Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 142, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 October 1932 — Page 11

OCT. 24, 1932

GRAIN FUTURES SELL OFF ON UGHTjUPPORT Drop In Sterling Forces Liverpool Values Down; Deals Slow. BY HAROLD E. RAINVILLE United Fret* Staff Correspondent * CHICAGO. Oct. 24 —Wheat eased fractionally as thft Board of Trade opened today. Prices were dc-! pressed by the lower tendency In! stocks and the weakness itt Liverpool where the unsettlement In the exchange again was the major influence. There was scattered selling with scant aupport at the start, although pressure was not great. Corn was easy with December equaling its low and May setting anew figure. Oats was easy and rye unsettled. At the opening wheat was unchanged to ** cent lower, com was unchanged to \ cent lower, oats unchanged to % cent lower and rye was % cent lower to '/i cent higher. Provisions were weak. Liverpool was higher, but another sharp drop in sterling left prices equal to % to \ lower in American money at mid-afternoon. The lifting of trading restrictions by the secretary of agriculture occasioned no surprise in grain cirrles. It was regarded as a step in! the right direction, although the large supplies in North America are regarded as more than offsetting its influence on the market. . It was estimated that 1.000,000 bushels of corn were sold for export last week, with another 1,000,000 in t he process of being loaded for Mon- j treal. Domestic cash business has been very active. Futures have been supported to some extent by i the export demand, but hedging of bookings prevents an advance. The action of the other grains, as ’ usual, proved the dominating influence in oats and rye last week. So far this season there has been very little rye sold for export. Chicago Primary Receipts - Oct. 22 Wheat 766,000 ' Corn 945,000 Oats 175,000 Futures Range Oct. 24 - WHEAT— > Prey. High. Low. 10:00. close. December .... 48% .47% .47% .48% Mbv 53' 2 .53% .53% .53% July 55 .54' 2 .54% .55 CORN— December ... .25 s * .25’4 .25% .23% May 30 *4 .30'/g .30% .30% July .32 .32 OATS - December 15% .15% May 18% .18% RYE— December ... .31% .31 % .31% .31% May .35% .35% .35% .35% LARD— January ... 4.05 4.07 May .. . ... 4.22 4.25 e INDIANAPOLIS WAGON WHEAT City grain elevators are paving 40c for No. 2 soft wheat. Other grades on their merits. , CHICAGO CASH GRAIN if// United Prcst CHICAGO, Oct. 22.—Wheat—No. 3 red red weeviy, 80 3 c; No. 1 ypllow hard, 48%c. Corn (old>- No. 1 mixed, 25%c; No. 2 mixed, 25%c; No, 1 yellow, 25%c; No. 2 yellow. 25%@25%c: - No, 3 yellow, 25%e. No. 4 yellow, 24% hi 24%c: No. 1 white, 25%c; No. 2 white, 25%c; No. 4 white, 24c; inewi No. 5 mixed, 20%c; No. 3 yellow. 23%c; No 5 yellow, 21%c; No. 3 white, 23%c. Oats—No. 2 white, 16©16%c; No. 3 white, 15% c; No. 4 white. 14 3 tC. Rye— No. 2. 36c. Barley—2l(36o. Timothy $2.25<U2.50. Clover—s7.so4tß 75. By Times Special CHICAGO. Oct. 24.—Carlots: Wheat. 14; corn, 232; oats, 17; rye, 7. and barley, 7. I TOLEDO CASH GRAIN By United Press TOLEDO. 0.. Oct. 22.—Grain in elevators. transit billing Wheat —No. 2 red. 52%®53%c. Corn —No. 2 yellow. 3041310. Oats- No. 2 whtie, 1947 20c. Rve—No. 2, 43©43%c. Track prices. 28%c rate; Wheat —No. 2 red. 47%@48%c: No. 1 red. 48%® 49c. Corn—No. 2 yellow. 25%®26c; No. 3 yellow. 24%®25%c. Oats—No. 2 white. 1647 17c: No. 3 white. n%'.il6%c. Seed close - Clover Cash, $5..504?5 65; October. $5.50®5.65: December. $5.75. Alsike—Cash. $5.5047 5 85; October. [email protected]; December, $5.50415 80. FRANKFORT STAR DEAD Happy Unroe, 1930 Cage Captain, Succumbs at Age of 22. *- By Times Special FRANKFORT, Ind.. Oct. 24.—Roy (Happy) Unroe, one of the greatest Frankfort high school basketball players of recent years, died here Saturday. He was a member of the 1929 Indiana championship team and captained the 1930 team which went to the semi-finals. He was 22 years old. His brother Willys also played on the 1929 team. CRACKS PRO RECORDS Helene Madison Sets Four Marks in m Swim Against Time. By Times Special AGUA CALIENTE, Mexico. Oct. 24.—Helene Madison, Seattle girl swimmer who holds almost all the world's free-style amateur swimming records, has started after professional marks. She established four new standards Sunday in the fifty, sixty, sev-enty-five and 100-yard events. She was unpaced, racing against time.

H. S. Scores Saturday

* HIGH SCHOOLS Culvtr NHitarv Academy. 25: Brazil 0. Warsaw. 0: Huntington. 0 ttie*. Hammond, 39. Froebel (Garvi 0 Hammond Tech. 12; Wallace (Garv). 9. Garfield (Terre Haute’. 0: Casev ni. 0 (tie). Valparaiso. IS; Plymouth. 13 (tie). Rohinson, 111.. 7: Oerstmever (Terr® Haute). 0. . Dugger. S6; Bloomfield. 0. Elwood 19: Wabash. 7 Connersvllle. 6: Newcastle. 0 Princeton. 13: Reitz (Evansville). 7. Boese i Evansville i. 37; Boonville. 0. Elkhart. 31; Jefferson (Lafavett®). 6. DONS RAP CLUBMEN By 1 nited Press SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. 24.—The University of San Francisco defeated the Olympic Club’s football team here Sunday, 16 to 0. It was the first win of the season for the Dons, and their first victory over the Clubmen in eight years of rivalry. THOM HEADS CARD A strong middleweight grappler is being sought to meet Coach W. H. (Billy) Thom, Indiana university mat and grid mentor in the main event of Friday night's card at the armory. Charlie Carr and Meric Dolby, will clash in the two falls out of three semi-windup. CONTE, MALLINI DRAW By United Press NEW ORLEANS. Oct. 24.—Guido Conte, 157, Pacific coast middleweight, and Buster Mallmi, 158, * Kiln, Miss., battled to a ten-round draw here Sunday.

New York Stocks 1 1 (By Thomson * McKinnon 1

—Oct. 34. Frev. | Railroad*— High Low 11:00 clo*e AlchUon 40% 39% 40% 40% Atl Coast Line 20 Balt Ac Ohio . ... 11% 11% j Chet* Ac 0hi0... 21% 21 21% 21% 1 Chet* Corp .... 13% 13% 13% 13%' Can Pac 13% 13% 13% 13 * i Chi N Went . . 6% 7 Del L At W . 29% 28% 79% 28% Del At Hudson ... 63 Great Northern. 11% 11% 11% 11% i Illinois Central. 14% 13% 14% 14% Lou At Nash 20 M. K At T 7% 7% Mo Pacific ... .. 5% Mo Pacific pfd.. .. . 8 8% N Y Central 22% 21% 22% 22% NY NH At H 14% Nor Pacific . . 18% 1% 18% 16% Norfolk A- West 99% O At W .. ... ... 9% Pennsylvania .. 14% 14 14% 14% Reading 33% Seaboard Air L.. .. . .. . % So Pacific 19% . 18% 19% 19% Southern Ry ... 8% ' 8 8% 8% St Paul 2% ... St Paul pfd 3% 3% St I, At S F . ... 2% Union Pacific ... 62% 61% 62% 63 Wabash ... ... 2 W Maryland .. ... 6% Equipments— i Am Car At Pdy 7% Am Steel Fd 7% Am Air Brake Sh 12 Gen Am Tank ... 5% General Elec ... 15 14% ■ 15 14 v* Press Stl Car 1% ... Pullman 21% 21% 21% 22% Westlngh Ar B. 13% 13% 13% 13% Westingh Elec... 25% 24% 25% 25% Rubbers— Firestone 12 Fisk % % Goodrich 3% Goodyear 14% 13% 13% 14 Kelly Sprgfld IV* 1% Lee Rubber 4% U S Rubber 4% 5 Motors— Auburn 41 39% 41 40% Chrysler 13% 13% 13% 13% General Motors.. 12% 12 12% 12% Graham-Paige.. 2 1% 2 1% Hudson 5% 5% Hupp ... ... 19% Nash 13% 12% Packard ... ... 3 Pierce Arrow 3 Reo 2 2% Studebaker 5% 5% 5% 5% White Mot 38% 23% Yellow Truck ... 3% 3% 3% 4 Motor Access— Am Bosch 8% Bendix Aviation. 10% 10% 10% 10* -1 Borg Warner - ... 8 8% Briggs 4% Budd Wheel 2% ... Eaton 6 El Auto Lite ... ... 16% Motor Wheel ... ... 3% Murray Body ... ... 3% Sparks W .. 2 Stewart Warner .4 Timkin Roll .... 14'/$ 14 14 Mining— Am Smelt 13% 13% 13% 14% Am Zinc ' 3% Anaconda Cop... 9% 9 9 9 Alaska Jun 10% 11 Cerro de Pasco 7% 7% Dome Mines ... ll'/a Preport Texas 20% Howe Sound ... ... 7 Int Nickel 8% Inspiration 3% ... Kennecott Cop.. 10% 10% 10% lfl% Magma Cop 7 7% Ngv Cons 5% Noranda 17% 17% 17% 17% Texas Gul Sul.. 20% 20 20 20'/g Oils— Amerada 19% Atl Refining . ... 16% 15% 16 15% Barnsdall 4% 4% 4% 4% Houston 2% 3 Indian Refining. .. ... ... 1% Sbd Oil 13 Ohio OH 9 8% 8% ■■ 8% Phillips 5% 5% Pure Oil i ... 4 4 Royal Rutch 17% ... Cons Oil 6% 6% 6% 6% Standard of Cal . ... ... 24% Standard of N.J 29% 28% 28% 28% Soc Vac 9% 9% 9% 9% Texas Cos 12% 12% Union Oil .. ... ... 11% Steels— Am Roll Mills... 10% 10 10% 10% Bethlehem 16% 16% 16% 17% Byers A M 13% 13% 13% 14 Colo Fuel ... ... 7 Cruc Steel 10 Inland 15% Ludlum ... 5% 5Vi McKeesport Tin 43 Repub I At S 7% 7% U S Stel 35 34% 34% 35% Vanadium 12% 12 12% 13 Youngst S At T 12% Tobaccos— Am Tob (Al new 61 Am Tob lß* new 63% 63 63% 63% Lig At Myers (Bl 54% 53% 54% E3% Lorillard 13 12% 12% 13 Reynolds Tob. . . 29% 28% 29% 28% United Cig % ... Utilities— Adams Exp 5% 5% Am For Pwr 7% 7% Am Pwr At Li 9% 8% 8% 9% ATAt T 101% 100% 101% 101% Col Gas At E 1.... 12% 12% 12% 12% Com Ac Sou ....... ... 33 Cons Gas 55% 54% 55'% 55% El Pwr At Li 7% 7% 7% 7% Gen Gas A 1% ... Inti T Ac T 9% 9% 9% 9% Natl Pwr Ac Li 13% 14 No Amer Cos .... 27% 27 27'% 27% Pac Gas Ac El ... ... 26% Pub Ser N J 45% 44% 45% 45% So Cal Edison .. 25% 24% 25% 46% Std Gas Ac El 15% 15% 15% 15% United Corp 8% 8% 8% 8% Un Gas Imp 17% 18 Ut Pwr AcLA • 4 West Union 26% 27% Shipping— Am Inti Corp 6% 7 Inti MerM pfd.. .. ... ... i% United Fruit 19% Foods— Am Sug 21% Cal Pkg ... 9% Childs Cos 3% Coca - Cola ... ... 94% Corn Prod ...... 48% 48% 48% 48% Cudahy Pkg 28 Gen Foods 28% 28% 28 Vi 28% Hershey 55 Jewel Tea 25 Kroger 14% 14% 14% 14% Nat Biscuit 38 37% 37% 38 Natl Dairy 17% 17% 17% 17% Purity Bak 7% 7% 7% . Safeway St 50% 49% 49% 50 Std Brands .... 14% 14% 14% 15 Drugs— I Coty Inc ... 3% j Drug Inc 33Vi 32% 32% 32% Lambert Cos .... 35 34% 34% 35 Industrials— Am Radiator 7% Gen Asphalt ... 7% 7 7 ... Otis Elev 12 11% 11% 12 Indus Chems— Air Red 54% Allied Chem 70 % Com Solv 8% Du Pont 32% Union Carb 23% U S Ind Alco 24 Retail Stores— Kresge S S 10% 10% May D Store 14% Mont Ward 11%* 11 11% 11% COPS MEXICAN CROWN By Times Special MEXICO CITY, Oct. 24.—Kid Azteca today held the Mexican welI terweight ring title after his twelveround victory over David Velasco, Mexican rival, here Sunday. Baby Casanova, Mexican featherweight, knocked out Speedy Dado of Los Angeles in the fourth of a scheduled twelve-round scrap.

THIS CURIOUS WORLD -

OeSIGNER n C(Xdc?N£ ; % CATfiem, I IS’ OAVKASOWA// if ACCORDING TT TRADITION, O A NAMELY VOUTH *•: BARTERED HIS" SOCH- % f ' W, MC* me. TfeSocking —zrr= A FISH WITH A SOCTION -Q £ IS USED BY THE CHINESE* g IN CATCHING TURTLES*. - : _Z * A STRING IS TIED TO = s =r# J THE TAM- OF THE 1 FISH AND- - ATTACHES ITSELF TO A TtSU, ~ THE FISHERMAN PULLS IT UP.

Penny J O 21% 21 21 21% Sears Roe 19% 18% 18% 18% Woolworth 36% 35% Amusements— Eastman Kod 49% 49% Fox Film A 2% 2% Grigsby Gru 1% 1% Loewa Inc 26 25% Param Fam ... 3% 3% Radio Corp 7% 6% 7 7 Warner Bros 2% Miscellaneous— Congoieum • 8% Proc A: Gam 30% Allis Chal 7% 7% Am Can 50% 49% 49% 50 J I Case 39% 37% 38% 39% Cent Can 32 31% 31% 31% Curtiss Wr ... 2 2 Gillette S R 15% 15% 15% 15% Gold Dust 16% 16 16 16V* Int Harv 21 20% 20% 30\ Int Bus M ... 89 90 Real Silk 5 4% S 5 Un Arcft . 23 22 22% 22% Tranaamerica ... 5 4% 4% 4% New York Curb (By Thomson Ac McKinnon) —Oct. 24Alum Cos of Am 48% Elec Bnd Ac Sh 22% Am Cvnamid ... 4 ;Gen Aviation... 3 Am aAc Eiec.. *6% Int Pete 10 Am Lt Ac Trac.. 17 iNat Inves 3% Am Super Pwr.. 4%‘Newmont Min’.. 13 Arx Gas A 1% Penroad 1% Braz Pwr A: Lt. 8L Std of Ind .... 33% Cent Sts Elec.. 2% Un'Gas fnewi.. 2% Cities Service. .. 3 Ut Pwr 2% ••• • 4% Un Fndrs 1% Deer A: Cos u%| New York Bank Stocks (By Thomson Ac McKinnon) —Oct. 22 _ . Bid. Ask. Bankers 64% 66% Brooklyn Trust 180 195 Central Hanover 134 138 Chase National 35 37 Chemical 35% 37% City National 43% 451/, Commercial 160 170 Continental is% Empire 25 27 First National 1,510 1 560 Guaranty 310 315 Irving 23% *5% Manhattan Ac Cos 30% 32% Manufacturers 28 30 New York Trust 92 95 £ ul ? Uc ™ 31V*) 33% Union Title 40 43 New York Liberty Bonds —Oct. 22 * Liberty 3%s ‘47 HUM Liberty First 4%s '47 102 12 Liberty Fourth 4%s '3B 10316 : Treasury 4%s '52 107 16 | Treasury 4s '54 104' Treasury 3%s 'SB 102 15 j Treasury 3%s '47 100 20 1 Treasury 3%s '<3 March 10L2 : Treasury 3%s 43 June 101 5 Treasury 3%s ’49 97 22 Treasury 3s '55 .'...7.7.7 96.4 Chicago Stocks Opening f ßy Abbott. HoDDin & Cos.) —Oct. 24 4 l £7 nd & Avia - -- 10%-Gt Lks Arcft..." I%| Borg Warner ... 8 iMiddlewest .... % CUies Serv 3 Natl Std 12 Cont Chi pfT ;n% N ° ob Sparks "” Births Girls Allen and Irene Sutherland, 3018 Newton. Lester and Heulah Adams, city hospital, pital 16 an<l Sarah Albert son, city hos- ! p.Ch arl es and Collinette Garr, city hosRo'bert and Lucy Reed, city hospital. Jesse and Cleo Arnold. 963 Indiana "Onn and Anna Anderson, 425 Blake William and Cora Jones, 2170 Pierson and Mary. Sumner, 2405 Shriver. Boys p.Kraiwis and Eugenia Anoskey, city hosKenneth and Alice Vance, city hospital. Georg® .and Charlotte Osthelmer, Methodist hospital. E .'u ei 7 M . , and Francis Stoneburner, Methodist hospital. Arthur and Olive Robinson, Methodist hospital. Leonard and Meta Tanner, Methodist hospital. Russell and Louise Oberlies, Methodist hospital. Herman and Lena Doan, 1759 Howard. Everett and Mazola Harrison, 3925 North Arsenal. Jessie and Alberta Anderson, 516 Blake Thomas and Nancy Harp, 650 East Fifteenth. George and Ella Moore, VIBSO Wood William and Maud Richardson, 835 East Walnut. Virgil and Bernice Yoncy, 330 Millrace. _^ J . e ‘® se and Viola Tungate, 927 West Thirty-first. Harry and Mary Williams, Methodist hospital. Deaths James fl. Lanham, 77. 315 North Walcott. arteriosclerosis. Mary Harold, 50. Methodist hospital, agramulocytosis. Oliver Spillman. 70, 3325 Central, cerebral hemorrhage. Clint William Housh, 47, Long hospital, carcinoma. Rose Ecta Dorsett, 52, St. Vincent hospital. pulmonary edema. Charles Graphman, 66, city hospital, acute myocarditis. William Nany. 78, 530 East Vermont, arteriosclerosis. Mabel L. Anderson. 35, St. Wincent's hospital. peritonitis. Clarissa M. Heaston. 77, 2862 North Gale, cerebral hemorrhage. Marcia Zearing Waddell, 54, 653 North Rural, bright's disease. Ellen Elizabeth Maston, 32, 3604 Ralston, pulmonary tuberculosis. Orval Wyrick, 41, city hospital, chronic myocarditis. Henry Billingslv. 9, Riley hospital, pneumococcic meningitis. Alvin C. Hendricks. 40. Boulevard place and Twenty-fifth, accidental. Pearl Hardin. 41, 115 North Pershing, chronic myocarditis. Henry Small, 40, city hospital, accidental. Wiilliam Brinker. 38, 808 Edgemont, pulmonary tuberculosis. Viola Garvin, 56, 1853 Calvin, chronic bronchitis. Edna Lines, 38, Long hospital, third degree burns. Kate Franzman, 87, North Dearborn chronic myocarditis. Oscar A. Wamslev. 65, Methodist hospital. acute myocarditis. John Mann, 62. 121 West 'Vermont, apoplexy. John W. Miller. 67, 3839 Park, cardio vascular renal disease. Rosa Mullally. 55. 246 North Hamilton, cerebral hemorrhage. Harry W. Doolittle. 54, Methodist Hospital. pulmonary embolus. Adam B. Miller, 65, city hospital, ch onic myocarditis. Charles Augustus Carlson, 1 day, 1507 Churchrpan, spina bifida. Frank* H. Seay, 50, 5927 Broadway, carcinoma. Jessie R. Trent, 48, Long hospital, gliqma. Plumbing Permits R. M. Cotton. 1027 Newman, four fixtures. George Conrad. 1528 North Alabama, one fixture. * C. A. Johnson, 1041 North Belle Vieu place, three fixtures.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

SWINE TRADING HOLDS STEADY AT CITYYARDS Quality Plain, Prices Even . in Cattle Mart; Sheep Unchanged. Hogs showed few changes this, morning at the city yards, prices for the most part close to the range prevailing last Friday. The bulk, 100 to 326 pounds, sold lor $3.40 to $3.60; early top holding at $3.60. Receipts were estimated at 8,000; holdevers were 67. In the cattle market quality was plain, prices steady. Receipts were 400. Vealers were unchanged at $5.50 down. Calves—Receipts numbered 250. Sheep were steady at $5.50 down. Receipts were 800. Trading on hogs at Chicago was slow, with prices holding steai>y at Friday’s average. Few early sales and bids were off 5 to 10 cents. The bulk of 170 to 270-pound weights was bid in at $3.55 to $3.65. Receipts were estimated at 30,000, including 11.000 direct; holdovers were 1.000. Cattle receipts numbered 20,000; calves, 2,500; market steady to 25 cents lower. Sheep receipts were 23.000; market stationary to mostly 25 cents off. HOGS Oct. Bulk. Top. Receipts. 18. $3,659 3.80 $3 80 8.000 19. 3.50(5 3.65 3.65 7.000 20. 3.509. 3.65 3.65 7.000 i 21. 3.50(5 3.65 3.75 7,000 | 22 3.40® 3.60 3.60 4.000 24. 3.40®. 3.60 3 60 8,000 Receipt*. 8,000; market, steady. (140-160) Good and choice $3.60 —Light Lights—i (160-180) Good and choice 3.60 —Light Weights—-(lßo-200) Good and choice 3.50 ! (200-220) Good and choice 3.45® 3.50 —Medium Weights—-(22o-250) Medium and g00d... 3.45® 3.50 (250-290) Good and choice.... 3.45® 3.50 —Heavy Weights—-(29o-350) Good and choice.... 3.30® 3.45 —Packing Sows — (350-500) Medium and good.. 2.50® 3.15 (100-120) Slaughter pigs 3.50® 3.60 CATTLE Receipt*. 400; market, steady. Good and choice $ 6.00® 8.50 Common and medium 3.00® 6.00 (1,000-1,800) Good and choice 1 6.25® 8.75 Common and medium 4.25® 6.25 —Heifers— Good and choice 5.00® 7.50 Common and medium 2.50® 5.00 —Cows— Good and choice 3.00® 3.75 Common and medium 2.25® 3.00 Low cutter and cutter cows.. I.oo® 2.25 —Bulls (Yearlings Excluded)— Good and choice beef 2.75® 3.50 Cutter, common and medium.. 1.75® 2.75 CALVES AND VEALERS Receipts, 250; market, steady. - Good and choice $ 5.00® 5.50 Medium 3.00# 5.00 Cull and common 2.00® 3.00 —Calves— Good and choice 4.00® 5.00 Common and medium 2.50® 4.00 —Stocker and Feeder Steers— Good and choice 4.75® 6.00 Common and medium 2.50® 4.75 (600-1.500) Good and choice 4.75® 6.00 Common and medium 2.50® 4.75 SHEEP AND LAMBS Receipts, 800; market, steady. Good and choice ..$ 5.00® 5.50 Common and medium 2.sofcc 5.00 Ewes, medium and choice .... I.oo® 2.00 Cull and common 50® 1.00 Other Livestock BY UNITED PRESS CHICAGO, Oct. 24.—Hogs—Receipts, 30,000 including 11.000 direct; steaay to oc below Friday; 180-280 lbs.. $3.D3®3.65; top. $3.70; 300-400 lbs.. $3.08®3.&0; 140-170 IDS., [email protected]; pigs, $3.35®3.75: roasters to 54.80: packing sows. $2.65®3.25; light lights, 140-160 lbs,, good mo cnoice, s3.si)(a: 3.65; light weights, 160-200 lbs., good ana choice. $3.509 3.65: medium weights, 200-250 lbs., good and choice. $3.55®3,70; heavy weights. 250-350 lbs., good and choice, $3.15 @3.70: packing sows. 275-500 lbs., medium and good. [email protected]; slaughter pigs, 100130 lbs., good and choice. [email protected]. Cattle —Receipts. 20,000; calves, 2,500; early steer and yearling market at standstill; asking higher, bidding steady on me&gre supply strictly good and choice offerings: weak on predominating crop medium to good grades: bulk of quality and condition to sell at $7.25 downward; several loads held around $8.50&9; about 7,000 western grassers in run. mostly Stockers, that trade steady to weak. Slaughter cattle and vealers—Steers. 600-900 lbs., good and choice, $6®6.25; 900-1100 lbs., good and choice, $69 8.50; 1100-1300 lbs., good and choice, $6.25®9; 1300-1500 lbs., good and choice. $6.50 99 : 600-1300 lbs., common and medium. [email protected]; heifers. 550-850 lbs., good and choice. $5.25®7.50; common and medium, [email protected]; cows, good and choice, [email protected]: common and medium, $2.50©3; low cutter and cutters. $1.509 2.50; bulls, yearlings excluded, good and choice, beef, [email protected]; cutter to medium. $293.15; vealers. milk fed. good and choice, $4@G: medium. $39 4; cull and common. s2@3. Stocker and feeder cattle—Steers, 500-1050 lbs., good and choice. $4.509 6; common and medium. [email protected]. Sheep—Receipts. 23.000; fairly active, steady; early bulk desirable native lambs. [email protected]; best held higher: asking above $5.50 for choice rangers: slaughter ewes. $1.25@3; feeding lambs. $4.2595, Slaughter sheep and lambsb—Lambs. 90 lbs, down, good and choice. $59 5.75: medium. s4®s: all weights, common. $3.50®4: ewes. 90-150 lbs., medium to choice. sl9 2.50; all weights, cull and common. [email protected]. Feeding lambs, 50-75 lbs., good and choice, $4.75®55.25. EAST BUFFALO. Oct. 24—Hogs—On sal®. 7.100: active to local packers; steady with Fridays average; bulk desirable. 110250 lbs.. $4: few 270-300 lbs.. $3.75®3.85. Cattle— Receipts. 2,150; holdovers. 150; better grade steers and yearlings, unevenly, 50c®$l lower: plainer kinds. 25 to 50c lower; cows and bulls, weak to 25c lower; entire market slow, catchy: choice steers and yearlings, [email protected]: good. [email protected]; fleshy grassers and short feds. $4.75®6.25; common steers and heifers. $3®4.50; fat cows. $2.7593.50; cutter grades. sl®2: medium bulls. $3. Sheep—Receipts. 7.580; fat lambs, generally 25c higher; others, strong to 25c higher: hulk good to choice. *5 75- common, medium and bucks. $4.75: fat ewes. $2.50 down. FT. WAYNE, Ind., Oct. 24—Hogs—5c off; 140 lbs. down, $3.20; 140-170 lbs., $3.30; 170-200 lbs.. 53.45: 200-250 lbs., $3.35; 250-300 lbs.. $3.25: 300-350 lbs., $3.15; roughs. 52.50 93: stags. $1.509 2; calves, $5.50; ewe and wether lambs, $5; bucks, $4. LAFAYETTE, Ind.. Oct. 24.—Hogs— Steady; 15c up; 160-200 lbs.. [email protected]; 200-325 lbs., $3.2593.40; 100-160 lbs., $3.25®3.40 roughs. $2.75 down; top calves, $4.50; top lambs, $4.50. EAST ST. LOUIS. Oct. 24.—Hogs—Receipts. 10.500; including 600 through; market. steady to 5c higher; top, 53.70; lew pigs. $3.75; bulk 180 lbs. down, $3.5593.65; 190-250 lbs.. $3.359 3.50;' sows. $2.509 3.90. Cattle—Receipts. 4.700; calves, receipts, 1.800; market, opened slow with initial deals on most classes about steady and cow market not developed; a few steers common flech. $4.25; mixed yearlings and heifers. s3.so®*: sausage bulls largely $1.75@f150: top vealers. $5.50; slaughter steers. 000-1100 lbs., good and choice, s6® 8: common and medium. $8.5096.25; 11001500 lbs., choice, $7.75 9 8.25; good. *6.25© 7.75; medium, $4.759 6.25. Sheep—Receipts, 4.500: market opened steady; top lambs. $5.50; bulk to packers, $5©5.25; throwouts. s3® 3.50; fat ewes. $1.50; lambs, 90 lbs. down, good and choice. $4.75 9 5.50; medium. $494.75: all weights common, $39 4; ewes. 90-150 lbs., medium to choice, sl®2; all weights cull and common. By Times Special LOUISVILLE, Oct. 24.—Cattle—Receipts, 1,000; better grade steers and heifers fairly active, others slow and mostly steady; beef cows and bulls around 25c lower; Stockers little changed; biflk common and medium steers and heifers, s3®s: odd head light weights, SB9 6 50; bulk beef cows.' $2 9 2.50; low cutters and cutters. 75c9. $1.75: bulk stockers and feeders, $3.50 to mostly $5.25: calves, receipts, 300; steady; bulk good and choice light vealers. s4© 4.50; lower: grades. $3.50 down. Hogs— Receipts. 900: steady with Friday and Saturday; 175-240 lbs.. $3.60; 245-295 lbs., $3.25; 300 lbs. up, $2.85; 170 lbs. down, $3.30: sows. $2.50; stags, $1.55. Sheep— Receipts 150; *teadv: bulk medium to good lambs. $4.50; better finished kinds eligible to $5.50; lower grades $3.50 down; fat ewes, sl®2. Saturday’s shipments—None. Sweoney Wins Jackson Trophy The Chester Jackson trophy passed into permanent possession of Captain Earl W. Sweeney Sunday when hev won the annual national guard plane race for the third consecutive year at municipal airport. Two Seriously Hurt in Crash Ed White and General Hurst, both of Homer, IIL, are ip city hospital today with serious injuries incurred Sunday night in an automobile accident near Danville, Ind.

BELIEVE IT or NOT

FOR CORONER J - ' K 1 tTo Greene County Voters: ‘ I v I want the job a<w>n. Y' SA9GUSL, ONLY ONE WINS POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS C r: ec r ™ * w ;j _ K n, ... Synimt.. N . B.'— .(iste-ufs) / the First man to be elected to an office in America . He was elected governor of Massachusetts !6 Times /

DOW-JONES SUMMARY

California Crude oil output in week ended Oct. 22. averaged 485.760 barrels daily, an increase of 12.810 over previous week. Canadian government loan of $80,000.000 to be offered on Oct. 31; $25,000,000 to be three-year 4 per cent bonds to net 4.28 per cent. Net profit of Owens-Illinois Glass Company and subsidiaries for twelve months ended Sept. 30, 1932, amounted to $2,030,578 after interest, depreciation, federal taxes, etc., against $2,792,840 in twelve months ended Sept. 30. 1931. Chicago. Milwaukee and St. Paul in first twelve days of October handled 79,426 cars of revenue freight as compared with 69.791 cars in same period last month and 92,269 cars in same period of last year. Hershev Chocolate Corporation in auarter ended Sent. 30. 1932, reported net income of $1,338,997 after depreciation, federal taxes, etc. against $1.767134 in September 1931; nine months net income totaled $4,082 801 against $6,485,814 in first nine months of 1931. Illinois Central system to purchase 6,000 tons of rails for 1933 requirements. Stocks of rubber at London on Oct. 22 totaled 43,173 tons, a decrease of 556 tons from preceding week; stocks at Liverpool totaled 57,568 tons, a decrease of 263 tons. New York, Ontario & Western in September reported net -operating income amounting to $177.045, against $146,601 in September. 1931; nine months amounted to $1,415,920, against $1,466,513. Illinois Central system in September showed net operating income totaling sl.662.722, against $762,986 in September, 1931; nine months amounted to $8,048, against $6,694,643. Minneapolis, St. Paul * Sauit Ste. Marine system, .including Wisconsin Central in September reported deficit totaling $251,277 after charges, against $331,025 in September, 1931; nine months deficit totaled $7,159,281, against $4,915,435 in first nine months of 1931. Wisconsin Central in September reported net loss amounting to $263,913 after charges, against $162,314 in September, 1931; nine months totaled $2,621,836. against $1,909,922 in first nine months of 1531. TRACTORS RIDE EASIER Super-Balloon Tires Take Away Bumps and Jars. By Science Service TORONTO, Oct. 24.—Rough-rid-ing, steel-wheeled tractors are being tamed into smooth-going, comfortable mounts by super-balloon tires. This is one of the latest applications of pneumatic tires, and was described by Burgess Darrow of the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company at the meeting of the Society of Automotive Engineers here. Darrow called it a startling development, because the full airwheel, practically the same tire developed for airplanes, with the addition of a nonskid tread, is used. They Tire twenty inches wide and are inflated at from three to five pounds pressure. \ Marriage Licenses Montie Huddleston, 24, of 2209 College avenue, farmer, and Ella E. Langford, 36, of 924 Laurel street, houseworker. Francis Castner. 21. of 1334 Silver avenue, truck driver, and Helen Parker, 19, of 1039 Division street, houseworker. Harry J. Meldrum, 21, ol 1437 East Raymond street, laborer, and Mary J. Brunnhoeffer, 19. of 1033 East Raymond street. E. G. Morehouse. 22. of 1437 Prospect street, cheese maker, and Ruth Ella Bennett, 23. of 1202 St. Peter street, hosiery mill employe. George Taylor Davis, 42, of 5230 East Tenth street, postal clerk, and Loretta Jane Cavis. 28. of 1036 East Ohio street, houseworker., Merrill Nimmo, 34, of Kansas City, salesman, and Lenora Diehl, 27, of Roosevelt hotel. Saylor S. Bvers. 40, of 26 East, Sixtenth street, civil engineer, and Gladys Fern Patterson, 22, of 28 East Sixteenth street, clerk. Rav Arthur Evans. 41, Michigan road, farmer, and Elsie C. Lacey, 25, of 422 West McCarty street.

Heavy Snow By Times Special MONTREAL, Oct. 24. —lt looks like a winter with lots of snow. At least so say the Indians of northern Quebec. They base their prophecy on two signs which they claim never fail to foretell the type of winter In store. The first is that the pine trees are laden heavily with cones and the second is that the partridge are appearing with heavily feathered legs. Both of these signs were missing last year and the snow fall was one of the lightest on record.

On request, sent with stamped addressed envelope, Mr. Ripley will furnish proof of anything depicted by him.

Following is the explanation of Ripley’s “Believe It or Not’< which appeared in Saturday’s Times: Forceful Golf —Charles O’Day, of Hartford, Conn., 22-year-old amateur golfer, succeeded in bettering by fifteen holes the record held by a Nashville golfer since last summer. The new record holder started in the moonlight and finished one hundred holes before sunrise. At 5:30 p. m. he had passed the 200-hole mark, but kept up*a brisk pace until he had played a total of 28 nine-hole rounds plus four extra holes. The total distance traversed by O’Day during his 17hour grind was about 54 miles, with a resultant loss of thirteen pounds in his bodily weight. Tuesday; “Family Longevity.”

INDIANAPOLIS STOCKS AND BONDS

(By Newton Todd) The following quotations do not represent firm bids gnd offerings, but indicate the approximate markets based on recent transactions or inquiries to buy and sell. —Oct. 24Stock* _ ; Bid. Ask. Belt R R and Stkyds com... 22 26 Belt R R and Stkyds pfd.... 45 51 Cent Ind 7% pfd 24 29 Citizens Gas com 14 18 Citizens Gas 5% pfd 81 89 Indpls Pwr and Lt 6% pfd... 65 71 Indpls Pwr and Lt 6%% pfd 72 78 Indpls Gas com 44 50 Indpls Water 5% pfd 91 97 Indp Pub Welfre Ln Ass com 47 52 Nor Ind Pub Serv 7% 55 60 Pub Servos Ind 6'h pfd 29 34 Pub Servos Ind 7% pfd ... 45 49 So Ind Gas and Elec 6% pfd 65 69 Terre Haute Elec 6% pfd ... 46 54 Bonds Belt R R aqd Stkyds 4s .... 84 89 Citizens Gas 5 s 1942 86 91 Indpls Gas 5s 1952 76 81 Indpls Rys 5s 1967 25 30 Indpls Water 4%s 1940 93 96 Indpls Water 5%s 1953-'54.. 97% 100 Trac Terminal Corp 5s 1957.. 38 43

Chicago Fruit

By United Press CHICAGO, Oct. 24.—Apples—Illinois Jonathans bushel. $1.25® 1.36; Michigan Jonathans bushel, $1.25; Delicious bushel, $1.25; Kings bushel. 75c: Mclntosh bushel, sl® 1.15; Spies bushel. $1.25. Grapes— Michigan twelve Quart Concords, 15© 17c Pears—Michigan Keifers bushel. 50®60c. Evansville Official Dies EVANSVILLE, litd., Oct. 24.—H. J. Karges, 66, a member of Evansville board of public works, who died Friday, will be buried Tuesday following private and public funeral services. slOl Stolen in Hotel Room Theft of slOl from his room in a downtown hotel was reported to police Saturday by J. R. Forster, Chicago.

Inaugural Bob

•* a.- 9

To the victors belong the curls—at least the top ones—in the “inaugural bob’’ created by Dumas, noted French coiffeur, and displayed here quite smartly by Miss Ann Taranda of New York City. One side of the hair is curled up, demoting the winners. The other side is curled down, denoting the losers. Here you see the winning side—even before the votes are counted, i

R*fl**red t?. S. If JL Fateat Office RIPLEY

The City in Brief

TUESDAY EVENTS Rotary Club, luncheon, Claypool. Gyro Club, luncheon, Spink-Arms. Mercator Club, luncheon, Columbia Club. . Architectural Club, luncheon, Architect* and Builders’ building. American Chemical Society, luncheon, Severin. Universal Club, luncheon, Columbia Club. Republican Veterans, luncheon, Board of Trade. Young Layers’ Association, luncheon, Washington. Zonia Club, luncheon. Columbia Club. Theta Chi, luncheon, Washington. Shortridge Parent-Teacher Association, meeting, 8. Shortridge. Purchasing Agents’ Association, luncheon, Washington. Young Republicans, lunoheon, Washington. Pigeons owned by H. H. Carter won first, second and fourth places in the last of the fall series of young bird races held Saturday by the Indianapolis facing Pigeon Club. • Jacob Dorman will be installed president of the Central Hebrew congregation, Twenty-first and Central avenue, Nov. 6. Other officers to be installed are: Abraham Borstein, vice-president; Samuel Dorfman, treasurer, and Joseph Fleischman, secretary. First united session of the school year for Hi-Y leaders and members will be held Tuesday night at central Y. M C. A., with Vernon Parker, central branch secretary, in charge.

Produce Markets

Delivered ln Indianapolis prices: Hens, heavy breeds lie; Leghorns, Bc. Broilers colored springers, 1% pounds up, 10c; barebacks ana partly feathered. 7c: Leghorn and black. 1% pounds up, 8c; Cocks and stags. sc: Leghorn cocks. 4c. Ducks, large white full feathered and fat. sc; small full feathered and fat, 3c. Geese, full feathered and fat. sc. Young Guineas, 20c ea.; old guineas. 15c. Eggs—Approved buying grades of Institute of American. Poultry Industries No. 1. 24c: No. 2. 19c; No. 3.11 c. Eggs—Country run, loss off. 22c. Butter. 22 to 23c: undergrades. 20 to 21c; butterfat. 18c. These prices for healthy stock, free from feed. No sick poultry accepted. Quoted bv the Wadley Company. BY UNITED PRESS CHICAGO. Oct. 24.—Eggs—Market, steadier; receipts, 4,245 cases; extra firsts, 23%@24%c; firsts, 23®23%c; current receipts. 19®22%c; dirties, 12®20c. Butter —Market steadier: receipts, 5,437 tubs; extras, 19%c; extra firsts. 18® 19c; firsts, 17©17%c; seconds. 15® 16c; standards, 19%c. Poultry—Market steady; receipts. 21 trucks- fowls, 11@13%c; springers, 10Vi® 11%#, Leghorns. i)%c; ducks, 10%© 12%c; geese, ldc; turkeys, 10®18c; roosters. 9c; Leghorn broilers, 9%c. Cheese — Twins, 12%®12%c; Young Americas, 12%® 13c. Potatoes—On track, 373; arrivals, 119*. shipments, 452; market dull; Wisconsin and Minnesota Cobblers, 50@55c; North Dakota Cobblers and Ohios, 55®60c; Idaho Russets, $1.05®1.10. NEW YORK. Oct. 24.—Potatoes steady; Long Island. 65c®51.85 ner barrel; New Jersey. $1.35®1.50; Maine. [email protected] per barrel; Idaho, [email protected] per sack. Sweet potatoes—Weak; Jersey basket. 40c®51.40; Eouthern‘barrel. [email protected]: Southern basket. 30@65c. Flour—Quiet; springs, patents. [email protected] per barrel. Pork—Steady; mess. $17.50 per barrel. Lard—Dull; middle west spot. $4.55® 4.65 per 100 lbs.. Petroleum— Firm; New York refined. 17c gallon; crude Pennsylvania. $1.22® 1.72 barrel. Grease —Quiet; brown. 2%®2% per lb.; yellow, 2%@2%c per lb., white. 2%©3%c per lb. Tallow—Quiet; special to extra. 2%@3%c per lb. Common hides dull. Hides—City packer dull; native steers. 6%c: butt brands. 6c: Colorado!, 5%c. Dressed poultry—Dull: turkevs. !4©25c; chickens. 12®20c: broiiers. 13(&26c; fowls, 10@19c: Long Island duck*. 14®16c. Live poultry— Dull; geese. 8® 14c turkeys. 20®25c; roosters. 10®lle: ducks. B©23c: fowls. 9@ 20c; chickens 11© 18c. Cheese—Dull; voung America. 13%@18%c. Butter—Market, steady; creamerv. higher than extras, 21 @2l%c: extr*s. 92 score. 20%c; firsts. 91 score. 19% ©2oc: firsts. 88 to 89 score. 18%c: seconds. 17©17%c. Eggs—Market, steady; soecinl packs, including unusual hennery selections. 29®32(-: standards. 28 @27e: rehandled receipts. 24@24%e.

In the Cotton Markets

(By Thomson McKinnon) NEW 'ORK Oct. 22.—Trade business was about evenly divided in cotton this morning. Hedge selling same along at regular intervals, but the mills were willing to fixe pilces at every point decline. Most professional traders prefer to act after they actually see the market show a turn, and axe willing to miss a part of the advance rather than anticipate a movement. The trade itself nverages its purchases as prices approach the point they have in mind as an approximate low. That kind of buying is in evidence now. CHICAGO —Oct. 22 . High. Low. Close. January 8.38 6.26 6.28 March 6 48 6.36 6.35 May 6.56 6.45 6.45 July 6.64 6.53 6.55 October .... ... g.n December 6.33 6.22 6.23 . NEW YORK January 6 28 6.23 6 20 March 6.38 6.30 6.30 May 6.45 6.39 8.4(h Julv 6 55 6.47 6 48 October ’. 6.18 6.10 6.10 December a.24 6.16 6.16 . NEW ORLEANS January e.ja 6.17 6.17 March 37 6.27 6.28 Mav 8.44 e. 37 6.37 July 6.55 6 45 6.47 October 8.17 6.02 ‘ r 6.02 December 6.35.. *.14 6.14

PAGE 11

STOCK ISSUES MOVE DOWN IN UNEVENJANGE Nearness of Vote on Steel Dividend Hampers Trade.

Average Stocks Prices

Average of thirty industrials for Saturday, high 61.82, low 60.32. last 60 85, off .16. Average of twenty rails. 28.10, 27.02. 27.26. off .02. Average of twenty, utilities 27.31. 26 80, 26.94. off .07. Average of forty bonds 79.69, off .13. BY ELMER C. WALZER United Press Financial Editor NEW YORK. Oct. 24.—A declining tendency was noted in the early trading of the Stock Exchange today after a narrow, irregular opening. Trading continued dull. Steel common opened down % to 35. and slipped back farther in the early trading. The issue was influenced £y proximity of the meeting of directors to act on the preferred dividend Tuesday, after the close. That meeting, incidentally, was supposed to be a factor in retarding operations in general on the market. Steel operations of the country were unchanged at 19% per cent of capacity, according to the magazine Steel. That was considered an adverse factor in that it was taken to indicate the peak in steel operations had been reached for the time being. Railroad issues eased off fractions to more than a point, with Union Pacific the heaviest loser. It sold down to 61?*/off l 1;, while Atchison eased to 40 ] i, off **; Southern Pacific 19, off and New York Central 214, off 7 s. Small losses were noted in nearly all the industrial leaders. Utilities also declined, with American Telephone dropping to 101 from its opening of 1014, off 4,

Bank Clearings

INDIANAPOLIS STATEMENT —Oct. 24Clearings $1,608,000 00 Debits 3,884,000.00

Foreign Exchange

(By Abbott. Hoppin Sc Cos.) #-Oct. 24Open. Sterling, England 3.33% Franc, France 039*% Lira. Italy 0512 Franc, Belgium 1393 Mark, Germany 2378 Guilder, Holland 4035 Peseta, Spain 0820 Krone. Norway 1700 Krone, Denmark 1737 Yen. Japan 2288

Investment Trust Shares

(By Abbott, Hoppin & Cos.) PRICES ARE TO 12 NOON, C. S. T. —Oct. 24 Bid. Ask. Am Pounders Corp, com 1.37 1.50 Amer and Gen Sec (Al 5.00 10.00 Am Inv Tr Shares 1.62 2.12 Basic Industry Shares 1.87 2.00 Collateral Trustee Sh (Al 3.00 3.50 Corporate Trust (new) 1.59 1.73 Cumulative Trust Shares 2.64 2.70 Diversified Trustee Sh (At.... 7.00 7.50 Fixed Trust Oil Shares (A1... 5.12 6.50 Fixed Trust Oil Shares iß>... 5.00 5.50 Fundamental Tr Shares (A).. 2.87 3.12 Fundamental Trust Sh <Bl 3.00 3.25 Leaders of Industry (Al 2.50 3.00 Low Priced Shares 2.25 2.75 Mass Inv Trust Shares 13.50 15.00 Nation Wide Securities 2.37 2.62 North Amer Tr Shares 1.70 1.80 Se’ected Cumulative Shares... 5.00 5.37 Selected Income Shares 262 3.00 Shawmut Bank Inv Trust 2.00 Std Amer Trust Shares 2.50 2.70 Super Corp of Am Tr Shares.. 2.60 2.80 Trustee Std Oil (A) 340 3.60 Trustee Std Oil (Bt 3.50 3.60 U S Elec Light and Pwr (At.. 14.75 15.00 Universal Trust Shares 2.10 2.20 NEW YORK COFFEE —Oct. 22 Santos High. Low. Close. March 8 85 May 8.56 July 8.43 September 8.31 8.29 8.29 December 9.38 Rio March 6.05 May 5.91 5.90 5 91 July : 5.79 September 5.72 5.71 5 71 December 6.42 RAW SUGAR PRICES —Oct. 22High. Low. Close. January LO4 1.03 1.04 March 1.01 1.00 1.00 May 1.04 1.04 1.04 July 1.08 1.07 1.08 September 1.12 1.11 1.12 December 1.07 1.07 1.07 In the Air Weather conditions at 9 a. m.: South wind, 6 miles an hour; temperature, 56; barometric pressure, 30.03 at sea level; ceiling, clear, light fog, unlimited; visibility, 2 miles; ‘field good. FIRE TRUCK IN CRASH Demolished Traffic Signal Making Run to Police Headquarters. Speeding to the scene of a fire in the garage at police headquarters today a ladder truck from fire headquarters struck and demolished an automatic traffic signal while making a turn at Alabama and Washington streets. The truck was not damaged. The fire started when a garage employe dropped a lighted match near the gas pump, caused only small damage.

★ Safety for Savings Fletcher American NATIONAL BANK Southeast Conor o* Market and Pennsylvania

TODAY THE INVESTORS’ OPPORTUNITY There are many logical and profitable changes to be made in every investment account. Send your list for analysis. P. T. Burke & Cos Incorporated SUITE 222 CIRCLE TO WEB PHONE Riley 8586

Checking Accounts Interest Paid on SAVINGS and Certificatea of Deposit AETNA Trust & Savings Cos. *3 North Pennsylvania Street Lincoln 7371