn No. 3 whits: 1 car. $1.70. No. 4 white: 3 cars, $1.65. No. 6 white: 2 cars. $1.65. No. 6 white: 1 car, $1.56; 1 car. $1 63; 1 car, $1.44. Sample while: 2 cars, $1.40; 1 car. $1.35; 2 cars, $1.30. No. 1 yellow: 3 cars, $1.65. No. 4 yellow: 1 car, $1.60. No 5 yellow: 1 car, $1.45. No. 6 yellow: l car. $1.35. Simple yellow: 1 car. $140; 1 car. $1.36; 3 3-5 cars, $1.36: 1 car. $182; 3 cars, $1.35; 3 cars, $1.20. No. 3 mtxed: 1 car. $1.69. No. 4 mixed: 3 cars. $1.62. No. S mixed: 1 car, $147. No. mixed: 1 car, $1.43; ( cars, $1.40. Sample mixed: 3 cars. $1.36; 1 car, $1.28; I car, $1.27. Oats Standard: 1 car. 69 c. No. $ white: 1 cars, 69o; 1 cars, 69c; 1 2-5 cars, 69c. Barley No. $: 1 car, $1.09; 2 cars. $1.08 No. 4: 1 car. $1.07. Wheat No. 1 hard: 4 cars, $2.11. No. 3 hard: 1 car, $$.1T; 14 cars. $2.16; 4 16 cars. $2.15; 1 ear. $3.15; 1 car (smutty), $3 15. No. 3 hard: 4 ear. $3.14; 4 cars. $3.11 1 car. $3.13: 4 ear (smutty), $3.10; 1 ear (smutty), $3.0$. No. 4 hard: 1 car (smutty). $3.06. No. 6 hard: 1 oar (smutty), $3 01. No. 1 northern spring: I oar (smutty). $318. No. 1 mixed: 1 car, $2.14; J car, $3.1$; I car, $3.11; 1 ear (smutty), $3.10. No. I mixed: 1 ear, $211: 1 oar (smutty). $3.08; 1 car (smutty), $1.08. Closing Chicago pries, lurnisnad Th Dm by Logan A Brysn. (lock and grain bmkar $1$ South Sixteenth tret. Omshs. Art. Open. High. Low. Close. Ye. Corn. J I I I Auf. 183 164 151 I 164161A Sep. 1 63 1 64 151 I 64 163 Oct 1(4 1 66 153l 66 154 Oat Auf. 70 70 69 69' 69 Sep. 7O07O 70 69i7O0 70 Oct. 71 73 71 7! 71 Pork. I Sep. 43 00 41 00 43 00 43 20 148 15 Oct, 43 60 48 76 43 17 48 70 1 4 3 (0 Lard l Sep. I 26 86 26 87 26 85 26 67;28 83 Oct 36 87 18 87 26 77 26 6730 82 Rib I I Sep. 24 (0-61 14 61 24 62! 14 66 134 60 Oct. 1 24 83 14 87 34 77 24 80 A14 86 CHICAGO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS. Corn Dip to New Low Level, Then Rallies on Profit Taking by Short. Chicago, Aug. 30. Corn today found new low level, but recovered and olosed 101C over yesterday. The dip was due to th ' fact that victories In Europe are regarded as bearish and to th bit dis count of the No. ( grades In the sample market, which declined 5010c and were 7o under August and September deliveries, Th closing rally was due to profit taking by shorts. Cash house generally were on th selling side. October closed lo up at $L66. Fluctuations ranged lc. and the movements wore nervou and Jerky. In the oats pit the same nervous tension was observed but sentiment wa mora even ly divided than In corn. Cash houses snd those with country connections continued hedging. Some of the buying was report ed a being for shippers. Cash oat war slightly lower, with No. t white about 2o nd standard about le under Octo ber. Receipts tontlnued liberal. The provision market In a sluggish way was firm, In astnpsthy with corn and hog, except that ribs worked 6e lower. Pork closed 1202Oo and lard Co higher. Cash Quotations: Corn No. 1 yellow, $1.68: No. 1 yellow. $1 60 01.63; No. 4 yellow, $1.5301.66. Oats No. 1 white, 69069c; standard. 970o. Barley $1.0001.08. Rye No. 1. $1.6601.87. Timothy $6.00 8.76. Clover Nominal. Pork Nominal. Lard $26 77. Ribs $24.00024.75, Turpentine and Rosin. Savannah, Oa., Aug. 80. Turpentine 01c; ssles, 387 barrels; receipts. 165 bar rels; shipments, 11$ barrels; stock, 18,308 barrels. Rosin Firm; sale,' 898 barrels; receipts, 1,036 barrels; shipments, 1,120 barrels; stock, 68,989 barrels. Quote: B, $11 40011.68; D, $11.60; E, $11.80; P, $11 15; Q, $11.(0011.06; H, $11.00 012.06; I, $12.10; K, $13.9091100; M. $13.10. N, $13.25; WO, $13.60; WW, $13.76. New York Coffee. New York. Aug. 3". The market for coffee futures was firmer today on cover ing and scattered buying which seemed to b inspired by the strength reported In Bra zil. Spot coffee firm; Rto 7s, 9c; Santo 4s, 12c. Dry Good. New York. Aug. 2. The dry food msr ket was quiet today. Cotton good houses were reluctant to sell In view of th high price of cotton and the fixed price of cloth. Raw silk was slightly lower, but with no signs of weakness. Minneapolis Grain. Mlneapolls, Aug. 80. Barley 2 097e. Rye $1.62 01.63. Bran $29.31. Corn $1.6501.88. Oats 66 87c. Flax $4.2104.81 Kansas City Prodnce. Kansas 'City, Mo., Aug. 80. Butter Creamery, 45c; firsts, 44c; seconds, 48c; packing, 36c. Eggs Unchanged. Poultry Unchanged. New York Money. New York, Aug. 10. Mercantile paper, sterling, guilders, lire, frsncs, rubles and Mexican dollars, unchsnged. Time loans, unchanged. St, Louts Grain. St. Louis, Aug. 80. Corn Higher; Septem ber, 81.69c; October, 31.69. Oats Higher: September, 72e asked; October, 73o bid. New York Metal. New York, Aug. 30. Lead Easy; spot, $8.06; spelter, easy; East St. Louis, spot. $9.0009.12. New York Sugar. New York. Aug. 10 Sugar Unchanged. McAdoo Says Railroad Men Should Be on Deferred List Washington, Aug. 29. President Wilson was told today by Director General McAdoo that successful op eration of the railroads demands that deferred classification be given most employes and those actually taken in to army service should be conserved for military liilway service in France to lessen the drain on railroad per sonnel in this country. Italian Troops Win from Austrian on Two Fronts Rome. Aug. 30. The Italian official crimmunication issued today follows: "In the Concei valley enemy attacks were averted by our fire. Advanced hosts were driven back with losses Prisoners were taken on the north ern slopes of Altissimo and north of Col -Del Rosso hostile reconnoitering parties were dispersed." HAGENBECK SHOWS ARE HERE SUNDAY Come a Day Ahead for the Parade and Two Per formances on Labor Day. About the time the milkman is mak ing his rounds tomorrow morning the first of the three special trains bear ing the Carl Hagen:.- Wallace shows, one of the largest circus or ganizations in the world, will reach Oiiiaha over the ntli cm. The big show will come from Carroll, la., where it is exhibiting today. Everything is in readiness for the reception of the circus. Agents who visited the city several weeks ago made arrangements for the licenses. Last week these licenses were deliv ered to a representative of the circus, which insures the two performances Labor day, at 2 and 8 p. ni., and a parade at 10 a. m. Charles Phceney, the 24-hour man, and Fred Seymour, the circus chef, reached Omaha Frjday night. During the forenoon Mr. Seymour will go marketing end he will nu carry a market basket either, for what he purchases will require two baggage wagons to transport to the circus grounds, Twentieth arid Paul streets. Kvery day 3,000 meals are served in t tie canvas hotels of the Hagenbeck Wallace circus. It requires to feed the employes each day .100 pounds of I" mils of pork and mutton, 110 cases of canned goods, 'JO bushels of fresh vegetables, 1,200 loaves of bread, 60 gallons of milk, 20 gallons of cream, 40 gallons of ice cream, 70 pounds of cakes and 60 doien pies. The horses with the show number 750 head and along with the three herds of elephants they consume daily a carload of feed. The Carl Hagenbeck collection of wild animals require three carcasses of beef daily except Sunday, which is fast day. Twenty-two tents covering 14 acres of ground are used to house the nag enbeck-Wallace circus. The arena tent is among the biggest reaches of canvas ever constructed, being two city blocks in length. Traveling with the show are 1,000 employes in ad dition to 108 advance representatives. The circus is capitalized at $3sOO0,0OO and is owned by hdward Ba.'rtrd of French Lick Springs, Jnd. Thirty years ago Ballard was peanut butcher with the circus he now owns. Omaha Boy Is Wounded in Ninth Charge Over the Top In a letter to his brother, Jake Slos berg, Morris Slosberg, Omaha boy describes vividly a daring charge made by the Yanks in which he was wounded. "Our platoon was going forward," he says, "when Germans at the edge of a wheat field cut bose at us. They poured a stream of bullets into us. but .it kept on going. "The sergeant, who was an old pal of mine, was killed and other fine lads that I had soldiered with were hit. We kept on, and when we were so close that they saw they had no chance of killing us, they shouted Kamerad. "We brought in eight prisoners. rour of them were old men that look ed all of 60 years to me." Slosberg has been over the top nine times. In the attack which he describes he was wounded bv a ma chine gun bullet in the foot. He expresses great thankfulness that the fighting is not on "home soil" as he says the desolation of war was ter rible. Miss Higgins Undergoes 1 Operation After Lecture Against the advice of physicians Miss Joy Higgins Thursday night spoke to an audience of 1,000 persons in Grand Island, and Friday morning succumbed to an attack ol annendi- citis and was rushed to an Omaha hospital where she will undergo an operation. Miss Higains was a member of th labor party on its recent mission to Europe. Jot wishing to disappoint the large audience which fiarl cath- ered to heaf her, and, in spite of her illness, she gave an address which held the audience spellbound. Brother of Omaha Mayor Dies at Home in Norfolk Norfolk. Neb.. An. 30 fSmrial Telegram.) George D. SmiA, prom inent wortolk man, and brother to Mayor Ed. Smith of Omaha, died in his home here Thursday night. Fu neral services will be held here Mon day afternoon. Mr. Smith was born in Iowa in 1847 and was a retired farmer. He was chairman of the Madison county republican committee for many years and county commis sioner here for about two years. Doane College to Have Student Training Corps Crete, Neb., Aug. 30. (Special Telegram.) Dean Scott received to day a telegram announcing officially that the student army training corps has been authorized for Doane col lege. This will enable Doane stu dents to gain military training and official military recognition while tak ing their college education. The Weather. Comparative Local Reword. 191 1917 191 sj 1915 Highest yesterday ,...71 80 7 till Loweit yesterday ...:.63 6S 03 44 Mean temperature ....07 i9 70 55 Proclpltatlon T. 00 T. .00 Temperature and precipitation departures from the normal: Normal temperature 71 degrees Deficiency for the day 4 degrees Total excess since Mar.1,1918 . . 7.06 degrees Normal precipitation 0.10 Inches Deficiency for the day 0.10 Inches Total preclp. since Mar.1,1918 . .10.46 Inches Deficiency since Mar.l.lOU 11.35 Inrhes Deficiency for cor, per. In .1917 2.03 Inches Deficiency for cor. per. In 191. 10,39 inches Reports from Stations at 7 p. m. Station and Stato Temp. High- ITeclpl- of Weather 7 p. m. . ... 01 70 ....70 ....70 ....74 ....72 ....74 ... .71 ....72 . ... 70 S4 ... .7i ....74 72 74 cst tatlnn SB .00 7S .90 73 .00 74 .OS dO .00 74 .00 74 T. 71 T. 74 .no 72 .IM ;4 .'in oo ", ."0 7: T. 7 4 1. I -U.ttion. Cheyenne, cloudy . . Davenport, cloudy .. Denver, clear Des Molms, cloudy Dodna City, clear ., I.andcr, clear North Platte, clear Omaha, clear Pueblo, ptfl. cldy. Rapid City, clear ... Halt Lake clear Santa Ke, cloudy ., Sheridan, clear .... Hloux Cily, clear Valentine, clear I.. A WELSH. i MetBorulogist. i "PREARRANGED" PLAN SURPRISES TEUT0N0FFICER Peculiar Light Thrown Upon German Assertions by War Correspondent's Story From Front. Amsterdam, Aug. 30. Peculiar light on the reiterated German as sertions that the retreat of the Teu ton forces on the western front was prearranged and carried out accord ing to plan without undue haste, is cast by A. S. Meyer, war correspond ent of the Essen Allgemeine Zeitung, who gives an account of his visit to a high staff officer of General von Huticr's array, to whom he was re ferred for information. " "In the midst of the officer's ex- ' planatory statement," said Meyer, "the telephone rang and news came that the enemy had rushed in on the left flank of the army of Von Der Marwitz and that his right flank was endangered. A sudden stream of telephone orders directed the retire ment and the officer's story was cot short , , Hutier Hurries Away. "We had to leave hurriedly. We were to lunch with General von Hutier, but during the luncheon the telephone never ceased ringing and Von Hutier himself was hurriedly . called away by a young orderly, who was to have given us the rest of the story." As the correspondent does not produce it, the assumption seems to be justified that there was no story that day. Such incidents do not pre vent Karl Rosner, generally consid ered the press agent of Emperor Wil liam, from declaring that superior leadership and skill still are on the German side, and the Lolcal Anzeiger -of Berlin finds it necessary to print -in large cross column type this as sertion from Rosner: "Further developments may be ' awaited with complete calm." Hysterical Appeals. On the other hand. General von -Salzmann, writing in the Vossische . Zeitung, makes hysterical appeals to Germans to set their teeth and to carry on. The German public, who so often has been told that France was at its last gasp, are now asked by General Salzmann to remember that . the boundless resources of the en tente powers lie at France's back and that even the capture of Paris and Calais would not change that fact and would not bring France to its knees. "If we possessed those resources," Salzmann exclaimed, "the Germans would long ago have been victors in Paris and all over the world." An illuminating insight into Teu tonic mentality is provided by the Cologne Volks Zeitunp-. which, la menting the terrible bloodshed and de struction caused by the war, says "Much as we detest it as human beings and as Christians, yet we eult in it as Germans." Germany to Receive Great Indemnity From Russia Under Treaty Copenhagen, Aug. 30. The princi ple laid down by Germany in the sup plementary agreements to the Brest Litovsk treaty signed in Berlin Tues- day will not cause or support the for cible disunion of the former Kussian territory, explains the semi-official North German Gazette. The independence of the Baltic provinces is assured, it says, and Rus sia has consented to recognition of the independence of Georgia (in the Caucasus). The newspaper adds that Russia has agreed to pay Germany 6,000,000,- 000 marks for German losses due to Russian revolutionary confiscatory legislation. Of this sum the Ukraine and Finland jointly will pay 1,000,000,- 000 marks. Germany has obtained concessions in the oil fields around Baku. Forces opposed to the central pow ers, including British troops, are in control of Baku. Nebraska Men Are Given Shoulder Bars at Iowa Camp The following Nebraska men have been, commissioned second lieuten ants at the fourth officers' training" camp at Camp Dodge, la.: Alvin L. Albert. Hartington: John L. Barton. Omaha; Ralph O. Cana- day, Minden; Arlie W. Dewey, Lin coin; William T. Eckerson. Ravenna: Harold W. Graham. 5020 Chicago street, Omaha: Walter E. Haarer, Lin coln; Daniel L. Hartnett, Hubbard; George C. Holman. Fairbury; Wil liam J. Houmark, Minden; John M. landrail. Clarks; Carl W. Jones, Polk; Philip C Jones, Omaha; Eric Todd Kelly. Atkinson; Hugh M. Nicholson, Wisner: Harry L. Reed, Beaver Crossing; Dud'ey K. Saund ers, Lincoln; Carroll O. Stauffer, Oakland; Thomas Zacek, West Point. Vesuvius in Eruption. Naples, Thursday, Aug. 29. Mount Vesuvius is in violent eruption for the first time since November 25, last. U.-f 17 1. A Par. .-J - CC cials of the observatory spent eight hours fodav in the crater, takine rjho- tographs and gathering data. They found the heat varied from 1,000 to 1,100 degrees at the base of the prin- cinal cone. INNER, PACKING COMPANY 51 RJITTEtV JK f EGGS mAUf MARK Mi6-lll8--Douclas St: TQl-Dourjiasl52l frTrir'i " t 4 . tt I K f 4 i i I