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Show VIOLENT DROP IN OIL SHARES Sufficient Buying Power Develops to Offset Slump Effects I f ! NEW YORK, OcL 1 3 Sufficient huylng power developed in today's stock market to neutrallxe the ftepree-( ftepree-( lng effect of a violent 20 point drop In Standard Oil of New Jersey and in other domestic oils. Active pool operations op-erations wcro conducted In a number of special stocks nnd these, with the buoyancy of Mexican and Pan-Amerl-) can Petroleum "hares, had a stlmulat- ' ins; effect on the rest of the list Sales. approximated 1.0S0.000 share. . Prices started upward :i:iln In thel final hour In response to the broad-: -- 4 enlng demand for the principal r;ill-. road shures. Atchison. Northern P-l clflc. Chenapeak. &. Ohio. Heading. New York Central. Lackawanna and Booth fern railway preferred rlsini; 1 to ' 2 points. Material Improvement also j was noted In a number of specialties. American Can gaining 4 points. U. R. Rubber JVfc and Coca Cola 2 The i closfi was strong I Strength of standard railroad and Mexican oil shares and weakness of ) the Standard Oil group featured to days Irregular opening. The. advance In rails was led by Chlcnpo A Northwestern North-western and Missouri Pacific, each of which were up a point whlei Mexican Mex-ican Petroleum tip 4 and tho Pan-American Pan-American Issues, up lH to 2. stood U out In the oil group. The sharp break In Standard Oil of New Jersey 3.500 shares of which were sold at 226 to 230 as compnred with the final rate of 236 14 on Wednesday reflected spec- ulatlv disappointment over tho fart that the 400 per cent stock dividend Involved no Increaso In tho present tato of cash payments. It yielded later to 22T. Standard Oil of California Cal-ifornia dropped l'i In the first half hour Sugar stocks were strong In response to Increased prices, American Ameri-can nnd Manatl sugars each gaining ' a point. American Itndlntor broke 2 and weakness also noted In Famous Players, International Paper, National Lead, Paldwln and Union Pacific. National Rlseult, U. S. A1-. cohol and Studebaker wero strong. Despite the arute weakness of Stand- ' ard Oil shares. New Jersey dropping to 219. or nearly 17 points, below Wednesday's close, price in the general gener-al lint continued upward Kxcept In the Standard Oil shares them was a noticeable absence of selling pressure, which encouraged buying for the long nceount. Increased activity In specu- ! latlvo pools, particularly In shares of companies noining largo surpluses available for distribution, furnished the Impetus for the advance throughout through-out most of the lLst. Mexican Petroleum Petrol-eum extended Its gain to 6 points and the Pan-American shares to 4 each, while new high records for the year weer made by American Can. American locomotive, United States Alcohol nnd American Kxprosa, the gains ranging from two to nearly 10 point. Call mom v opened and renewed re-newed nt 5 per cent. Prices took a downward course after af-ter mlddoy. the further drop In Standard Oil of New Jersey to 216. M encouraging traders to work for a re action Particular weakness devcl- oped In the domestic oil shares and i fome of the food, rns. motor accee- sorles. equipment nnd Ifldependi nt s'e.ds were ,l90 depr s.ed sharply. i Tidewater Oil cave way five points. Standard Oil of California three, and ' Pacific Oil and General Asphalt two j point. American Radiator declined fl while American Ebrpreea sold 7 points under Its high figure of the-; morning. United States Realty wa forced down 2 and United States Pood Products and Fisher Itody two1 '-..X. point National Blaeult receded from ?11 to SOS, but again mounted to I ii 218' A subsequent buying movement In Studebaker. Chandler Motors. Murine preferred. Continental Can and Int.-r national Paper, which improved 1 to 2 points, nnd further easing off the call money rate exerted a later steady. ! 4 lng effect. j . v.'A OO- LOCAL ixvrarrMKNT spcuRinua (As reported by J. A. Hoglc & Co.) BANK BTOC K i I Bid Aaked. Hunkers Trust If 160 .00f 160 00 Columbia Trust 90 00 licseret National ... 270. 00 276 00 Deeeret Savings .... 206.00, 210 00 l irst Nat. of Ogden 310 . 00 1 Contl Natl Bank 160.00! Security State bank I 100 00 Natl. Copper 145.00 150.00 ' 'tab. State National. 110. 00 120.00 Utah Saving A- Trust 95.0i 106 00 , Walker Bros. Bankers! 22 7.00 .231.00 Zton'e Savings A Trst 205 .0Q 210 00 INDUSTRlALBTOCK3 ! V Amal. Sugar, com.... 3.451 360 Amal. 8ug 8 pet pfd.. 82.001 85 00 j Con. Wagon 60.00 66.00 j Homo Klrc Ins 315. 00i 325.00 Independent Coal ... .57 CO 1 Morgan Cunng &s pfd. 101. OOi 103 00 I lit States T & T ... .1 104.001 106.00 1 Peoples Su pfd & com 2 00 2 60 j S-J. 8s pfd 100.00 102.60 , Standard Coal .60, 65 US Fuel 7s pfd .80 .85 j Utah-Idaho Sugar . . .J 3.8E 3 45 Utah Fire Clay 60.00 56 00 I Uh Pr. St Lt 1st pfd! 94 00 96 00 Walker Bros. D Gds 200.00 Z C M I 112.001 U4.00! 1 BONDS I 8 L. Stock Ex 6s 19 29 88.001 90 00 Stndrd Coal 6s 19281. 98 oi) Ut Pr & Lt 1st Ss '44 93.00 00 ', V. J'r 49 1930 ' ' 001 88. 001 Lt-Ida Sugar 7s 1930, 9 7.60 99.00 j 00 Tres rarely die of old age The Danube la 1725 miles long. TEN THOUSAND PAID FOR SEAT ON CURB l NEW YORK. OcL 13. Harold M. Thomas today purchased tho curb istock exchange seat of Paul H. van IDaell for 10,O00, a new record high price, which Is an advance of 1250 oor tho preceding transfer. Ni:V YORK STOCKS (I -ft suJe.) Allied Chemical & Dye 85 Allls-Chalmers 664 American IUet Sugar 46 American Can 72 American Car & Foundry ....Its lAmer. Hide & Leather pfd. ... 70 Va American International Corp. .. 374 American Locomotlvo 133 (American HmHtlng & Itef'g. ... 60fc jAmerlcan Sugar 81 Amer Sumatra Tobacco, bid.. 28' American T. & T 123 .American Tobacco 16! American Woolen 1014 Anaconda Copper 51 Atchison 107 Atl . ;ulf & W. Indies 30 Baldwin Locomotive 139 Baltimore & Ohio 554 Bethlehem Steel "B" 76 Canadian Pacific 148 Centra Leather 40T4 Chandler Motors 64 h y.-i ,i .1 k c 1, 74 1., Chicago. Mil. and St. Paul ... 32 7 Chicago. R. L & Pac 44 Chlno Copper 29 Colorado Fuel A Iron 3 2 Corn Products ... Cruclblo Steel 86 ;rl 15 ,1-amous Players-Iasky 97 'in. r.il Asphalt : Oeneral Electric 1827ij , General Motors 15 Ooodrlch Co J5 Great Northern, pfd 94 Illinois Central .. 115V Inspiration Copper 38 International Harvester 109Va Int. Mer. Marine pfd 62 International Papfr 60 Invincible Oil ., l(tt Kclly-Sprlngfleld Tiro 44 Kennecott Copier 34 Louisville & N.xshvlllo 138 Mexican Petroleum 205 V Miami Copper 28 Middle States on 13 Mldvaln Sti cl , 34 Vi Missouri Pacific 21 New York Central 98 N. V. N. H and Hartford 10 Norfolk & Western 121 Northern Pacific 87j Oklahoma Prod & Ref 2 Pacific Oil 654 Pan American Petroleum 91 Pensylvanla 48 People's Gas 96 Pure oil 3i Ray Consolidated Copper .. .. 14 Reading 81 Rep. Iron & Steel 69',4 Royal Dutch. N. Y 68 Rears Roebuck 89' Sinclair Con. Oil 341 Southern Pacific 96 Southern Railway 26 Standard Oil of N. J 217 Studebaker Corporation 138 ITenneaeee Copper 94 Texas Co 60 Texas & Pacific 29 Tobacco Products 85 Transcontinental Oil 14 Union Pacific 151 United Retail Stores 80 U. 8 Ind. Alcohol 69 lUnlted States Rubber 67 United States Steel 107 Utah Copper . 66',4 Wcstlnghouse Electric 62 Willys Overland 7 Amir. Zinc, Lead and m 1 1 14 Butte and Bhperlor S3 "ala. Petroleum 62 Montana Power, bid 71 Shutiuck Arizona 82 Great Northern Ore 38 Maxwell . . j 7 Chicago and Northwestern .. .. 92 mining si cuRrnrs. (As reported by J. a. Hogi? & Co ) I Bid ' Aaked Alia Mich I I Alta Con f f '02 Albion Cons 06 .08 Am. Metals qo Alta Tunnel 04i 05 B""on 01 01 Big Cot. Coal 05 .06 Bay State 0i i H Black Metal !o6 Bingham Galena .... .02 0 Lent. Eureka 00 02 (Colb. Rexall 26 27 Colorado Con . 06 06 ,Crown Point 03 04 K,:ardlff 60 !56 i,0 lnf 01 o Daly Uest . . 3 .86 3 75 raiton 07 .10 Emma Silver 02 .02 Emplro Mines 02 03 E. & B. Bell 2.36 . " Emerald 06 Eureka Mines ..... !o5 E Crown Pt. . ... .02 02 V E Tin. Coal .00 !oo Eureka Lily 06 08 Eurekn Bullion 04 06 Gold Chain 02 .06 Grand Vntral 60 ;r-.it W. -stern oi 03 Hamburg Mines .. . . 00 1Iowel .02 " .'03 Iron Blossom 27 29 Iron King 16 '26 Judge M. S 4.00 I 4 .' 4 6 K,,tr-,ne 36 ... K' nnebec . . oi 03 Ihi Tin 01 ;0i Leonora 00 01 Lynn Big Six 06 Mummoth 35 ' ' ki)' ' Mnier HUJ May Day 01 Michigan-Utah 09 10 New Qutncy 01 ,01 Nail Driver 08 !l6 ! North standard 02 0"' Opohongo .00 .00' I'lutus ( J2 .24 1 Prince Con .11 jj Paloma 00 ,01 Ploche Bristol 00 01 U Price Mining 02 I " Prov 03 " !o' South Standard 12 .20 Sell.i qi 6ndlcate 00 ".00 Silver King Coal. ... 1 60 1 r, Silver King Con .44 .45 Sioux Mines .01 !o4 ITar Baby 00 .00 Tintlc Central 00 .01 Tintlc Standard .. .. 3.10 3.12 Unole Sam ,02 .02 I tan Con 00 .00 Union Chief 05 Victor Con. . . .05 Wst Toledo 01 .04 Walker Mining 4 12 4.40 Woodlawn I .06 'Yankee Con I .01 !oS Zunia I .06 .qs Oprnlng Sales. Bullion. 1000 at lc. Emma Silver. 298 at 2c 10.000 at Ploche Bristol, 2000 at lc. Prince Consolidated. 500 at llc. Silver King Coalition. 600 at $2 60 200 at $2.62. Silver King Consolidated, 100 at 44.-. 100 at 46c. Tintlc Standard. 800 at $3 00 30f at $3 07 ; 300 st $3.02Vt . $00 at $3.05. I lining Solos. Alta Tunnel. 2000 at 5c Emma Silver. 7000 at 2o. Lehl Ttntic. 1000 at lc. New Qulncy, 2500 at lc. Prince Consolidated. 1500 at 11c. Silver King Consolidated. 200 at 44c. Tar Baby. 1000 at c Tlntlc Slnndard. 300 at $3 10. Woodlawn. 600 at 6c Zuma, 1000 at 7c. "u : OGDEN LIVESTOCK ; 4 Cttle 498 Hog Mft Slioep 3530 Cattle: Receipts. 498. steady; top. $6.60; choice prime steers. $6.00? 7.00; good steers. -6. 00O6.00; fair steers. $4 00 fj 5 .00; feeder steers, $4.00(6.25; choice heifers, none; .choice cows. $4. 60 Q 5.00; fair to good Jcows. $4. 00 4. 60; canners. $1.00 -if 2.00; bulls, $3 .OOfjr 3 . 60; feeder cows. $3.500 4.00; veal calves, $7,000$ 00. Hogs: Receipts. 88. 25c lower; top $9.00, fat hogs, 190 to 220 pounds. $8,609.00; heavy hogs. $7.5068.00: bulk. $7. 60 9.00; feeder hogs, $8 50 O10.60. Sheep: Receipts. 3539. steady; choice lambs. I in . 00 O 1 1 6: tat wethers. $6.00 0 7.00; fat ewes. $4.00 6.00; feeder lambs. $9.6010.75; feeder ewes, $3 .006 4.00. rrlals. J. W. nillman. Downey. Ida., 3 cars cattle. J C. Allen, Preston. Ida., mixed car cattle and hogs. R. H. Peck, Soda Springs. Ida., $ cars cattle. Lt. J. Thomas. Soda Springs. Ida.. 9 cars cattle. M. K. Parsons. Huntsvillc, 6 cars sheep. Braekenbury Commission Co., Elko, New. 3 cars sheep. Edwin T. Welle, Elko. Nov.. 1 car sheep. J. W. Hlllman, Oxford. Ida.. 1 car cattle. J. T. Taylor, Lovelock. Nev.. 2 cars sheep. Charles Stewart, Rlrle. Ida.. 3 cars sheep. Lorln Lewis. Fairfield, Ida., 1 car cattle. Shipments nnd Sale. Ogden Packing & Provision Co., Ogden. Og-den. 1 car cattle. D. D. Harris. Ogden, lcar feeder hogs. Fort Dodge Serum Co., Ogden, 1 car scrum hogs. Anton Oirlstenscn Brlgham. 8 cars feeder cattle. Con Ncvlns. LIvermore. Cal., 3 cars cattle. Con Nevlns Livestock Co . Los Angeles. Ang-eles. 2 cars cattle. Block & Guss, Salt Lake, 1 car cat-1 tie. Sw.inston & Son. Swanston. Cal., 7 I cars cattle. Noel Cover Sheep Co.. Cozad. Nob . 12 cars feeder Bheep. f FOREIGN LIVESTOCK (United State-. r partment of Agriculture Agri-culture ) a CHICAGO, Oct. 13. Cattle Receipts, Re-ceipts, 3500; beef heifers strong to 15-hlgher; 15-hlgher; beef cows steady to strong, other classes generally steady; nativu boef steers comparatively scarce; bulk i being short fed and wurmed up kin. I. top matured beef steers $12.75. weight 11369 pounds; best mixed yearlings' $11.40; bulk beef steers $9.00 10.60; I 'practically no fresh westerns here, bulk bologna bulls 84.004.15; bulk veal calves around $10.50; to packers j outsiders paying upward to $11 00. Hogs Receipts 18,000 lights and I butchers 106 15c Iow.t, packing eowe and pigs unevenly steady; fe wchoice 220 tu 260 pound averages $9.40 . 'J.oO bulk 100 to 210 pound averages. $9. 2069-35; top $9.50. bulk 140 to 180 j pound aerages $S.'JO9,16; bulk 1 packing sows $7 756 &.26; pigs mostly most-ly $S.769.00; heavy $8.6069 60, me-I jdlum 19.15 09.40; light $8.90)9.35. light light $8.7669.00; packing sow3. ameoth $7,806 S. 50; packing sows. rough, $7.356 8.90, killing pigs. $8.50 6 9 00. Sheep Receipts 11.000; fat lambs opening steady; early top natives $13.85 to packers and city batchers; bulk natives around $13 50, cull-inostly cull-inostly $9 009.50. 10 cars choice Idaho lambs $14.10 with 600 out and feeders at $14.00; same price and sort J their mates here sold for feeding late Thursday. Iambi and sheeD around steady; heavy fat ewes $3.50 ' 4.00, some up to $4 60, lighter weight upward to $6.50. OMAHA. Neb., Oct. 18. Hogs Receipts Re-ceipts 4600, 1001(0 lower than Thursday's Thurs-day's average, .bulk mixed and packing pack-ing grades f7.00Q8.O0; bulk medium and light $8 256 75; top. $8.90. Cattle Receipts 1 700; all classes of cattle generally steady, quality plain; top corn fed be-even, $11 60; choice , grass becf cows $4.75; canners down to $2.25. bologna bulls mostly $3.25; choice light vealers $9.75. bulk stock-ers stock-ers and feeders 06.766 7 ?5 Sheep -Receipts S500; lambs steady to 25c higher; bulk western lambs $13.60 13.85; top $14.00; fed. clipped lambs $12.156 12 50; sheep steady; best ewes $5.60, feeders strong, top feeding lambs $13.80. ST JOSEPH. Mo.. Oct. 13 Hogs: Receipts. 3.600; shippers buying good butchers ari.und 25c lower. $9.00 paid. Packer market mostly 15 to 25c lower; low-er; top. $8.90; packing sows, strong;1 bulk. $ 7 . Iv a 7 Cattle: Receipts, 2.000,; no good native steers here, receipts, largely I stockcrs and feeders; all cla.sses nominally nom-inally steady; a fo wnatlve ateers and 1 y .uiingB, $8.60. down; a few westerns! down; canner cows mostly $2 76 j 3.00; veal calves. $9.60. a few other ' sales of light western feeders, $6.25 6.60. 8hoep; Receipts. 2.000; three decks' western yearlings. averaging 87 pounds. 100 btralght; looks about steady; short deck 170-pound western fat ewes, steady at $6.00; five double deck western lambs not sold early. KANSAS CITY, Mo.. Oct. 13. Cattle. Cat-tle. Recelnta, 6.500: srenanal market on most classes dully, steady, gra.ss-ers gra.ss-ers about steady; tup medium weight steers. $10.75. other sales $5.7069 30; cholco vealers, $10.00; most cowsl $3.754.75; odd head. $6.5006.60. fed heifers. $7. 00 6 7.76, plain grass heifers. $4.0004 76; better grades canners. $2. 60 2. 85. Hogs: Receipts. 5,600; lighter weights. 6 to 10c lower, others mostly most-ly 10 to 15c lower; shipper top. $9.00;! packer top $8.90. bulk 160 to 190! pcunders. $8.406 8.85. bulk 200 to' 250 pounders. $8.600 8.90; 260 to 300 pound weights mostly $8.40$ 70;, bulk sales, $8.4068.90; packing sows steady to weak, mostly $7.50 0 7.75,; stock pigs, steady; mostly $8,25 6 8.60. no cholco light stock pigs here. Sheep: Receipts. 2.000; lambs gen-1 erally strong; clippers, higher, short! cropped ColoradoB. $13 65; local fed Clipped $12 7:.. odd let h.'ep steady; feeding lumbs lato Thursday $13.50. HI n I K M I GGS CHICAGO. OcL 11 Butter steady, creamery extras 43e; firsts 35 37c. extra firsts !962c. seconds S4u34e; standards 39c Eggs, lower; receipts 6679 cases; firsts 310 35c; ordinary firsts 2." 6 26c miscellaneous 28 30; refrigerator firsts 26c; refrigerator extras 26c Poultry, alive. asy: fowls 16 24c springs 20c. roosters 14c. 1 " It -4 Ogden Cash Grain 4 4 (Quotations furnUhed by Globe Grain Milling I (Values Include freight paid to Ogden) Utah wiut- r Wheal No 2 dark hard. 84094c. No. 2 dark hard, 8169c. No. 3 dark hard. 78 0 87c Utah White Wheal No. 2 soft white. 66?76c. No. 3 soft white. 62 0 73c. No. 1 hard white 620 82c. No. 2 hard white 69 6 79c Idaho N Inter I -.1 1 No. 1 dark hard. S40)94c. No. 2 dark hard. 810 96c No. 8 durk hard. 7S0-91c. No. 1 hard winter. 79 6 83c. No. 2 hard winter. 766 86c. blah.. Hani Spring Wheat No. 1 dark northern, 84 6 99c No. 2 dark northern S1 6 97o . No. 3 dark northern. 78 0 93c Idaho W Inter W In at No. 2 soft white. 696 89c No. 3 soft white 660 86c. No. 2 hard white, 84 0 94c No. 3 hand white 816 91c. Idaho Whin- Peed l ats 38 bulk. $1. 6801.7. Eight oats 5 0 16c leas. If sacked. 6c additional. 1 -a-teru orn No 2 yellow. $1.36 1.38. No. 2 mixed $1.34 01.36. (Above bulk, sacked 5c additional.) J I GRAIN 1 CHICAGO. Oct. 13. Higher prices for wheat here resulted this morning from a rise In Lovcrpool quotations jnnd from continued transportation difficulties dif-ficulties on this side of the Atlantic, preventing any general accumulation of wheat supplies and creating an ur-igent ur-igent demand for prompt shipment of I other grain, especially corn. Demand I was also proportionately greater for nearby deliveries of wheat. Most of1 the selling appeared to be of a profit I taking character. The opening, which ranged from to c higher, with December $1.09 1091 and May at $1.10 0 1 11. was followed by a slight reaction and then a fresh upturn. Corn and oats displayed Independent Independ-ent strength from tho outset, with May and July corn scoring new price records for tho season. After opening open-ing 6 1c higher, December 63 64c tho corn market held near to the Initial range. Oats started 4flc up, December C and after a llttlo sag made a further advance Lower quotations on hogs weakened the provision market. Subsfiuently. in wheat, gossip that 1.600.000 bushels of Canadian wheat 'and some United States wheat had I been taken for Europe tended to up-Ihold up-Ihold values The close was firm. to lc net higher, with December $1.09 to 1.09 and May $1.10 to 11.10. In corn, an estimate that Argentina has only 30,000.000 bushels left for export were construed as bullish. The 1 market closed firm. 1 to lc net higher, with December 64 to 6411 'MAHA. Neb.. Oct. 13. Wheat, No. 2 hard, 1.090 1.11; No. 2 mixed. 99 1.02. I "-n. No. 2whlte, 630 63; No. 2 mixed. 63. Oata, No. 2 white. 40; No. 3 white, 39 040. CHICAGO. Oct. 13. Wheat. No. 2 Bed. $1.17 t; 1.17 . No. 2 hard. $1.12 0 113. Corn. No. 2 mixed, 6869c, No. 2 yellow. 6869c. Oats, "No 2 white. 4243c; No. 3 white. 40 ftx 44c. . Rye. No. 2. 7677c. Barley. 63 6 69c. Timothy seed, IS 500 6. 60, Clover seed, $15 00 19. On Pork, nominal. Lard, $1 1 .00. Ribs. $10.95. MINNEAPOLIS. Oct. 13 Plour unchanged. un-changed. Bran $21.00. I OREIGJj 1 ( 11 B NEW XORK, Oct. 13. Foreign ex change. Irregular; Great Britain, de-mand. de-mand. 4.43; cables. 4.43; sixty-day bills on banks, 4.41. France, demand. 7.57; cables, 7.58. Italy, demand. 4.24, cables, 4 25. Belgium, demand. 7.07, cables. I 7. 07. Germany, demand, .03 13-16; cables, '-03. Holland, demand, 38. S6; cables. ! 38.92 . Norway, demand, 18.26. Sweden, demand. 26.62. Denmark, demand. 20.10. Switxerland. demand, is..'.'. Spain, demand, 15 1 1 ( Jreeee, ! ma nd. 2 C ' Holland, demand. .01. Czecho-Slovakla. demand. 3.3 7. Argentine, demand. 36.00. Brazil, demand, 11.75. Montreal, 1.00 3-32. NEW YORK SUGAR. NEW YORK. Oct. 13. Tho early raw sugar market was more active today and prices were firmer with Cubas quoted at 3c. cost and freight, I equal to 5 53c for centrifugal. There were sales of 10,000 bags of Cubas to an outport refiner and 100.000 bags to local refiners at 6.68c for centrifugal. centri-fugal. Raw sugar futures, higher In sym- pathy with the advance In raws and prices atmldday showed gains of 3 to 6 points on active covering and light 1 commission house buying. The market for refined was firmer with raw sugar and pr.ces were unchanged un-changed to 15 points higher, fine granulated gran-ulated now being listed to 6.60 6.90c. Refined futures, nominal. Sugar futures closed steady; approximate ap-proximate sales. 62.350 tons; October, $2.70; December. $3.50. March. $3.51; May. $3.60. cure . 1 i t u eu a CHICAGO, Oct. 13. Open High Low Close Wheat-Dec. Wheat-Dec. $1 09 $1.09 1.09 $1.09 May 1 10 1.11 1.10 1.10 July 1.03 1.03 1.03 1.03 Corn Dec. .63 .64 .83 .64 May .66 .66 .66 .65 July .65 .66 .66 .65 uats Dec. .39 .40 .39 .40 May .40 .41 .40 .40 July .39 .39 .38 .39 Blank. Oct. 11.10 11.10 10.90 10 96 Jan. ... 9.27 9 22 9.27 I Ard Oct. ... 10.70 10 50 10.60 Ml ri MARK 1 NEW YORK. Oct. 13 Copper, dull; electrolytic, spot and futures. 14. Tin. strong, spot and futures. 84.00. Iron, steady, prlcej unchanged. Lead, steady: spot. 6.50 0 6.76. Zinc, firm; East St. Louis spot and 1 nearby delivery. 6 65 6. 70. Antimony, spot, 6.76 0 7.00. Mn 1 -V M XHIvl'I NEW YuRK. et. 13 Call money, caster; high. 6; low. 4; ruling rate. 6. closing bid. 4: offered at 5; last loan, 4. call loans against acceptance. accept-ance. 4; time loans, firm; mixed collateral. 60 and 90 day. 4 04; four and six months 4 5, prime fc.on.ri. . 1 . . r, paper. 4. t If Daily Market News, By Extension Service. Call Local Extension Office. Pnone 1 164, for further Information. I POTATO MARKET. OGDEN No cosh sales reported One consignment buyer advancing- 30c on sales at 40c cwt. on cobblers; 35c on sales a 60c on rurals. IDAHO FALI.S Prices snd conditions condi-tions unchanged. Rurals 40c. Russets 50c to 60c. Shipments Wednesday. 44 cars. ! KANSAS CITY Market. firm. Traek sales, carlots. outwelght Monn. aseked Red River Ohlos, U. 8. No. 1. $115 1.20; Colo, sacked Rurals. No. 2. $1 00. CHICAGO. Potatoes, firm; receipts 60 cars; total U. 8. shipments, 1.213; (Wisconsin sacked and bulk round I whites. $1.00 1.15 cwt.; Minnesota sacked round whites. No. 1. $1 95 i ff 1 . 10 w , Mim s.ita par ki d sand land Ohlos. No. 1. 90 1.05 cwt.; Minnesota sacked Red River Ohlos. .$1 061.25 cwt.; ditto bulk. 95 '105 cwt., North Dakota sacked Red Rivera, $1 001.15 cwt.; South Dakota Da-kota sacked early Ohlos. 85c 1 00 cwt.; ditto bulk. 80fl90c cwt. I III lis M BG1 1 1 1 1 1 v KANSAS CITY Apples, boxes Missouri Mis-souri and Kansas Jonathans. Jumble park. $1.60; Jonathans, fine quality. (Orchard run. $1.75; Washington extra fancv .lonnlh.ins meilliim size. J2.50. , I Lettuce Washington. $6 . 50 7 . 60. Celery Market unchanged. SALT LAKE, Oct. 12 Supplies of produce were light. The market waa dull and draggy. Potatoes moved jvery slow at lower levels, offerings of apples were moderate and the market mar-ket was weak and draggy. Cucumbers, Cucum-bers, corn, peaches, pears and cantaloupes canta-loupes continue to arrive on the market, mar-ket, but In such small quantities to hardly establish a market. Ill II Apples, bushel, mostly $1.00; Jonathan. Jona-than. $1.00 1.25; Greening. $1.00 1.25; Rome Beauty. $1.00. few Spitz-en Spitz-en berg. $1 IS Prunes. Italian, pound. 4 5c; German, Ger-man, pound, l25c. Watermelon, cwt.. 60 75c. VI iGBTABl I iS Cabbage, pound. 11c. Cauliflower, pound Ivsl, 5c. Lettuce, crate (24 headsr. $1.00 1.26; few best. $1.502.00. Onions, dried, pound, lc. Peppers. Green Bell, pound, 2 3c; Tied Bell, pound. 3 5c Potatoes, white, cwt.. 60 65c. Blue Victor, cwt., 60 70c. Tomatoes, lug.. 35 40c. Dairy products, poultry and eggs, and hay, unchanged. |