STOCKS-BACK AND FILL, 21/Buffalo NY Courier Express... · the recurrent weakness In stocks like...

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BUFFLO rnrRIER-EXPRESS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 21. 1926 9

STOCKS-BACK AND FILL, WJ/W^^J^^mjUST^^J^^^^ Foreign Exchange

-• N E W YORK STOCK E X C H A N G E T R A N S A C T I O N S LIVESTOCK MARKETS N. Y. CURB EXCHANGE

AT LOW LEVEL FOR THIS WEEK

Leaden seven to ten points under record, (or year, made

recently

D. & a ATPEAK PRICE i_

Other railroad snares, however, fail to respond to big

earning, forecast

Xew York. Aug. 20—Last prices <ln l e w ofTxcha. it on the principal for­eign countries today-

T o t a l sales, 1,584.300 shares T o t a l sates 1926 to da te . 292.106,500 shares

F R I D A Y , A U G U S T 20, 1926. T h u r s d a y . T.657,400 shares. Same day

Last year, same date, 265.546.aw last year . 1.463J shares.

tares.

Gt. Britain, pound . Canada. Dollar Fra n ce. franc . . . . . . . Italy, lira. Belgium, franc . . . . . . Switzer land, franc Hoi.and. gui lder . . . Germany, re i chsmar* Austria, schi l l ing . . . Greece, drachma . . . Sweden, krona . . . . . Norway krone . . . . . Denmark , krone . . . . Spain, peseta Hungary , pengo . . . . . Bulgaria, lev Caecho-Slov. . krone . Poland, attoty . . . . . . . Finland, markka . . . Rumania , l e u Jugo-Stav ia . krone . Argent ina, peso . . . . . Brazil, milrels. . . . . . . Chi le . M M . . . . . . * f , » Hong Kong, dollar . . . Japan, yen . . . . . . . . .

Demand 485.4375 100.1362

2.1573 8,3771 2.73

19,31 4 0 > 8 •3 .10 14.125

1.11 28 .7 f 21.92 26.57 13.49 17.57

.7$ 2.9523

12.00 2.53

.47 1.7673

40.48 , 15.40

12.15 , 52.8125

43.00

Cables 485.9375 I

—1926— Sales Stock H i g h L o w in 100s div 8 7 % 7 0 %

21.77 21.92 26.58 15.50

By C H A R L E S A . L O V E T T R a w York. Aug. 20— R e n e w e d l iquids

t i o n . a n d considerable epecuUUive eiMing • for tt)s decl ine were effect ive in 4epre»- j M . / i r I_ A.

i v a l u e s In the s tock marke t today £k cttfitt #>t \lCLTK6t new low levels for the m o v e m e n t , / l t , M W " v t lWM « * * * * w "

_ rallied s l ightly before the close. d o w n w a r d m o v e m e n t s tarted in the

noon after a period of Irregularity staring whicthere w e r e t i m e s when It appear'-d a s if the se l l ing m o v e m e n t had M e n s t e m m e d Strong eupt-ort w a s e x ­tended to the p.votal industr ia ls , but t h e recurrent w e a k n e s s In s tocks l ike Uni ted S t a t e s Su-> ' c o m m o n . General Motors. Central Leather . American Radiator and others , induced a reoump-

dlrect ions .

53.©625 48.25

vdz>

123% W e

Such as Present Hard to Prophesy

"We are again experiencing those sud­den reversals of sentiment and market action which -——.-.«- » , the distributing process this are usually a sale wnen iney mvm

- - t - .K. , , . t K o v l o o k

are so characteristic of Markets like

felt

t ion of liquidation In many directions. | h - ar» T-ua.v « ,,» c ....... ... „ The rail stocks turned lower with the in- best and a purchase when they dustriate, with the exception of Dete- w o r » t , " says Moody's Review. war* A Hudson, which advanced f% "Investors since early June have jo int s to a new high level at 174% j e i M , enthusiastic than stock traders; for *:.d held atl but one point of the grain. W h e r e a , active stocks have made a net gome of them however, ftrmtd up a bit - , „ o f t h l r teen points since June 12th, *"*LI 0 # a*sr* . .,_ * i r — ' —«»— h.»« »ctu«liy sagged a lit-

Trade new* was not of the character to account for the fresh selling today, though It was reported that steel mills were reducing operations slightly. A ?nore cheerful view of credit conditions

gain ot imneen yumi . ».....« . . . bond prices have actually sagged tie. York re-

71»

- The advance In the New discount rate does not look like a de­pressing factor of any Importance; the

«._. JJf'V'if 7**,w -v" „*•"****; *•"•"—re—I past does not show any constant rela-t u srJi'oon i n d , S ^„ n n l r t . ° t h ^ S C ^ i l » o n between re-discount rates and stock) TO Its^aert^RaSsi I f . o ? m l lliiF£ II m « r k ^ movements. The main question \* f a s s r v t Bank, was of little avail m re-> , whether general credits are going to storing confidence In the market. Re- JT.J7, «« ««.nA!«»••• (Sets that leading operators, who had ****' o n M p a n q m g -made large profits in the summer rise, were withdrawing from the market, combined with a natural pre-holiday 1 hesitancy on the part of professional j •peculators to extend, affected practical­ly all of the recently active favorites and turned them lower.

An announcement that W. C. Durant I

EARNlNGSRErORTS SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA EDISON

Company's gross earnings for July amounted to $2,714,896. compared with $2.33.1,502 for July. 1923. a gain of ap-

^ proximately 16 per cent. Net earnings Motors and Hudson Mo.or* were offered I a f t € r <>P«™tli}a; expenses and taxes f sale a" c o n c i s i o n s ? I amounted to $1,857,753. against $ 1 ^ 4 ,

%

Would sail for Europe Tuesday was re- ] t, •carded as s'gnlflcant. when several *" blocks of United State* Steel, General p£ Motors and Hudson Mo o n were offered ' * for sals at concessions.

Forecasts of reYord-breaking earnings for the important earners last month . I.1.M1 to stlrmilate buying Interest in that ar mi. The heavy buying move­ment In Delaware & Hudson In the last hour checked the decline in many of the raits and turned some of them upward. But losses on the day were quite gen-Sral throughout the group. The expec­tations were Northern Pacific, which seeninl under accumulation, advancing t s T7% for a gain of 1% pointa over yesterday's cos ing price. Missouri Pa­cific, Union Pacific. Rock Island and Chesapeake A Ohio were strong spots.

• I f Industrials Waver As usual, speculative Interest con­

verged on 17. 8. Steel common and Gen-srsl Motors, the two stocks which more than any other had been used on the rise to generate bullish sentiment. The demand for Steel around ISO was very good: so good, in* fact, that all the sell­ing the early session was absorbed with-ou* difficulty, and eventually the quo­tation was bid up to 152. On the after­noon raid, however, the price broke be­low 149, when renewed buying came to, sending it back to 150. General Motors moved on parallel lines. Selling ex-

fuvldend SI.TS In cash. It opened Tower, hut recovered the dividend, only to break to 197% In the afternoon, in the final half hour fresh buying appeared and the price moved up sharply to Sut)%. fo<* a gain of about a point on the day.

Other high priced stocks were weak, of them sinking into new low

..'tl. However, s few new candidates speeulatlvs favor were bid up with

Ce success, Philadelphia. & Read-Coal, for Instance, was advanced

mors than a point at one time. Radio Corporation had s sharp rally.

ward Baking B responded to news of dividend declarations for the preferred • n d class A stock. American Republic. Htds and Leather preferred. Interna­tional Papsr, American Ice and Loose-Wiles were other strong spots. In the oils Atlantic Refining and General Asphalt forged ahead, the latter sell­ing at a new peak price for the year. Mark Trucks sold at lii% on an early Wlge. but dropped bach to 111%.

TGIMKroiAWaETS (Quoted by A. J. WrUht A Co.>

Golds

A r g o n a u t . . . Atlas . . . . . . Baldwin . -. Bswry . . • • • Btgood Buckingham. C W Dome Dome Mines Goldale . . . . Gold Reef . Hollinger Hunton . . . . . . Ksora . . . . . . . Klrkland Lake Lake Shore . . Melntyre . . . . (oaeta

*«•• « « »« •

Lake

| . • « • SJ. 4M

• * • • * s * * • e

Bid 23%

2% 8 %

8 3 % • % I

10 11.05

33% 1%

19 40 13

IK 1.01

14.05 S i . 15

14 88%

18.80 1.14 I

4 . 4 1 a% n 1.81 •.to

A s k e d 24

S 3>4

63 ? S

24% 11.20

34% 3

19.55 14

3% 1.08

14.18 16.50

14% U

2 15 t

4 44 49

ilw 3

613 In the same month last year, while thrf balance after fixed charges amount­ed to $1,159,529. against $1,254,253. ac­cording to advicea received by E. H. Rollins A Sons.

Net earnings for the first seven months of the current year, after oper­ating expenses and taxes amounted to $1<»,20S,G09, compared with $9,322,894 in the corresponding period of last year, an increase of $885,714, or approximately 10 per cent.

On July 31. balance after fixed charges amounted to $6,776,279, compared with $6,512,309 on July 31. 1925.

OPPEXHE1M, COLLINS & Co. re­ports for the year ended July 11, 1926, net Income of $1,567,800 after depreci­ation, taxes, etc.. against $1,038,337 in the preceding fiscal year.

WALWORTH Company's reports net profits of $59,039 for the quarter ended June 80th equal nine cents a share on 300.000 common shares issued after pre­ferred dividends, agamst a net loss of $161,829 In the preceding quarter. For tho six months ended June 30th net loes amounted to $102,790.

GOODYEAR TIRE A RUBBER Com­pany reports consolidated net profits of $4,014,873 after fixed charges for the six months ended June 30th, equal, after prior preferred dividends, to $3.24 a share on 65U.796 shares of 7 per cent, cumulative preferred stock, on which accumulations total 29% per cent.

This compares somewhat unfavorably with net income of $6,011,407 after de­duction of $3,000,000 for a special raw material reserve reported for the first half of 1925, which was equal to $8.31 a share on the cumulative preferred stock after allowing for prior preferred dividends.

KANSAS CITY SOUTHERN Rail­way's report compares as follows:

JULY— 1D26 1925 Gross Revenuss . . $1,940,820 $1,800,541 Operating income. 554,017 436,884

SEVEN MONTHS— Gross revenues ...$12,760,195 $11,951,890 Operating Income. 3.525,867 2,730,870

COMMONWEALTH POWER Corpora­tion and subsidiaries, for the twelve months ended July 31, 1926, had earnings applicable to dividends and retirement reserve of $9,615,376. of $26.24 per share on the outstanding 366.378 shares of pre­ferred stock and $6.51 per share on the 1.133.922 shares of common. After pro­vision for retirement reserve, earnings amounted to $17.35 per share on the preferred and $3.65 on the common, compared with $12.26 and $2.01. respec­tively, for ths eame period last year, based on the same number of shares now outstanding.

and in A H i j j h

6 Abi t ib i P & P 4. . 8?44 1 Abra & S . raus . . i t y a 1 A b r a & S t r a u s pf 7 103 2 A d a m s E x p 6 . . . . 114** S A d v R u m e i y 13*4 2 A h u m a d a Lead 1 . 8

19 A i r Reduc 5 ,J , . . .« 136*4 1 A j a x Rubber . . . . . 8*4

514 Al l ied C h e m 4 138»4

3 A l l t t - C h a l 6 . 89 23 A m e r a d a C t 2 . . . . 31

5 A m A a Ch . . . . . . I t 11 A m A a Ch pf 62 st

2 A m Bk Note 1.60. 4 0 ' ? 11 A m Bosch M a g . . 22 11 A m S S & h' o 1-W1 2

3 A m B r w n Bov 2 . . 47 'a 1 A m B r w n Bov pf 7 96+4

283 A m C a n 2 5 8 ^ 2 A m C a n pf 7 125' 2 7 A m C a r 8 F S 100'/4 2 A m Car A F pt 7 125 1 A m C h a i n 2 25! 4 1 A m Chicle pr pf 7 9 U 2

12 A m D r u a S y r n . . 10'/4 7 A m E x p 6 . . . . . . . . 124 2 A m A For P w . . 20' 2

11 A m H i d e A L . . . . » / a 11 A m H i d e & L pf 41

4 A m H o m e Prod . . 2 6 % » A m Ice Sx . . . . 123 1 A m Ice pf 6 . . . . 8 3 %

15 A m I n t Corp 3 3 % 1 A m - L a F r F E n g 1 13

153 A m Linseed . . . . . . 48!« 2 A m Linseed pf 7 . &3</*

27 A m Locoo 8 104i/s 1 A m M a c h & F d y . 77 4 A m Pow A Lt . . 67 1 A m Rad ia tor 4 . . 1 1 7

2 A m Ry E x p • 81 5 A m Rcpub 60(/a

81 A m Sa»ety Rax 3 . . 67 ' / 2 5 A m Ship A C o m . . 7*4

2S3 A m Smel t 7 . . 145% 1 A m S m e l t pf 7 . . . 1191/4

11 A m Steel Fdys 3 . 4 5 % 9 A m Sug Ref 5 . . . 73 2 A m S u m T o b A c t 36

37 A m S u m Tob new 31?« 9 A m T e l A T s l 9 . . 145'/2 4 A m T o b 8 . . 120 4 A m T o b B 8 . . . . 118% 1 A m T o b pf • . . . . 111 1 A m T y p e 8 . 122 1 A m W a t W A E 1.20d 57! 2

14 A m W o o l 30 4 A m W o o l pf 7 . . . . 7 3 % 7 A m W r i t P a p p f . . 7 a 4 Am Z L A S 7

50 A n a c Copper 3 . . . 5J 1 A r m o u r D«l pf 7 . . 94i/« 3 A r m o u r I I I " A " . . 14% 9 A r m o u r III " B " . . 7' /a 2 Arnold Const . . . . 26 1 A r t M e t a l 1 22! a 1 A r t l o o m 3 49^ ,

15 Asso D r y Gds 2.50. 44 97 Atch ison 7 . • . 149

2 A t c h pf 8 . . . . . . . . 100 7 A t i O i r m A A t l . . %

27 A t l C o a t t L 7x . . . 223' /4 29 A t l Ref 113*4

1 A t l a a P o w e r 4 . , . 59 2 A t l a s T a c k 1 1 % 2 A u t o Sales pf . . . . 35

67 Ba ld Loco 7 118'i 1 Bald Loco pf 7 . . . . 112!j

12 B A O 5 104 1 B A O pf 4 73ft 2 B a n g A Arooa 3 . . 41

13 Barnsdal l A 2 . . . . 253 , 2 B a y u k Bros 47^,

I 3 B e e c h - N u t Pk 2.40x 60 1 Belding Bros 3 , . . 30'

33 Beth bteel 47ft 2 Beth Steel 7 p i 7 . 103!,,

L o w 87 52'a

108 114%

13% 8

132!» 8 %

135! a 88* 4 30«,2 1 7 % 61 .'/a 4fli , 2 0 %

143 4 5 % 96% 57%

123% 100 125

25% 9V 2 10

122 2 0 %

8 3 8 % 2 3 %

125% 8 3 % 3 3 % 13 40 33

103'% 77 66 ' / ,

117 8 0 % i>8% 6 3 %

7 % 143% 119% 45 72% 35% 31

146% 119% 118% 111 122

57% 29 78

Last N e t

Ch'g 8 7 % 4-52}.'r—

108 4-114%—

1 3 % — 8

136% r 8 %

136%— 8 8 % — 31 — 1 7 % — 1 61%— 40%i-20 % —

140 46', 2— S»m 57%—

125! i — 100 — 125 4/ V*

25% 9 1 % + 3 % 10

122 — 3 % 2 0 % — %

8' 2 + % 41 -r 4 26%

126% + 2% 8 3 % 3 3 % — % 13 43 — 3% 8 3 — 1 %

(Z

V* 1 1 %

% %

% i

% !

% ! 1 2 % 1 % i

% 1 %

— 1926— Sales H i g h L o w in 100s

2 4 % 1 3 % 13% 3 8 % 5C% 3 3 %

112% 6 %

27 53'% 3 2 % 4 4 . . 89

111 6 %

25 10% 21 34% 6C%

' 4

10 Briggs M f g 3 . . . 2 Brook lyn Edison 8..

30 Brook lyn M a n T r 4 1 Brook lyn M T r pf 6

13 Brook lyn U Gaa 4x 17 B r u n s - B a i k Col . .

2 Bruns Dock Co . . . 1 B u r n s Bros " B " 2 . .

,10 Bush T e r m . . . . . . I B u t t e Cop A 2 .50

12 B u t t e r i c k Co 4 Byers A M

23 C a l P a c k i n g 4 . . . . 10 Ca l Pet ro 2 7 Calumet A Ariz 6. 5 C a l u m e t A H 1.90

10 C a n a d i a n Pnc 10. 27 Cass T h r e s h M . .

5 Cen t L e a t h e r 4 Cent L e a t h e r pf . . 5 Cent Rib M i l l * 2 . .

20 Cerro de Pasco C 4 7 C e r - T e e d Prod 4 . . 4 Ch?nd Clev pf 4 . .

80 'Ches A Ohio 8x . . 5 Cn A A l t u f . . . . . 4 C h A E III pf

12 Ch G t W e s t 53 Ch G t W e s t pf . . . 20 C M A S t P 15 C M A S t P pf . . . I I C M A St P c t f s . . 5 C M A S t P pf c t fs . .

45 Ch A N W e s t 4 . . 10 C n R I A P

1 C R I A P f % pf 6

27% 149%

64% 85 93% 30% 13 35 28

5% 59% 35% 7 1 % 3 2 % 7 1 % 18

165% 160

7% 52% 1?% 71 45 2 9 %

153% 8 %

41 10% 27% 1 2 % 2 2 % 1 1 % 2 1 % 77"% 62% 89%

4 C R I A P 7 % pf 7 103

-Tjike . . . . . . 'Total sale* 145,458.

88 35

4 2:» 9 %

l fJJ » 4

18 3.93 5.85

1 5%.

2 a 1.44 4.40 11

in 1.79

8 f

13%

i.ti S.TS

s%

SUGAR TRANSACTIONS

Wallboard Merger New York, Aug. 20—iff}—a controlling

Interest in the Schumacher Wallboard Corporation, one of the largest enter­prises of its kind on ths Pacific Coast, has been acquired by Paraffin,- Com­panies, inc. In connection with the deal, > public offering of 30.000 shares of Schu­macher Wallboard Corporation partlcl- | pating preferred stock wtll be made at > 125 a share. A portion of this stock has been set aside for the eastern invest- | ment market. Purchasers of three shares of preferred will be privileged to bay one common share at $17.

BUFFALOWATIONS (Buffalo In vest man r Bankers' Prfcsai Aug. 20. BONDS Bid Asked

Buff. Chemical 7s '41 99 101 Buff-Ft E Bridge Ts '55-... 107 108

Do Ss "45 108 Buff Gen Else 1st 5s '39. . 102%

Do ref 5s ' I t . . . . . . . . . . . . 101% 101 Buff A Lockp 1st 5s '38. . . 69 71 BHo N A E Pow 5s'30 . . . . 99% 100% B A N F E L A P &S ' 4 2 . . . 99 101 B A N F E Ry 1st 5s '35. . 71 75 Bfo Natl Corpn Js 96 100 Buff Ry eons 5s '21 83 84% B u f f T r a c t i o n 1st 5s ' 4 8 . . . 7u 14 C a t a r a c t P % Oood I s : ? . . 89 Crosstown St R y I s '13 . . . 83 8 1 % Depew A Lane 5s '$4 100 101% Silicon Sq 1st Is *13 97 98% Hydraulic Pow 1st 5s "50 . . 103 104%

Do. ref 5s 1951 281% Int Ry rf A imp 5a '82 . . . 65 C6% Intl Salt 5S '11 14% 86 4-ockport L H A P 5%s '84 101% 103 Nlag Falls Pow 1st 5s '32. 101% . . .

Do ref. 60 '32 105 — New York. Aug. 20 tJ*!—There was no

Change in the raw sugar market today, ul a little more activity. Sales included 14.wo bags of Cuban iatt yesterday, and about SO.OOft bags today ••«••» ****** nsd

Do 1st A con t s 1950. , . . . Nthn N Y Utll 5%s '49 . . . tRogers-Brown 1st 5s *53.. Salmon R Pow 1st i s '52.. Speneer_ Kel logg 6a '38 . . . i f r o m store n s d

for p r o m p t s h i p t m n t a t 4.24 cents d u t y ^ ^ ^ W a t e r cv 6s '35 w w paid. „ . t . mm. _ Do, ex-warrants ^Liquidation ^ • • • t l J i y *£* Isur I * * «** » » . . chancing v» ..— month* again featured raw sugar fu­tures, and held prices within a range of ©no to I'Otnu. Houses with trade and Cuban connectJOKS were the prlncipsl buy ens, altnough there was also a little outeide demand, prompted by bullish foreign crop advicea A loading Euro­pean authority in a tentative estimate sc the lMv-87 Kuroo«.an beet crop placed tho yleid at 7,284.000 metric nnie. raw of the 19S-2* crop of 7.594.000 metric tons. The market eWedi unchanged to one ponlt higher Approximate aaits, 85.

. l i t tons September dosed at 343; De-flsmbsr. 2.59. January, 3.65; March, 167; May. ITS. -

The rvfined sugar market was un-shsnged at 5.%0 to 3 80 cents tot fine sjprauniatcd with only moderate demand.

CRUDE RONER MLUES AFTER WEAK 0PERIN6

98 BANK STOCKS

Community NaL Bank,. . . 2.»0 _̂ Liberty Bank g f

wiTe""th« 'principal I Geneses National Bang.... 1T0 ' ^ iMfrs. A Trmdsrs Trust . . . 400

I Marine Tr Co (50) par. . . . 263

105% 106% 101 % 103 . 8% 7% 101% 101% 103

98 II

269

New York. Aug 2*—Following a qylet and weak opening, crude rubber prices hi the "street" market developed stronger tons and generally clo*?ed quarter of a cent net higher mvox, rubber fluctuated .and 19% pence , »i-i*ing

a a

London between 19% at the higher

figure tor a net l< >•< of one-eighth of A penny.

Dealers' spot quotations were as fol­lows: ribbed smoked sheets, 40% cents; first latex crepe. »•»% <-ents; amber No.

i t ! cent*; clean thin brown creoj , \k cents, and fine up-river Para, 19% R e c l a i m e d r u b b e r pr ices w a r s : t i r e ,

ahos. 11 e t tys . . a n d t a b s SS

Peoples Bank STOCKS

Alabama P o w e r pf . . . . . . . Becker Moore . . . . . . . . . . . .

Do., pf. Buff Niagara & E Power. .

Do pf . . . . Buffalo Natl Corpn

. 1 0 P ' • • e i i l M « * t l l » i t l l t Donner Steel pf Dep A Lan L P A C pf. . East States Power . . . . . .

Harmon la Insurasos . . . . . . International Ry v t c . . . . „ .

I Meir Casualty Ins . . . . . . . ' N i a g a r a Fa l l s P o w p f . . . . i Nlag Lock A Ont pf . . . . . ! Nlaxara Share C o r p . . . . . . ; Northern N Y Utll pf 1 Ontario B scust . . . . . . . . . . . I Rand Kardex Bur p f . . . . . .

Sterling Shoe . . . . . . . . . . . . . * Shredded Wheat n e w . . . . . j Standard G A E pr p f . . . , {Syracuse Lighting . . . . . . . .

D o i % % pf Do 7% pf.

» • • > * • • • • •

• ••4>*as>»*-a#4>4>

2%

105 '.'9 H 1 1 % 2 1 % 35 96

1 3 % . 103

16% 91

46 29 81 2 7 % 111% 12%

104 47 95

100 49%

102 l i 333

103 185%

70% 109%

Dos.. Ssl Pf«_ »»»• !»• »«* • •» i s G u a r . . . . I M Title and Mtg.

Union Nat Gas . . . . . United Gas A El pf Upsoa Co pf . . . . . . Upson Co A . . . . . . . W X I Water w n u

tlsAtars ssniilrr:

. %»wr-». * t-n^fW"

to 34 97 10^ 24

T

18 93 51 30% 91 21%

113 13% 1

3 si t i . j

* *• 50%

105 348

« * • •* • «<• > • •-

11 57

125 2 1 % 25% 73% 2 7 > 4

106% 22%. 39%

1071, 93% 35

2. 35» 48%

i 39% 40

123% 37 99

21

2 1 % ' 124% 34

104 105

1» 1SSJ4 100% 106%

2 3 % 4

1 8 % TO 8 1 % 7 1 % 2 3 % 6 5 % Wi 33% « * % 43 1 « 4

.2 4 1

103% 28 24?i 30 14% 94 76% S * % 83 5 5 % 1 1 % » 39 80 8 4 % 48 7» 11 34 45

113% 113% S I 8 0 % S I . . . 1 5 % 41V? 4 5 % W ' z 33V4

4 7 % 98 15 16% 8 9 % 19 89

aas 25% 95 62 25% 30% 17% 40 27 35 4 9 % 17

113' j 18% 90 SO*

4 Chi lds Co 2.40c 4 Chile Cop 2.50

133 Chrys le r 3 1 Chrys le r pf A 8

47 Coca-Cola 7 5 Col l ins A A i k m a n

37 Cot F u e l A i r . . . . 14 Co lum Q A E 5 . .

1 Col G A E pf 7 . . . 3 Co lumbia C a r b 4 . . 1 C o m In T r pf 7 . . 7 Com Solv B . . . . . .

143 C o n g o l e u m . . . . . . . 3 Congress C i g a r 3 .

13 Consol C i g a r 10 Consol D i s t r i b . . .

152 Consol Gas 5 . . . . . . 7 Consol T e x t i l e . . . 7 Cont C a n 5 x . . . . . . 9 Cont M o t .80 . . . .

17 Ccrn Prod Ref 2 . . 3 Cruc ib le Steel 5 . . 1 C u b C S u g pf . . . .

27 Ct.ba Co 4 . . . 925 o I. C u b a Co r t a . .

15 C u b - A m Sug 10 . . 1 C u y a m e l F r u i t 4 . .

17 D a v i a o n C h e m . . . 27 De l A H u d 9 . . . .

4 D r I L A W 6x . . . 2 D e n A Rio Gr p f . 1 O s t r Edison 8 2 D e v A R a y ' A ' 2.40

112 Dodge Bros 8 Dodge Bros pf 7 . . 5 D o m e M l n s * 2 5 Douglas Pec t in 2x

33 Du Pont 14x 2 D u Pont deb 6 . . . .

22 E a s t m a n K o d S x . . 7 Eaton Axle A S 2 5 Elec Boat 9 Elec P A L c t f s . . 3 Elec P A L pf 7 . . 3 Elec Ref r ig 2x

35 Elec Stor Bat tot.. 3 E n g r s P u b Svc 1 E n d i c o t t - J o h n 5 . . . .

80 E r i e R R . . . 12 E r ie R R 1st p f . .

9 E q u i t a b l e B pf 7 . . 4 E u r e k a V a c Cle 4 . . 3 Exchg Buf fe t 1.50.. 1 F a i r b a n k s Co 5 F a i r b k s - Morse 2.60

53 34 3 6 %

102% 160% 81 44 82

114 63 93

160 24% 42% 6 9 %

2 % 108%

2 % 81 1 1 % 4 5 % 74 3 7 % 3 8 % 1 0 % 2 1 % 4 6 % 3 7 %

174% 144 46

135% 36!4 29%

36 3 0 1 % 106% 117% 2%i 1 8 % M Y . 6 4 % 92 24 65% 33 4 3 %

130 52 15%

3 51

37 F a m o u s Players 10 115% 3 Fad Lt A T 1.40h.. ~

10 Fed I M o t T r k n . . 1 F i r s t N a t S tor 1.50

13 F l a k Rubber 1 F isk R 1 pf cv 7 . . 2 F isk R 1 pf s ta 7 . .

27 F le ischmann Co 2x S Foundat ion Co 8 . . 2 Fox Fi lm 'A' 4 . . . .

47 Freepor t T e x a s . . 1 Gabriel S 'A' 2.50* 5 Gen Am T a n k C 3

402 Gen Aspha l t . . . . . . I t Gen Aspha l t p f 5 . .

2 Gen Cigar 4 . 143 Gen Elec new 3 n . .

4 Gen Elec Spi .60 25 Gen Gas A E 1.50k

2 Gen Gas A E B . . . 767 *Gen Motors 7 x . . . .

9 Gen M o t D 7 % pf 7 1 G e n O u t A d 'A* 4 . .

12 Gen Ry Signal 4 . . . . 20 Gi m bel Bros

1 Glidden Co 2 . . . . . . 29 Gold Dust 13 Goodrich B F 4 4 Goodyear T i r e pf 7

11 G o t h a m 2.50 4 G o t h a m n e w 2 8 0 . . 7 G o t h a m 1st pf 7 . . 1 Gould Coup ' A ' 2 . . 9 G r a n b y Consol . . . .

30 G i t N o r t h e r n pf 5 . . 20 G r t N o r O ct f 1.7S

1 G r t W e s t Sug 8 . . . . 5 Greene Can Cop .

12 Gulf Mob A N o r

33 3 1 % 32 1 8 %

100 8 0 % 4 9 % 95 69% 27% 31% 45% 80%

122% 5 0 % 92' 11 % 5 1 % 46%

2 0 1 % 119%

5 3 % 9 0 % 56 1 8 % 5 0 % 5 0 %

108% 5 8 % 5 5 %

120% 15 24% 77 20 95% 20% 35%

rs 7

49% •**% 14%

7 % 2 5 % 22! 2 | 49% 43%

146 100

% 220 110%

59 1 1 % 35

115% 112% 102

7 3 % 41 2 6 % 47 60 30% 4 6 %

103% 34 2 7 %

149% 63% 85 92 30 12% 35 28

6 % 58 35% 70% 32% 70% 17%

165% 155

7% 62 17% 69% 443/4

29% 150%

8% 41 10 2 5 % 1 2 % 2 1 % 1 1 % 203/4 7 5 % 60! 8 89%

102% 53 33% 353/4

102% 158

50 4 2 % 81

114 63 93

156% 23 42 68%

2 % 108%

2 % 8 0 % 1 1 % 4 4 % 74 37% 37% 10% 20% 46% 36%

167 142%

4 5 * 135% 36% 2 8 % 8 7 % 11 3 4 %

296',-, 106% 115% 27

7 % 13% 96 64% 90% 23% 65% 3 2 % 42',4

127 52 16%

3 50%

115 33 31" s 32 1 7 %

100 8 0 % 4 9 . . 95 6 9 % 2 6 % 3 1 % 4 4 % 7 6 %

119% 4 9 % 90 1 1 % 50% 46

197% 119% 5 3 %

V.

% % % % % %

1 %

%

2 %

103"; 77 — % 66%— %

117 — 2 . . 80%— % 6 0 % + 2 % 65 — 2% 7*4+

145%+ 119%—

45 7 2 ' / , + 3 4 % — 31%—

145>4— 1 l l%r— 113% + 111 122 —

6 7 % + 2 9 % -78

% 7

49%— 94% 14! 2 7% +

25%— I Sty,

4 9 % 4 3 % — %

147%— 1 % 100

% 2 2 2 % + 1 112 + 1

59 1 1 % — % 35

117% 4-1 1 2 % + 1033 * —

7 3 % 41 — 25%— 47 — 1 60 — 1 % 3 0 % — 4 7 % —

103% 34 — 2 7 % —

149% 63%— 85 92 — 2 % 3 0 % + 1 1 2 % — % 35 28 — %

5%— % 58 — 1 % 35%— 1% 71 32! 4 70% 18 + %

165%+ 1% 155 — . 5

7%— % 6 2 % + 17% + 70 — 44%— 2 9 % —

152% + 8 %

41 — 1 10 — 2 6 % 1 2 % — 21%— 1 1 % — 21 — 7 6 % + 8 1 % + 8 9 %

103 + 53 — 33% 36%—

102% 159%+

50

8SV4 213-4 26* 4 5 0 ' 2 71% 64%

136*4 12% 46% 66% 46% 63% 98%

133 8%

43% 19% 66 49% 67% 47% 2 1 %

126 58%

2% 82 24% 60% 93% 41%

.94 69% 43% 50% 1 1 %

156% 42%

143 18%

5 8 % 159 122 4 4 % 2 8 % 8 7 %

. 6 1 % 3 2 % 5 1 % 6 3 %

137% 2 4 % 30 2 4 % 1 3 % 1 5 % 37

1 2 % 86 4 9 %

% % %

% %

l'4 %

I ,

%

re

% % 7s % % %

— 1 43 — 81 —

114 63 93

157'% + 2 3 % + 42 — « 8 % — 2'/; +

1 0 7 % + 2 %

8 0 % — 1 1 % + 4 4 % — 74 — 37^=: It

% Vz

% Ts

I % % %

'•••

1 %

1

3 7 % 1 0 % — % 21 + '/• 4 8 % — 36%

173%J- 6% 144 + 1

4 5 % — % 1 3 5 % + % 36%— If 29%+ % 8 7 % - g 11 — % 35 +

299%— % 106%— % 116 — 1 % 27 - %

7 % 1 8 % — 96%4-8 4 % — 9 1 — 1 2 3 % — % 65% 32% 4 2 % +

127 52 15 ' i—

3 50%—

115%— 33 3 1 % + 32 1 7 % —

100 + 2 8 0 % - r . % 4 9 % 95 6 9 % — % 27 — % 3 1 % — % " - * 1 %

3 %

133% 4 4 % 5 2 % 4 7 % 95 4

4 1 % 9 3 % 8 3 % 82 3 7 % 6 3 %

7'/2 33%

38% 15% 66 98% 54 9 2 % 80 4 2 % 7 3 % 4 0 % 8 9 % 3 8 % 6 8 % 14% 4 6 % 8 4 % 84

140% 185% 108

4 5 % 205

4 8 % 2 8 % 4 2 %

166% 67 5 1 % 77% 15% 36 22% 45% 62

129% 108%

14% 7 5 % 8 3 % 4 5 % 2 8 % 7 6 % 7 8 % 46 32 83 23 6 5 %

2 % 130 104% 9 1 % 4 8 % 2 4 % 4 9 % 4 4 % 4 3 %

127% 7

4 2 % 119% 124% 4 2 % 3 6 %

114 9 3 %

122 184

47 31

112% 4 8 % 4 8 %

100 42

4

22

%

%

%

m «u* 4

3. »

5 Gulf Mob A N pf 6 107 9 Gulf S t Steel 5 . . . 7 1 % 1 H a r t m a n Corp 2.50 26! , 5 H a y e s W h e e l S x . . 33* 2 2 Hoe A Co 3 1 % 2 Household Prod 3x 43

SO H o w e Sound 3 . SS% 13 Hudson A M 2 50 : .3%

213 Hudson M o t o - •* "i S7% 37 H u p p M o . Gr ' • • 17%,

7 I l l inois C ' t r - ' 7 . 122% 35 irtd Oil • . . » $ ! . . . . 2 4 %

2 I n d i a n Ref ln pf S3 10 Ingersoll R a n d 3 . . ICC 4 I t I n land Steel 2 . 5 0 . . 4 2 % 17 inspiration Cop 2-* 85.

89 , 5 3 % 1 8 % 4 9 % 4 9 %

108% 55% 5 3 %

118 15 24'4 75% 19% 9534 20% 3 5 %

105% 71 26% 33 3 1 % 4 2 % 3 7 % 3 8 % N 65*% 26%,

122 24% 93 99% 42

%

1 1 1 %

%

44>4 80 +

122 -r 49% 91 — 1 1 % 51 — 46 —

2 0 0 % — 119% + 5 3 % 90 — - a 53%— 2% 1 8 % 4 9 % — 1 % 4 t % — %

108» g— % 56''4— I'/sI 53' 2— 2%;

118 — 5 15 2 4 % — 76 — 20 + 95%— 20*s 35' , —

106'a— 7 1 % -2 6 % 33 — 3 1 % 43 — 37«.r -38%— 67% ~ 27 +

122%— 2 4 ' r -93 9 ? % ^ 42' — 2 4 ? * -

56 100 127

15% 6 3 % 8 3 % W % 6 7 % 5 4 % 48 ' / .

1 0 1 % 74

138' / , 51 4 8 % W*a 57'a iou 29% 70% OH; 2

109-, 2 2 8 % 2 4 ; , » % 17ys

142% 5 5 % 3 5 % 33

tut*4 147% 122;«

9 5 % 3 1 % 69 6 2 % 4 6 %

119% 1 0 % 90 9 2 % 6 1 %

3 % 4 %

16 M

173 19% 61% 43 48 6 2 %

112% 115

5 % 7 1 % 92% 58

158%

42% 19% 39% 75% 30% 71 53% 34% 42'/ ,

7 88 3 0 %

118 12 3 0 %

103% 86% 34 15% 56 3 8 % 2 2 % 3 9 % 49%

106% 19 2 2 % 2 2 %

6 11 2 7 %

1 % 107

30 34 32 82 27 7 1 ' . , 6 9 % 55 19! 2 3 3 %

5 % 22

3 4 % 3

52 74 38 7 1 % 53 25% 38 2 1 % 76 16% 55% 1 1 % 3 6 % 32 84

117 130 93 3 2 / ,

175 30% 1 9 % 2 7 %

130% 42 49 65%

7% 30 14% 3 1 % 47

106 102%

8 % 6 3 %

31% 13% 56% 56% 34

4% 45% 16% 48%

1 % 117

67 70% 36% 16 40 31 19 7 6 %

3 29 85 75% 34% 30%

106 72

115 145%

33 2 5 %

106 32 4 4 % 79 40 16% 41% 95% 8 3 %

8 %

Stock and div in $•

7 tnt Rap T r a n . . . 9 In tercont Rub 1 •

10 In ter A g r i •• 7 In t Bus Mach 3, 7 In te r Cement 4 . . . . 1

77 In t Comb Eng 2 . . J 30 In t H a r v e s t e r 5 . . . . I 10 In t M M a r i n e . . . . § 80 In t M M a r i n e p f - . f

1 In t M a t c h pf 3.20. . 1 15 In ter N icke l 2...A 80 I n t e r Paper 2 . . . . . A 11 In t Paper 7 % pf 7 . . | 10 I n t T e l A T e l 6 . . . . | 25 In t T e l A T e l r t s . . |

1 Jewel T e a J, 1 Jones Bros T e a .M 1 Jordan Mot Car 3 . . |

40 K a n Ci ty Southern 1 K a n C i ty Sou'n pf • 1 Kayser J . 3 J 3 Ke l ly -Spr lngf ld . . § 1 Kelsey W h e e l 6 . . . «

30 Kennecot t Cop 4 . , 1 Keystone T A R . . .

89 Kresge S S 1 . 2 0 . . * 29 Lago Oil •••M 44 L a m b e r t Co 3 . 5 0 . . . ;

7 Leh igh V a l 3 .50 . . J Lehn A Fink 3 . . • Lig A Myers 8 3x . Jj Lima LoCo 4 • Loew's Inc 2 . . . * Long Bell L u m A 41 Lo f t Inc 9

3 11

1 15

1

Loose W i l e s Bis . . J 162% Lor i t la rd P 3 f 3 2 % Louis A Nash 6 . . | 1 3 7 % Louis iana Oi l . i . . l 18 L u d l u m Steel 2 . . 1 34

122 . . . . 39

16'-

584 M a c k T r u c k s 6 . . f 133% 9 M a c y R H . . — 7 M a g m a Cop 3 3 Mat l inson Co .

10 M a n n Elec Sup 5 . . 15 M a h n Ry M G 6 . |

2 M a h n S h i r t 1.50 . j 3 M a r k e t St Ry pr pf

34 M a r i a n d Oi l 4 21 M a y Dept Store 5.

39 16% 8 2 % 53 2 4 % 4 2 % 58%

. . ._ , _ _ , 128% 1 M a y t a g 2 1 23 3 M e l n t y r e Pore M t i 2 6 % 1 M e t Golf pf 1.89.

12 M e x i c a n Scabd . , 14 M i a m i Cop 1 . . . . 30 M l d - C o n t Pete

1 Midd le S ta tes Oi l 4 M id S t Prod pf 7 M i l l e r R u b 2 . 1 M i n n St P A 8 8 7 Mo K a n A T e x 7 Mo K a n A T e x p f

17 M o Pac i f ic . . . 37 M o Pac i f ic pf

4 M o n t P o w e r 6 110 M o n t g W a r d .

7 Moon Motor S 7 M o t o M e t e r ' A ' 3.i 5 M o t h e r Lode .75 3 Motor W h e e l 2

1 M u n s i n g w e a r 3 . 24 M u r r a y Body . . 37 N a s h Motor .

9 N a t Biscuit 4 1 N a t C Reg A c t 3 1 N a t C loak A S t pi

14 N a t D a i r y Prods 17 N a t Dept Store)

1 N a t D i a t Prod pf 5 N a t E n a m e l A S t 1 N a t E n a m e l pf I 7 N a t P w A L t 80

15 N a t Supply 3 . . 3 N e v a d a Consol C 1

89 N Y A i r B r a k e 2 . . Y Canners 2g " N _ _

1 N Y Canners pf . 1 * 131 N

4 N 2 N 1 N

115 o.

'-2

%

%

» %

. : ' z %

94% 25%

109% 167 59

f l 6 % 38%

248% 109

61»% 7 9 % 7 1 % 8 8 %

109 4 9 %

159% 130* 8 64 2S% 7 8 % 43 22

90 7 %

4 9 % 4 2 % 3 8 % 85 5 7 % 4 2 % 27 ' / , 3 1 % 12% 44'/4

4 % 24 52 • * * %

107% 15 19% 90 2o%

103 43 22 3 0 % 9e 's 92

103% 87! 2

18% 51 5 2 % 40*4

118 4 %

75 6 8 % 47

1 % 1

1 0 % 48

119% 1 2 % 4 2 % 1 3 % 4 2 % 4 4 % 95' 4

103 3

35 78 3 7 %

1 4 1 ! , 84% 2 S % 83 .

134 55% 98 22

150 100%

39 45% 4 8 % 50'.-4

1 0 1 % 3 6 %

117 124%

56% 13% 52 29

Sit

Y Cent ra l 7 . . . Y Chi A S t L Y Ch A S t L p

Y Dock I. N Y A H a r l e m 6

8 4 N Y r 4 H A H w

9 N Y O n t A W 7 N o r f o l k A Sou'n

27 N o r f o l k A W e s t 89 N o r A m 10f . . .

5 N o r t h A m pf 3 122 N o r t h e r n Pac l f i

74 N o r w a l k T A R 1 1 Oi l W e l l Supply 7 Omnibus 2 O n y x Hos iery 7 Oppenhe im Col 1 Ot is E l e v a t o r 8 1 Ot is E leva to r pf 7 Ot is Steal 2 Owens Bottle 3x

12 Pac Oi l 33 P a c k a r d M o t 2 15 Pa ige De t M o t 1

2 P a n - A m P e t A 31 P a n - A m P A T

7 P a n - A m W P • 62 Panhand le P A

1 P a t h e Exchg 'At, 1 Penlck A Ford ,

31 Penn R R 3 . 19 P e n n Seabd Ste

1 Peoples Gas 8 12 Pere M a r q 8x &. 7 Pere M a r q pf S I .

112 Phi la A Rdg C A I 2 Ph i l ip M o r r i s . . « , •

103 Phi l l ips Pete 3 1 . 1 Phoenix Hos

187 P l e r c e - A r r o w 27 P i e r c e - A r r o w pf

3 Pierce Pa te . . 3 P i t t s Coal . . . 1 P i t t s A W V a

93 Postum Cereal 4 Pressed Steed 1 Prod A Ref pf 1 Pub S E L A P

35 Publ ic Svc N J 5 1 P u b S v N J 1 % J

17 P u l l m a n Co 8 1 P u n t a A legre

10 P u r e Oil Co 1 1 Pure Oi l pf 8

317 Radio 1 Radio pf 3 .50 . .

13 Reading 4 1 Reading 1st pf j

29 Reading r t s . 1 Reid Ice C r e a m 1 *Reld Ice Crm

29 Remington Ty 7 Replogie Steel

22 Rep I ron A St 1 Reynolds R J '

19 Rober t Rs.s . . . 3 Royal D u t c h 3, 1 Sa fe ty Cable 4 2 S t Joseph Lead

75 S t L A San F 3 S t L Southwe

13 Schulte R Stor 4 Seabd A i r L ine 1 Seabd A i r e L i n I Seagrave Corp

81 Sears- Roebucy 1 Seneca Copper j * .

82 Shell U n Oi l 1 * 0 9 S h u b e r t T h e a t a f

34 S immons Co 1 S immons Co

29 S i m m s Pete 1 4 Sincla i r Oi l . 1 S inc la i r Oi l pf

212 Skei iy Oi l 2 . 7 Sloss-Sheff ield 9 South Da i r ies

I I South Da i r ies 15 So Cal Edison 25 Soutnern P a c l f i

4 So P Rico Sug 19 Southern Ry 7

7 Southern Ry 7 Spicer M f g . . 5 Std Gas A El

59 S t a n d Oi l of 34 S tand Oil of N

2 Std Oi l of N J 1 S tand P la ts G 3 Ster l ing Prod 9 S t e w a r t W a r n

17 S tudebaker 5 A . . . 7 S u b m a r i n e Boat •• 1 Superior Oil . 4 . . . 1 T e n n Cap A Chan 1

20 T e x a s Co 3 . . . §

2 3 % 1 1 % 15 3 1 %

1 % 119%

3 8 % 36 36% 92% 4 1 % 93 79% 70 23% 39%

6% 23% 3 8 % 1 0 % 6 7 % 9 1 % 4 1 % 7 1 % 71 28 48 25 82 2 1 % 68% 13% 4 8 % 4 5 % 84

137% 177 100

3 9 % 192 46 ' / , 25% 41

162% 5 4 % 6 1 % 7 7 % 9

34 15% 39% 61

120% 108%

9% 7 1 %

1% 37% 16% 66 67 3 7 % 1 5 % 54% 20 5 4 %

1 % 122% 103 90 4 2 % 2 3 % 4 8 % 40 31

124 3

3 2 % 108 104% 4 0 % 3 1 %

113 9 1 %

120 180

3 5 % 2 6 %

1 1 1 % 4 7 % 4 8 % 95 4 0 % 1 8 % 46 M %

120% 1 0 % 59 9 7 % 1 1 %

. 5 0 % 6 0 % 4 4 % 99%

1 68 F 4 8 %

3 4 % 3 7 % 1 3 % 5 6 % 5 %

2 9 % 8 1 % 33 ' / ,

107% 16% 2 1 % M 3 6 %

132 5 3 % 3 0 % 3 1 %

107 112% 121

94 22% 54%

6 1 % 4 3 %

L o w 4 3 % 15% 14 48% 53% 54

130'/, 6%

27% 63% 36% 58% 96

116% 7 %

4 1 % 12 24 4 3 % 6 7 % 39 1 2 % 9 5 % 56

% 49 2 1 % 57 88% 36'/, 34 6 1 % 4 0 % 4 4 %

7 % 160

3 2 % 135

1 5 % 34

130% 120

3 8 % 15% 8 1 % 53 24

4 1 % 5 7 %

125% 23 26 2 3 % 1 0 % 14% 31

1 % 119

3 7 % 36 36% 9 1 % 3 9 % 9 1 % 79 68 23 3 9 %

6 23% 36%

»% 56% 9 1 % 4 1 % 71% 70 26 48 24%

N e t Last Ch'g

4 3 % -15'/4— 14%^-4 8 % -53% 55 +

132 6%

28 — 6 3 % -38%— 59%+ 96 +

116%— 7 % —

4 1 % — 12 24

' 4 i

E a s t Buffalo. Aug. 20. 17. S. D e p t of Agriculture. )

CATTLE—Rece ip t s were e s t imated at 400 a l though a few loads of holdovers raised to total offerings above that figure. Medium grade light butcher atock. which made up ha!f of the run, was not in demand and only on.' minor sate was recorded. when some 850 pounds mixed offerings were s teady at $7.50. Cows aga in ruled steady under a fair demand. Low cutter and cut ter re­actors made 12 25 to 3.75. A lew m e ­dium cows brought $5.

,;- CALVES—Around half of the 700 of-(f ! ferings were Canadians whi le the others (' I were most ly choice nat ive kinds. Ah /* i early c learance w a s made at s teady %

1 %

early c l e a r a n - - — . prices. Choice n a t i v e s scored $15 the shipped-in offerings usually $15.50. Medium kinds sold down

S H E E P and LAMBS—A "

8-67% 39

$f, "ST 5 0 % — 2 1 % 5 7 % + 89 -r-3 6 % + 84%

4 % % %

' 2 % % %

vaiuf s.

6 1 % — 1 % % % '••

40%— 4 4 % +

7% + 160 +

3 2 % 1 3 7 % +

16 34

1 3 1 % + 120 —

3 8 % — 16% 82%+ 53 24 — 41%— 6 7 % —

126%— 23 — 2 6 % + 23% 1 0 % — 15 + 3 1 % —

1 % 1 1 9 % —

3 7 % — 1 %

%

B

:-4

%

% % %

%

% % % %

V'4 % % % Hi

% %

% %

2 1 % 6 7 % 13% 4 4 % 4 4 % 84

136 176 100

3 9 % 192 44% 24% 40%

160 53% 50% 76% 8

34 16% 39% 60

120% 108% . » % 7 1 %

1 % 3 6 % 1 5 % 66 66% 37% 13% 54% 20 54%

1/a 122% 1 0 1 % 90 4 0 % 2 3 % 4 7 % 40 2 9 %

122% 3

3 2 % 108 102% 4 0 % 3 1 %

113 90

120 177%

35% 26

1 1 1 % 4 5 % 4 8 % 94 40% 18% 46 98%

118 10 58 97% 10% 50% 50%

36 — 3 6 % -9 2 % + 40%— 9 2 % + 79 69 23 — 3 9 % +

6 — 2 3 % + 8 6 % + 1 0 % + 1 5 7 % + % 9 1 % + % 4 1 % 7 1 % — 7 0 % -26 48 — 2 4 % — 8 2 + 6 2 1 % - y* 68 — %

44%— 1% aaM 84

136%— 176 100 —

3 9 % 192 45 — 24%— 4 0 % +

162%+ 6 4 % — 6 1 % + 7 7 % + 4 1 % 8%+ %

34 15% + 39%— 60%—

120% 101%+

8%— 7 1 % —

1 % -37 — 15%— 6 6 — 2 M% 37% 1 4 % — 1 % 54% 20 6 4 % -w

1 2 2 % + 102 — 1 80 4 1 % + % 2 3 % — % 48 + % 40 — 1 %

while j made !

to $12. ! __ late count

showed around 1,000 fresh and 250 hold- i over sheep and lambs here. Trading ruled ac t ive w i th practical ly steady

A small choice lot of l a m b s ;i4.65. but the bulk of the good

offerings went a t $14.50. Culls usually sca led at $10 to $10.50. Some good 120 pound e w e s scored $6. while heavies landed at $4 to $4.50. Lambs , good to choice, $14ti'14.15; cull to m e ­dium, $10® 13.75; inferior, $6.504fl. ewes , l ight and medium weight , good and choice. $5.50416.75; heavy , $4«f5.50.

HOGS—Uneven trade featured deals on the 2,400 fresh arrivals and 804 hold­overs. Strong to 23 cen t s w a s the trend on most sa les with the h e a v y w e i g h t s scoring the bigger advance . The top reached $14.50 for fifth t ime this week. Most of the good to choice kinds up to 200 pounds went at $14.25 to $14.50. A load of 246-pound butchers scored $14. Those averag ing 280 pounds up com­manded $12.25 to $12.75. Packing s o w s ranged from $9.75 to $10.50. Very few p igs passed $14.

Quotat ions—Top on 130 pounds up, $14.50, bulk of all sales $13.25 to 14.50: 300 to 350 pound averages , good to choice 112.25® 12.75; 250 to 300-pounds. $12.75® 13.75; 225 to 250 pound. $13.75f»14.25; 200 to 225-pound. $13.85@14.25: 160 to 200-

round, $14.25@14.50; 130 to 160-pound. 14.00 to $14.50; s laughter pigs. $13.75©

14.25; packing sows , $9.75® 10.50.

In Chicago Market Chicago. Aug . 20—Catt le—Receipts ,

2,000. Close s t eady; s l ight ly h igher t h a n week ' s low t i m e on moat ki l l ing c l a s s e s ; no th ing choice offered; f e w fed s teers , $8.25®9.25; grassers , $7.25 d o w n w a r d to $6.50; supply of both fat and feeder c a t ­tle c leaned up; s tocker and feeder trade higher for w e e k ; m e a g e r cow run m o s t l y $6 d o w n w a r d w i t h l o w cut ters $3.75®4.15; m e d i u m bulls , $6.25; s t eady; R^mmhla for f ew vea lers at 25 c e n t s

%

%

VA VA % % %

2

% %

1 % % % % % %

scramble for f ew higher, m o s t l y $14® 14.50; f ew $16.

H o g s — R e c e i p t s . 16,000. U n e v e n ; l ight and l ight l ights In broad d e m a n d ; g e n ­eral ly 10 to 15 c e n t s h igher; f e w early sa le s on other w e i g h t s shar ing a d v a n c e ; late market , espec ia l ly on h e a v y s o w s and butchers , 25 to 40 c e n t s lower tha/i ye s t erday ' s b e s t prices , spots of more; few m e d i u m w e i g h t b u t c h e r s included in late downturn; top , $14.10; choice 140 to 200-pounds up to $14; bulk 210-OOUnd downward , $13.50 to $13.95; bulk 240 to 280-pound butchers , $12.35 to $13.10 late; Z90 to 350-pound butchers , $11.50 to $12; m o s t sows . $10.55 to $10-76. Snippers took 4,500; e s t i m a t e d holdover, 4.000.

Sheep—Rece ip t s , 8,000. F a t l a m b s m o s t l y 25 c e n t s h igher; top seven doubles N e v a d a lambs , $14.25; Idaho and W a s h i n g t o n lambs held late a t pr ices upward to $15; top na t ive s , $14.65 ta packers and c i ty butchers ; bulk, $14.25 to $14.50; some d o w n w a r d to $13.75 and be low; h e a v y buck lambs around $12; cul ls , 25 c e n t s higher, m o s t l y a t $9.50; s o m e sa l e s up to $10; s h e e p s t eady; bulk fat e w e s , $6 to $6.50; feeder lambs s trong to 25 c e n t s higher; top, $14.50 for 501 pound; heav ier kind sa lable around $13.50.

Industrials Sa les Stock High

23 Allied Pack pr pf 201 100 Am Brown Bov . 20-

10 A m C y a n a m pf . . i*Q ?00 Am Gas & El . . V7* 275 Am Lt & Tr 223

SO A m Pub V 1% pf ;»7* 10 Am Pow & Lt pf ^7'

100 Am Seat ing v t c . 33' 300 Do pf 37 < 300 Am Superpow B . 30' 100 IX. pf 26 500 A m Thread pf . . 3'

50 Arundel Co 341

2100 A s s o c G A E . . . . 37 1100 Atl Frui t 1

50 BnJab & Katz ctf 74 100 Bonn Alura . . . . . 14 400 Borden — W 500 tBrad ley F l r e p r . . 55 100 Bridgeport Mach 7 400 Brill Corp A 37 100 B r i t - A m Tob c . 24

1200 D o rts c a s h . . . 1 100 B r o c k w a y M T . 41 100 Bk lyn City R R . 7 100 B u r d m e s 15 100 C-G Spring 12 SO© Can Dry G A t e . . 46 210 Celluloid pf 70

75 Celotex 201 100 Do pf 97 100 Central Stl 70 400 Centrlf P ipe 20 100 Chi Nipple B T . 29 100 Colum El P w wi 53

20 Columbus El P w 255 200 Colum G & E w i V8 300 D o pf wi 96

1500 C o m w P o w . . . . . . 4f 200 Do pf *$ 150 D o w n t s . . . . . . 65 500 Cons Laund M 500 Cons Gas B a i t . . . . 53

5800 Cont B a k 'A" SI 14700 Do 'B' IS

1300 D o pf 83 200 Cont Tob 2( 200 Curtis Aero 11

1200 DeFores t ct f . . . . I 1000 Dubll ier 1 2500 Du Pont wi 133

35600 Durant M o t . . . . . . 1! 200 Dux Co ctf II

2600 El Bond A S h . . . 71 1300 Ely Investors 4* 2200 E s t e y Wilde 'A'.. 2'

100 F a c e d Motors . . 70 Fa Jar do S u g . . . . Ill

100 F i lm Inspec I 50 F ires tone pf 10 Ford Canada . . . .

700 Foundat ion f g n . . 600 F o x Theater 'A'.. 400 Frankl in M f g . . . .

2000 F r e s h m a n 1200 Garod C o r p . . . . . . 1300 Gen B a k 'A' 1600 D o 'B'

100 Gen Necess i t i e s . . . 100 Gen El Ger r e t s . .

9100 Gen Motors w i . . . 100 Gen Pub Soc pf . . 600 Gillette Saf Raz

L a s t

120 97 » ; Caution s e e m s to be the w a t c h word ••7% In brokcr-vge circles . There is no grea* 33% amount of o u t - a n d - o u t bearishness . out 37% with th« market still under fire from 3 0 u the professional e lement , the maior i ty » j I o( commiss ion houses are urging c l ients " j v l t o p r o « e d s lowly in fol lowing any u p -34% : t l , r n * **<«' * r « recommending the pur-jg»? chase of only those s tocks that h a v s

H* •. shown rbl l i ty to withstand sell ing. 71U I Leading i ssues have g iven little |ndi-- •- cation of pool operat ions in the past few

days ar.o while the groups that h a v e been at work In prominent s tocks s r e , perhaps not dissolved, they at least are ly ing dormant until prices reflect suf­ficient adjus tment to favor a resurnp* tion of operations. T h e rails are sti lt considered to be in an a t trac t ive posi ­tion and it is bel ieved that much of the profits taken in the past month are re­enter ing the market in this direction.

Mack Trucks ' Strength Renewed buying of Mack Truck*

which has been in s teady progress s i n e s UK* stock sold around 120 is another p u s -xle which the speculat ive e l ement tn t h s street i s trying to solve . The two lead­ing Stock E x c h a n g e houses which had been looked upon as control l ing marke t operat ions and direct ing m o v e m e n t a ttt •- - - «_.«. , „ s t s t t m e n t a

497% 497% 497%

Mack Trucks, according to . made by their affil iations, have taken no part In the buying , but instead s o m a Interests closely assoc iated wi th t h e n huve disposed of speculat ive l ines, the last of one large block coming on t h s market below 110. It w a s c o m m e n t e d upon a t the t ime that the market a d ­vanced whi le this l iquidation and pronU tak ing w a s in progress .

Or. Thursday , when formal denials were m a d e that General Motors h a s n o intent ion of endeavoring to obtain c o n ­trol of the property, the stork suffered a break of five points to 121, and it w a s then supposed that those denials ended the movement. Accumulation has been resumed, however, and the only expla* nation is that seme new interest or group Is accumulating the stock for special purposes.

In Peculiar Position. Philadelphia A Reading Coal A Iron

Is now about half way between its high and low of the year following the ad­vance of more than three pointa in tho last few days. For a time the stock war under pressure because of unfavor­able earnings following the long "nMl coal

Flour and Feed

%

%

meal, 36 per

1

FLOUR—Steay. Less than carlots, per barrel. In one-eighth barrel paper sacks: Best patent, $10.20® 10.26; bakers, $8.75®9: first clear, $8.26®8.35; pastry, 39.50; graham, $9; light rye, $7.40 ©7.50: dark rye, $5.45®5.50.

F E E D—Demand limited, receipts small. Per ton, less than carlots, f o b . mill-sacked: Bran. $28; standard mid­dlings, $29; flour middlings, $35.50; red dog. $40; cracked corn, $38.50; hominy,! white, $36.50; yailow, $36.60; linseed , meal, 34 per cenL, fIS: linseed meal, 32 per cent., $46.50; cottonseed meal, 43 per | c en t , $41; cottonseed cent., $38.

Boston Stocks Aug. 20. High

Arizona Comml 12 Amoskeag Calumet & Hscla .. Copper Range Edison Elec Gillette , Hardy Coal Island Creek 181 Isle Royale 13% Mass Gas 83 Mohawk 40% New Cornelia 23% Torrlngton Co 69 Tower Mfg 11% Utd Shoe 60% Utah Apex 8% Waldorf 21% Warren Bros 50

Detroit Stocks

51 18 17

229 92% 17

L o w L a s t 11% 12 60% 17% 17

229 92% 17

181 12% 82 40 23% 68% 10% 50

8% 21 49%

60U 17% 17

229 92% 17

181 12% 83 40 23% 68% 11% 60

8% 21% t t %

Aug. 20. Contl Motors D e t Creamery Fedl Mot Trk n H o u s e m a n Spltzley Mich Sugar Packard Motor P a i g e Motor Parke D a v i s Reo Motor 21% T i m k e n Axle 13 Truscon Steel 26%

H i g h 1 1 % 41 31% 32%

8% 37% 16

123

L o w U % 41 31% 32%

3% 37 15%

123 21% 13 26%

Pittsburgh Stocks Devon Ion Oil . Lone Star Gas

16% 3 9 %

Ohio F u s l Corp 41% Okla. Nat . Gas 28% P i t t a PI. Glass 290 Sa l t Creek Cons i Std. Sani tary 100% W a v e r l y Oil 42

16% 39%

28% 290

S% 100

41%

Las t 1 1 % , 41 31% !

32% i 3%

37 1 6 ,

123 2 1 % ' 13 i 26%

16% 39% 41% 28%

290 9

100% 41%

800 Glen Alden 17.4 1800 Goodyear T & R. 35V

100 Grand Stores 65 300 H a p Candy ' A ' . . . 64. 100 Hel lman 14* 100 Hel lman pf 31* 100 Heyden C h e m . . . . 1 | 100 Hires Co (Chas E 23V 100 Imp Tob C B A I 27 V 200 Inter ProJ I1V 100 Inter Utl l " A " . . . 30

1000 t K e y s t o n e S L . . . 42 150 L V Coal Sa les 94

2100 Leh P w 8ec n . . 17? 3200 Leh V Coal . . . . 421

100 Lib McNeil l n . . . 8V 700 Mesabl Iron II

75 Met 5 A 10c pf 38^ 100 M i d l W Utl l . . . . 112« 100 Mid W e s t Utll p 1 117 200 Mohawk V a l l e y . . 39 500 Municipal Svc . . 21 300 Nat l B a k i n g 121 300 N a t El P o w A . . 24 100 Nat i Pub S v c A 191 100 N e v Cal El 22

20 N e w J Zinc . . . . 193 100 N A m n C e m . . 21

1100 Northeas t P w . . . 19« 4UW Nor Ohio P w . . . . 16«

600 Nor Sta P o w . . . 10 Ohio Bell pf . . . .

100 Ohio Fuel ICorp 100 Ovington pr pf . . 9' 100 P a c Stl B o i l e r . . 13 120 P e n n W A P w . . 154

10 Phe lps D o d g e . . . 115 300 Pick Earth c t . . 13 40 Proc & Gamble . 138

100 P u g e t S o u n d . . . . 28 400 Puri ty Bak A . . . . 45 300 D o B 39 100 Pyrene Mfg 12

1000 Rand K a r d e x . . . . 43 20 Rlty Assoc Brk . 117

200 Rea Motor 21 6500 Rickenbacker . . 5 2100 Servel Del 18

200 S e e m a n Bros wi 28 100 Si lvers B r o s . . . . 2T 100 Sierra P a c El . . 27 400 Si l ica Gel 18

1100 S E P w A Lt . . . 29 200 D o part pf . . . . *6 100 D o w n t s 9:

400 South G A P A . 21 100 Stand P u b 7 400 S tan ley Co A m s . 81 400 Swi f t Ipternac . . 20

60 Swi f t A Co 115 2600 T e x a s G Snip wl 41

600 tThermlodyne . . 50 500 T h o m p s o n v tc . . I

1500 T i m k e n Axle . . . 13 500 Tob Prod E x p . . 3 900 T r a n s L u x D P . . 8 100 Trumbull St l . . . 11 100 Truscon Stl 26 20 Tub Art Silk ct f . 188

100 Tungso l L a m p . 8 200 D o A 18 300 U t d El Coal ctf . 13 100 Utd B i s c u i t B . 300 Utd Gas Imp .

1800 Utd L t & P w A . 16% 100 IT 8 Lt A H t . . . 22% 400 Utll Share 9% 100 D o opt 2%

1100 Victor Talk M . . 96 1800 W a r n e r B - P l c t B 28

100 W e s s o n Oil ct

. ? * 1 strike, but with the settlement of that strike the outlook apparently is assured as far s s labor is concerned for the next ten years. So far this company has not gone on the dividend list, although prior to the coal strike last year it hsd been thought that it would be placed on a $4 annual basis.

The position of the stock is compli­cated because of uncertainty regarding the attitude to be taken by Baltimore A Ohio on the "rights" on 600.000 shares of Reading stock owned by B. A O. Tha advance in the coal stock has material­ly improved the value of those "rlghti" and may be a factor In causing liberal bids to be made If the Baltimore A Ohio should elect to retain Its holdings of Reading railroad stock and dispose of Its "rights" in the coal property.

400 Ohio Oil • 100 P e n n - M e x F u e l .

1700 Prair ie O A O . . 100 Prair ie P L

10 Solar Ref 3300 Std Oil Ind

100 Std Oil K a n t . . . 100 Sid Oil K y . . . . . . 100 *Std OH ->«hr--

6400 •Std Oil N Y . . . 10 Std Oil O h i o . . . .

300 V a c u u m Oil

6 0 % 69% 6f% 20 M M 31% »•'*•

125% 125% 109 209

64 61% 21% 21%

123% 121% 122% 49% 49 49 52% 32% 12%

305 $0* 305 102 1 0 1 % 1 1 1 %

5< % 123% 204

2 1 % a, • "

100 D o pf 96%

900 Anglo A m i r , . , , 17% 50 D o n o n - v o t . . . 17% 100 At l Loboa 1%

10 B o r Scry . . . . . . . 285 150 ' B u c k e y e P L . . 47% 900 Cont inenta l 20% 100 E u r e k a P L . . . . 49%

1500 H u m b l e Oil 80% $00 Imp OH Can . n . . 36%

50 Indiana P L . . . . 59 8800 Inter P e t r 14%

100 Nat l Trans i t . . . . 14% 2 1 % 14%

independent Oil* 1700 A m Contro l led . . . 1% | !

400 tCardinal P e t r . . . 55 11 300 Carlb Synd . 14% 14

1600 Cit ies Svc 44% 44 100 D o pf • . ! » % W

2000 Colombn S y n d . . . 2% 2 300 Cons Royalty . . . 9% 9 100 Creole Synd 14% 14 100 Crown Centra l . . . 2% 5 600 Euclid OH 1% 1

23300 Gibson OH 4 " 200 Klrby Pe te 2 2

1200 Leonard OH • 400 tLivinsrston Petr . 75 75 100 Lone S»ar G a s . . . 19 19 100 Mariand Mex . . . 2 2

2600 Mex Panueo 4 3 100 Mount Gulf 1% 1 400 Mount Prod . . . . 24% 24

70 N a t Fuel A G a s . 155% 134 900 N e w Mex & A L 12% 12

1200 North Cen T e x a s 10% 10 7000 t N o ' w e s t OH . . . . 8 6

700 Pandem OH 8% I 600 Red Bank 10% 20

2300 Relter Fos ter . . . 27 26 142O0 tRoyal endn . . . . 75 19

700 Salt Cr C o n s . . . . 8ffc 8 300 Salt Cr P r o d . . , . 10% 1« 100 Savoy OH 2% ! 200 Bhrevep El D . . . 800 Tidewater Assoc 100 Venez P e t e . . . . 200 Wilcox n e w . . . . .

16000 t Y Oil A G a s . . $0 28 Mining

Sales Stock High Los 5000 U r n Tin A T u n c 2 2 5000 tArlz Globe . . . . 13 II 700 Cons Cop M i n e s , 2% %*

J000 tCortea S i l v e r . . . 9 T 200 Cresson Gold 2% 2"

1000 tDo iores E s p 39 29 500 Eng ineers G o l d . . 6 5'

107000 t E u r e k a Croesus 16 10 11100 t F a k o n L e a d . . . . 69 67

500f) tF lorence Gfd . . 9 9 100 t F o r t y - n i n e M . . 12 12

2000 tOold M i n e s . . , . . 2 1 400 Golden Center . . 2% 2'

5000 t H a w t h o r n e 13 12 100 H e e l * Mining . '"

3400 Kay Copper . . . 200 Msson V a l l e y . . .

320"0 ' N a t i o n a l T i n . . . . 20 200 N e w m o u n t . . . . . . 66 86 400 NY Honduras . . 12% 11

1000 Nlp i s s ing 6% 5% 1000 Noranda M i n e s . . 19% 16%

200 t O h l o Copper 68 I I lOOOO tPlym Lead . . . . 11 11

100 So Am P A O . . 5 1 2000 tSpearhead . . . . . 4 4 900 Teck-Hughes ... . 4% 4 » 100 tTonopsh Ext . . 50 10

1000 Utd Vsrds E x t . . 21% 28% 1000 tUnlty Gold . . . . SO SO •Ex-dividend; tcsnts per share.

21

ii

—1926— S a l t s Stock a n d H i g h L o w in 100s d iv In S

%

•/a

2 9 % 3 1 %

98% 32% 52 78% 2 1 % 2 3 % 85%

110% 32 81 8 5 % 1 8 % 3 9 % 8 5 %

7 pf 7

'/4

5 Va-C Cham 36 Vlvaudou 21 W a b a s h R R

7 W a b a s h pf ' A ' 5 . . 2 W a l d o r f Syst 1.25. 2 W a l w o r t h Co 1 . . .

74 W a r d B a k i n g ' B \ 1 W a r e B a k i n g pf 7

77 W a r n e r P l e r ' A ' 2 1 W a r n e r Bros 1 W e b s r H e i l b 4 . . . 2 W e s t M a r y l a n d . . 4 W e s t e r n P a c 1 W e s t Pac pf 1 . . . 2 W e s t e r n Un Tel 1

22 Wes t tngh Air B 6x 113% 137 W e s t i n g h o u s e El 4 6f%

7 W e s t o n El Ins . . . 9 Wheel ing A L E . . 1 Wheel A L E pf

H i g h 91 1 1 % 46 7 5 % 2 1 % 16 38 • 1 % 1 0 % 4 1 % 5 1 % 1 2 %

• 5 % 145

18% 2 4 % 4 3 %

L o w 9 0 % 2 1 % 4 4 % 75 2 1 % 16 34 • 1 % 2 1 % 4SVs 56% 12% 8 8 % M' / ' ,

141 1 3 1 %

6 1 % 1 7 % 24 4 3 %

N s t C h ' g .

% L a s t

91N + 1 1 % - % 45%— % 78 2 1 % — • % 16 8 4 % + 1 % • 1 % + Y$

4 9 % — 5 * % — 1 2 % — s?v5— •5%+

145 — 112%-*- 1 % M%— % 1 1 % 24 - % 4 3 % - H

— 1 9 2 1 — Sslss Stock and H i g h L o w In 100s div In I

1 % %

%

2 1 % 90 49 34 99 12% • 1 % 22

222 19% M 16%

106% • 5

2 5 % 6 1 % 4 7 % 18 9 1 %

1 42 14

ISsVs 2 4 % • 0 % 20 9 1 %

1 W h i t e Eagle OH 2. 21 W h i t e M s t C a r 4 .

2 W h i t s I w g M e h pf 145 W i l l y s - O v t r l d . . . .

2 W i l l y s - O v t r l d pf 7 2 W i l s o n A Co n 1 W i l s o n A Co pf . . 2 W i l t o n A Co c t f A

17 W o o l w o r t h F W 4x 6 W r i g h t A t r o 1 . . . 1 Y a l e A T o w n * * x .

73 Y e l l o w T r u c k .75. 1 Y t l T r u c k p f 7 . . .

29 Y o u n g s t n S h A T 4.

H i g h

ft M 10 M

112% 31 67 so%

1 M % • 1 %

Las t

*

e—Plus 4 % In stock, d—Plus 2 % % In x — P l u s e x t r a s . _ . — _ stock, a—Plus 1 % In s teak , f — P e r c e n t p a y a b l t g—Plus 5% In stock, k—Cash or stock opt iona l , h — P a r t l y M o c k , n—Plus 11 a share In sptc ls l stock. " " p— V a r y i n g r a t e — t h i s la c u r r a n t .

In stock.

•— Ex-dividend.

•K+ % 8 5 % - % 73i/«— Vt

METAL MARKETS New

3-43 T e x Gulf Sulp 10. 17 T e x A Pac C 19 T e x a s A Pac

9 T h i r d A v e R 11 Thompson J * # • • 7 T i m k e n R o l l e r * . .

84 T o b Products 2 1 . . 3 T o b Products «m'

49 Transscont O i l * . . 4 U n Bag A P * $ # •

27 U n Carb ide A 43 5. 4 U n Oil of Ca l E . .

19 Union Pac I f . • • 2 Union T a n k C a r 5. 2 U t d A l loy S t e a l 2 .

72 U t d Csgar S 10 U n i t e d D r u g

2 U t d D 1st pf 1 United Fruit 2 U t d Paper Be

17 U S Cast I r o n ! 2 U S Cast tron;J»f 7

27 U S Dist . . - . « - • • 105 U S Ind Alco;

7 U S Rea l ty A I I 29 U S Rubber

1 U S Rub 1st 4 U S Smel t 3.

2847 L S Steel 7 J U S Steel pf 1 L S Tobacco

34 Un iv Pipe . . • > • 1 U n i v Pipe pf l l .

12 V a n a d i u m Cosp 1 V a n R a a l t e . & . 1 Va-C Chem 1 f f

, York. Aug. 20—Copper was lo -% 1 active today, with leading producers

still offering the red metal at 14 1-2 cents a pound, delivered In Connecticut valley. There Is some "second hand"

/ • , copper on the market, however, which 1 can be bought below this figure. % I A quiet but easier export market pre-% | vailed, being quoted at 14.35 cents.

I f. a. s. New York harbor, and 14.60 % c. 1. f. London, Hamburg or Havre. % 1 The New York Metal Exchange % ; quotes:

Electrolytic copper: spot to October. ' 14.20®14.30; steady.

Tin—(Straits shipments): spot and August, 64.87% ® 66.37%; September.

• 64.75®63.12%; October, 6417%©64.75; % Vm 8.90 nominal; "Lead*: spot to October,

dUZi'nc- East Saint Louis spot to Oc­tober, 7.40®7.50; firm.

Range of Coffee Prices 10.

• p 4

A u g . 2C Sept . Dec. March May July 59/4 +

107 j 38 — 1

150 — % ' 128 — % : Kn%. ;

63 ; O c t . . . . 22%— % l D e e . . . 73% T 1 Jm«. . . . 40%— % M a r . . . 15%— % , M * y . . .

Open IS.17 17.40 16.68 16. IS 15.90

High IS.21 17.43 16.SI 16.30 15.94

I*ow 18.10 17.30 16.62 11.17 15.85

Close 11.20 17.43 16 . t l 16.20 15.34

Range of Cotton Prices 20 Open High l iow C o s e

. . lfi.7* 16. t2 . 16.73 16.78 „ 16.77 16.M

16.97 17.04 17.01 17.IS 11.97 17.00

-..^BISS & . . . . < : ; " • . . . - •

16.74 16.72 H . 7 9 17.01 17.13 17.09

P.C1. n is 17.35 IS.70 16.19 15. $7

P . CI.

is. n 16.71 16.77 i t .69 1 7 . 1 2 , 1240 '

WATCH tor STARTLING ANNOUNCEMENT

PINEHURST Lake Shore's Choicest

Subdivision

Uberty Bank Bldg. Seneca 6480

A -* •

I

' (' ?' 1 f

•1

1

*

i i i

- «

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