Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 299, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 April 1933 — Page 13
'APRIL’ 23, 1933
SWINE STEADY TO 5 CENTS UP AT CITY YARDS Cattle Slow With Sentiment Mixed: Sheep Trade Dull. Hogs mostly were steady this morning at the city yards with a few butchers and underweights 5 cents up. Reported top was $3.90 with the bulk of 160 to 300 pounds selling at $3.80 to $3.85. Weights of 300 pounds up sold for $3.70 to $3.75; 120 to 160 pounds, $3.40 to $3.70. Receipts were estimated at 7,500. Holdovers were 127. Trade was not fully developed in the cattle market with sentiment mixed. Most bids were steady to lower. Opening sales were around steady. Receipts numbered 2.000. Vealers were steady at $5 down. Calf receipts were 700. Little was done in the sheep market. Asking held sharply higher. The bulk of Monday’s late sales were around $5.25. Receipts today v/ere 1,000. Only slight action developed in hog trading at Chicago, with most bids and sales around steady at Monday's average. Several classes of porkers remained inactive. The bulk of good to choice weights from 190 to 220 pounds was bid in and sold at $4. Receipts were estimated at 25.000, including 10.000 direct; holdovers. 1.000. Cattle receipts were 8.000; calves, 3.000; market steady. Sheep receipts numbered 15,000; market unchanged. HOGS April. Bulk. Tod. Receipts. 18. s3.7O'® 3 75 $3 80 7.000 19. 3 6/ )”t 3 65 3.65 7.500 20. 3.55*/ 3 60 3.65 7.500 21. 3.707/ 3.75 3.75 7.000 22. 3 85 •/ 3.90 3.90 2 000 24 3 800/ 3 85 3 90 7.000 25. 3.80*1 3.85 3.90 7.500 Market, higher. (140-160) Good and choice...* 3.60*£ 3.70 —Light Weights—-(l6o-1801 Good and choice... 385 1180-2001 Good and choice... 3.85*? 3.90 Medium Weights—--1900-2201 Good and choice.. 3.85® 390 1220-2501 Good and choice. . 3.85*/! 3.90 Heavv Weights—-("2so-290) Good and choice ... 3 80*/ 3.85 (290-350) Good and choice... 3.754? 3.80 - Packing Sows — 1350 down) Good 3 35*6 3.50 (All weights) medium 3.25'/ 3.40 (All weights) medium 3.004/1 3.25 Slaughter Pigs—-(loo-190) Good and choice.... 3.30® 3.40 CATTLE Receipts, 2.IMI0; market, steady. (150-1.100) Good and choice .....$ 5.00® 6.75 Common and medium 3.25*? 5.00 (1.100-1.5001-Good and choice 4 25*6 6.50 Medium 3.501? 4.25 —Heifers—-(sso-750) Good and choice 4.50*7 5.75 Common and medium 3.25*/ 4(50 (750-900)-Good and choice 4.25*? 5.50 Common and medium 3.0041 4.25 —Cows— Good 3.00*6 3.50 Common and medium 2.50® 3.00 Low cutter and cutters 1.50'q) 2.50 Bulls ivearhngs excluded i Good .heel I 2.50*6 3.25 Cutter, common and medium.. 1.504? 2.50 VEALERS Receipts, 700; market, lower. Good and choice $ 4 50*7 5 00 M- cliutn 3.00*6 4.50 Cull and common 2.004? 3.00 —Calve*— (250-5001 Good and choice 3.50*8 4.50 Common and medium 2.00*? 3.50 —Reeder and Stocker Cattle—-(soo-800) Good and choice 4 50® 5.75 Common and medium 2.75® 4.50 1800-1.050) Good and choice 4.50*8 5.75 Common and medium 2.75® 4.50 SHEEP AND LAMBS Receipts. 1.000; market, steady. - Lambs. Shorn Basis—(so lbs. down I Good At Choices 5.25*8 5.75 (90-110 lbs.i Good and choice 4.50*1 5.25 (90 lbs down l Com. ft med. 3.00® 590 Spring lambs 7.00*8 8.50 —Ewes— Good and choice 2 00*7 2.75 Common and medium I.oo® 2.00 Other Livestock BY UNITED PRESS CHICAGO. April 25. Hogs—Receipts. 15.000 including 5,000 direct: moderately active, lull steady with Monday's average; best 170-300 lbs.. $3.90® 4.10; ' top. S4 10; good pigs, $3.25*/ 3.50; bulk packing sows, S3 45*/ 3.60; light lights. 140-160 lbs., good and choice. $3 75''/4: light weight. 160-200 lbs . good and choice. $3.85*/4.10; medium weights. 200-250 lbs., good and choice, $3.95 *14.10: heavy weights. 250-350 lbs., good and choice. $3.75*/ 4; packing sows, 275550 lbs . medium and good. s3.3o*i 3.65: slaughter pigs 100-130 tbs. good and choice. $3.25 i 3.75. Cattle —Receipts. 8.000: calves, 3.000; fed steers and yearlings mostly steady: better grade yearlings scarce; general killing qualities being clean; early top yearlings and light steers, $6.25: some held higher but most steers and yearlings selling. $4 507/5.75; supplies good steers and yearlings and cows small: all cows fully steadv. bulls steady; vealers 25c lower, mostiy, s4*/ 4.75: ton $5: slaughter cattle and vealers: steers. 550-900 lbs . good and choice. $5.25 *(7: 1,100-1 300 lbs, good and choice, $5 "/ 6 75: 1.300-1.500 lbs., good and choice. $4.50*7 6.28: 550-1.300 lbs., common and medium. $3.25*/ 5 25: heifers, 550-750 lbs., good and choice, $4,506/5.50: common and medium. $3 25 /4 50; cows good. $3*74.50: common and medium. s2.so'</3; low cutter and cutter. $1 90*/2 50: bulls /yearlings excluded), good /beef), $2.75*/3.25; cutter common and medium $2 50*7 3.10: vealers. good and choice. $4 25*7 5 25: medium. $3.50 *74 25; cu! and common. $2.50*/3.50: Stocker and feeder cattle: steers, 500-1.050 lbs good and choice. $4.75*7 6: common and medium. $3 50 6 4 75. Sheep— Receipts. 15 000: market not established: killers around steady; most interests bid 25c more desirable 69-94 lbs , clipped lambs. $5 25 /7 550 most holding best about. $5 65: slaughter sheep and lambs; spring lambs, good and choice. s6*/7.25; medium. ss*7 6 lambs 90 lbs. down, good and choice. $5 25i77 50; common nnd medium s4*7 5.35; 90-96 lbs good and choice. $5*75 65. 98110 lbs., good nnd choice. $4 75*75.35: ewes, 90-150 !hs , good and choire. s2*7 285 all weights, common and medium. $1.25*7 2.25, CLEVELAND. April 25.—Hogs—Receipts. 1.900; holdovers 137: mostly steadv. extreme top 5c lower; pigs steadv to 25c higher: 160-300 lbs. $4 10; 150 lbs. down, $3 60*/3.75. Cattle Receipts. 250; market active at Monday's advance; common to medium steers under 1.000 lbs.. $4.40*/5.35; cows unchanged. $l6O /3 25: sausage bulls. $3 25 down. Calves—Receipts. 650: market steadv; good to choice vealers. Ssj 5.50. cull to medium. $2 50 ./4 50 Sheep— Receipts 2.000: market active, steadv with late advance: spots 15c higher than early Mondavi bulk clipped lambs not particularly outstanding, $5.25*/6.35; near choice deck. $5 40, cull to medium throwouts. $3 (./4 SO; choice 58-61 lbs , springers. $8 Others downward to $6 and below. EAST ST LOUIS. April 25.—Hogs—Re- j ceipls. 15.000. market, opened 5c to mostly 10c higher; bulk. 170-280 lbs $3.75*/3.85: 140-160 lbs. $3 20*13.65: 100-130 lbs.. $2.75 3 10: SOWS. $3 25 / 340. Cattle—Receipts. | 3.000: calves. 1,500: market, opened generally steady: bulls strong; a few steers j at $4 50 /5: mixed vearlmgs and heifers. $4 23*/5; cows. $2.50*/3. low cutters. $1.50 1.75: top sausage bulls, $2.85: good and! choice vealers. $4 75. Sheep Receipts.] 2.500: market, a few spring lambs to city j butchers strong to 25c nigher. packers l talking lower on old crop lambs: a few 1 desirable spring lambs. $6.50./ 7 25: prob-, able bulk clipped lambs around $3 15 .z 340 throwouts. $3 50: fat ewes, s2*/2 73; spring; lambs, choice, $6,500 7 25; good. *s f i 6 50; i medium. $5/5 75: lambs 90 lbs. down 1 good and choice. ss*/5.50: common and! medium. $3 50.i 5.15: lambs. 90-98 lbs. good] and choice. $4 90*i5.50: vcarlir.g wethers. 90-116 lbs., good and choice. $4 /4 50 ewes 90-I*o lbs., good and choice. $1.75 o 2 75 ali weights, common and medium. $1 n 2. EAST BUFFALO. April 25.—Hogs—On ! sale, 700 very active generally 10 to 15c ! O'/r Monday's average: some weighty kinds UP more, desirable 170 to 260 lbs $4 35./ i 4 40: Plainer kinds. $4.30: weights around I 140 lbs.. $3 85: few 320 lbs butchers $4 25. Cattle —Receipts 25; cows, unchanged cutter grades. $l4O .i 2.25 Calv cs—Receipts 150: holdover. 400: vealers trade dull weak to 50c lower: good to choice. $4 50'./ 5 few $5 25 common and medium. s3*/4 ! Sheep— Receipts 400: lambs steadv: handy i weights woolskins $6 weights around 110 ! lbs *5.25 medium clippers. SS FT WAYNE April 25 -Hogs-Market. steadv: 160-200 lb* . $3 85: 200-225 lb' *3 80 225-275 lbs . *3 75. 275-350 lbs $3 70 140-160 lb:. . S3 55 100-140 lbs $3 25 ! roughs. $2 75 stags. $175; calves, $5 lambs. $5 25 Cattle—Market, steers, good to choice. $54/ 5 50: medium to good $4 50 <-j 5 common to medium, $3 50*/ 4: heifers g. ;d to choice. $4 50 '/5 medium to gn*d $4 /4*o common to medium s3*/4. cow.good tr holce. $3 , 4 50: medium to good $2.50*/3: eutter cows. *1 75*/2 25 earner cows $I(B1 50: bulls, good to choice $3// 325 medium to good. $2 50*/3; common ; to medium. s?•■?> 50. butcher bulls. $3 25 ! ;i3 75 LAFAYETTE April 25.—Hogs—Market. ! steadv 170-250 lbs.. $3 704/3 75: 250-325 lbs.. $3 60"/ 3 65; 150-170 lbs . *3,50: 100-150 lbs.. $3 10'/ 3 30; roughs, $3 down; top calves. $4; top lambs. $5.
New York Stocks — ~ (By Thomson St McKinnon) ~““~~
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Corn Prod .... 69% 68 69 % 70% Crm Wheat 30 29% 30 30 Cutiahv Pkz 35% Cuban Am Sug 7% 7 7% 7 4 Gen Foods ... 30% 30 30-* 30 4 Grand Union... 7 6% 7 7 Hershev 54 Jewel Tea ... 35 34% Kroger 26% 25 26% 27% Nat Biscuit 44% 43% 44*e 46 ; Natl Dairy 17% 16% 17% 17% Purity Bak 13% 12 13% 12% PHlsburv . . ... 18 ig% Safewav 5t.... 43% 42% 43% 44 Std Brands 18% Ward Bkg 1% Drug*— Cotv Inc 3% 3% 3% 3% Drug Inc 41 % 41 41 % 42 Lambert Cos 30% 29\ 30% 30% Lehn ft Fink 19 IS Industrials— Bush Term 2% Certainteed ... 2 Gen Asphalt... 10% 10% 10% 10% j Otis Elev 14% 14% 14% 17 Ulen ta ... I Indus Chems—j Air Red 63% 62% 63% ... Allied Chem ... 92 91% 91% 94% I Com Soiv 17 16% 16% 16% Dupont 46% 46 46% 47% Union Carb 32 U S Ind Alco 27% Retail Stores— Assoc Dry Gds 9% Gimbel Bros ... 2% 2% Kresgc S S .... 9% 9 9% 9% | May D Store ... 20% 20% 20% 31 I Mont Ward ... ... 19 Penny J C 32% 31 31% 32 Schulte Ret St Sears Roe 22 21% 22 22% Wooiworth 35% 34% 35 36 Amusements— Bruns Balke 4% Crosley Radio ... ... 4% Eastman Kod ... 60% 59% 60% 61% Fox Film A ... ... 1% Loews Inc 13% 13 13% ... Radio Corp ... 5% R-K-O 2 2 Warner Bros. .. 2% 2Vi 2% 2% Miscellaneous— City Ice ft Fu 12% Congoleum 10% 10 10 10% Proc ft Gam 36% 36% 36% 37% Alii sChal 11% 11 11% 11 Am Can 73% 72% 73% 75 J I Case 52% 81% 52% 54% Cont Can 51% 51% 51% 52% Curtiss Wr 2% 2 2 2% Gillette SR ... 12% 12% 12% 12% Gold Dust 18% 18% 18% 18% 1 Tnt Harr 28% 27% 28% 29 I Tnt Bus M 105 Real Silk 9 9% Un Arcft 26% 26 26% 27% Trans-America.. 5% 5% 5% 5% Owens Glass 47V* 47% New York Curb (Bv Thomson ft McKinnon) —April 25 11:00 11:00 Alum Cos of Am 53 Hudson Bav .. 5% Am Cvnamid... 7% Humble Oil 51 Am Gas ft Elec 22%'Imp Oil of Can 9% Vm Lt. ft Trac.. 14% Int Pete 13 Am Super Pwr.. 3% Mead Johnson.. 53% Ark Gas A ... 1% Midwest Util ... % Ass Gft Elec.. 1% Nat Bellas Hess 1% Can Marconi ~ 1% Nat Inves 3% Cent. St.s Elec .. 2% Newmont Min.. 28% Cities Service.. 2% Nia Hud Pwr.. 10% Cons G of Bit.. 46 Penroad 1% Comm Edison.. 57% Salt Creek 4% Cord 7% Sel Indus 1% Deer ft Cos 16% Std of Ind 23% Elec Bnd ft Sh 15% Tr Air Tr 4% Elec Pwt Ass... 4 United Gas (new 1 ) 1% Ford of Can... 6% Un Lt ft Pvv A 3% Ford of Eng... 3 s * iln Verde 3% Goldman Sachs 2% Ut Pwr 1% Gt A ft P 160 ! U Fndrs 1% Gulf Oil 37 ! New York Bank Stocks (Bv Thomson & McKinnon) —April 24 Bid. Ask. Bankers 57% 58% Central Hanover 121 125 Chase National 24% 25% Chemical 36 V* 37 Vi City National 29% 30% Corn Exchange 55 58 First National 1.375 1.425 Guaranty 273 278 Irving 177* 18% Manhatten ft Cos 20% 21% New York Trust 83 86 Liberty Bonds nil T'nitcd Press NEW YORK, April 24.—Closing Liberty bonds: Liberty 3%S '47 100.24 Liberty Ist 4%s 47 101.29 Liberty 4th 4%s '3B 102.17 Treasury 4* 4s '52 107.12 Treasury 4s ’54 104.9 Treasury 3%s '56 102.12 Treasury 3%s '47 100.1 Treasury 3%s '43 March 100.1 Treasury 3%s 43 June 100.16 Treasury 3%s '49 97 8 Treasury 3s ’55 95.24 Chicago Stocks Opening (Bv Abbott. Hoppin ft Cos.) -—April 25 Bendix Avia... 12 iElec. Houshld... 6% Borg Warner... 10%'Lim McNeil prod 3% Cet Wst 5 Natl Std 12% Cities Serv A.. 2% Nob Aprks 13 Cord Corp .... 7% Prima Beverage 17 Cont Chi Com. 2 Swift &Cos 15% Cont hi pfd.... 21% Swift Inti 22 Comm Edison.. 57 (Quaker Oats ...100% Grigsby Grunow 1 I BUSINESS NEWS SUMMARY Union Carbide and Carbon and subsidiaries in March quarter earned 19 cents a share, against 22 cents in first quarter of 1932. Cigaret production in March amounted to 7,974,030.237 in March. 1932; large cigars totaled 290,111,072 against 355,.382,130; manufactured tobacco amounted to 23.938,566 pounds, against 27,988,491 pounds; snuff output totaled 2.518.475 pounds against 3,455.166 in March, 1932. Reading Company in March reported net operating income of $824,000 against $855,000 in March, 1932. Dun ft Bradstreet report showed 447 failures in United States during last week against 439 in previous week and 663 in like 1932 week. Arson Investigator Resigns Virgil Quinn, holdover arson investigator under the Republican regime, resigned Monday, it was announced by A1 Feeney, chief of department of safety.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
STOCK SHARES MOVE DOWN IN BRISKJRADING All Sections of List Show Small Declines on Profit-Taking. Average Stock Prices Average of thirty industrials for Monday. high 74 84. low 72 32 last 73.69. up 1.45. Average of tw-enty rails 31.77. 30.50, 31.08. up .42. Average of twenty utilities 24.60 23.11, 23 70. up .53. Average of forty bonds 75.05. up .70. BV ELMER C. WALZER United Press Financial Writer NEW YORK. April 25.—Profittaking hit the stock market at the opening today. Prices declined fractions to more than a point on heavy volume involving large blocks. Cotton futures dropped 7 to 15 points. Tlie dollar firmed up in terms of the pound and dipped in relation to the French franc. Railroad shares were depressed. Pennsylvania dipped to 19 ! 2, off 1%; Chesapeake & Ohio, 31, off %; Delaware, Lackawanna & Western, 24Vs, off ; Illinois Central, 16, off %; Atchison, 47, off 1; New York Central, 22%, off 1%, and Baltimore & Ohio, 12 off 3 4. American Telephone opened at 94, off l 12; United Aircraft, 26, off l's on 5.000 shares; Cerro de Pasco, 20, off 1 1 i; International Harvester, 2714, off IVi on 1,500 shares; International Telephone, 10%, off % on 2,500 shares; Consolidated Gas, 44%, off IV2 on 1,300 shares; Montgomery Ward. 18, off 1 on 5.000 shares. U. S. Steel opened 8,000 shares at 42, off I*4 points.' Bank Clearings INDIANAPOLIS STATEMENT —April 25 Clearings $1,276,000.00 Debits 3,381,000.00 TREASURY STATEMENT —April 25Net balance for April 22....5322,929,895.51 Expenditures 9,088,397.80 Customs rects., mo. to date.. 12,608.451.52 Investment Trust Shares (By Abbott, Hoppin ft Cos.) —April 25 — Bid. Ask. American Bank Stocks Corp.. 1.17 1.37 American Founders Corp 1.12 1.62 American ft General Sec A.. 3.50 3.60 Basic Industry shares 2.42 .... British Type Inv Tr sh 45 .70 Collateral Trustee shares A.. 3.87 4.25 Corporate Trust shares told). 1.81 Corporate Trust shares (new). 183 1.90 Cumulative Trust shares .... 300 ...'. Diversified Trust shares A... 6.75 .... Diversified Trust shares 8... 5.70 .... Diversified Trust shares C... 2.33 2.55 Diversified Trust shares D... 4.00 4.37 First Insurance Stock Corp... 1.76 2.05 First Common Stock Corp... 1,31 1.46 Fixed Trust Oil shares A..... 630 .... Fixed Trust Oil shares 8.... 5.20 Fundamental Trust shares A. 3.12 3.62 Fundamental Trust shares B. 3.00 3.50 Leaders of Industry A 2.50 .... Low Priced shares 3 3,7 Mass Inves Trust shares 14.75 16.37 Nation Wide Securities 263 .. . North Amer Tr shares (1953) 1.53 . .. North Amer Tr shares (55-56) 1.96 220 Selected American shares .... 205 215 Selected Cumulative shares... 5.53 6.13 Selected Income shares 2.87 325 Std Amer Trust shares 2.50 270 Super Amer Trust shares Ai. 2.65 Trust Shares of America .... 2.37 275 Trustee Std Oil A 3 50 Trustee Std Oil B 3.37 362 U S Electric Light ft Pow A.. 11.75 Universal Trust shares 2.10 2.20 INDIANA STOCKS AND BONDS The following quotations do not represent actual bids on offerings, but merely indicate the approximate market level based on buying and selling inquiries or recent transactions. —April 25STOCKS Belt Rail & Stock Yards com.. 27^ Belt Rail ft Stock Yds pfd 6% 45 50 Central Ind Power pfd 7% 5% 8% Citizens Ger com 12 16 Citizens Gas Cos pfd 5% 63 68 Home T ft T Ft Wayne pfd 7.. 34 39 Ind ft Mich Elec Cos pfd 7%.. 65 70 Ind Gen Service Cos pfd 6%.. 65 70 Ind Hydro Elec Cos pfd 7% .... 25 30 Indpls Gas Cos com 40 45 Indpls Pwr ft Lt Cos pfd 6%.. 40 45 Indpls Water Cos pfd 5% ...... 86% 91 % Indpls Pwr ft Lt Cos pfd 6%% 47% 51% No Ind Pub Ser Cos pfd 5%%.. 25 29 No Ind Pub Serv Cos pfd 626 30 North Ind Pub Serv Cos pfd 7% 27% 31 % Public Serv Cos of Ind pfd 6% 15% 19% Public Serv Cos of Ind pfd 7% 33 37 South Ind Gas ft El Cos pfd 6% 53 56 Terre Haute Elec pfd 6% 37 44 . BONDS Citizens Gas Cos 5s 1942 76 81 Home Tft T W 5%s 1955 .... 93% 97% Home TftTFt W6s 1943.... 94% 98% Indpls Gas Cos 5s 1952 66 70 Indpls Rys Inc 5s 1967 22% 27% Indpls Water Cos 4%s 1940 94% 991? Indpls Water Cos 5s 1952...' .94 qq Indpls Water Cos 5s 1960 ... 87 91 Indpls Water Cos 5s 1970... 78 qi Indpls Water Cos 5%s 1953 ... 96% 101% Indpls Water Cos 5%s 1954.. 96% 101% Kokomo Water Works 5s 1958. 68 73 Lafayette Tel Cos 5s 1957 81 85 Muncie Water Works 5s 1939 . 89 94 Richmond Water Works 5s 1957 80 85 Terre Haute Water Wk 5s 1956 80 85 Terre Haute Wat Wk 6s 1949 90 95 Traction Terminal Cos 5s f957 38 42
joint Stock Land Banks ... Bid. Ask. Atlanta 6 r n, 35 oq Atlantic 5G '"*’44 40 Burlington 5% 28 99 California 5% 52 56 •Chicago 5% 19 22 Dalas 5G 49 53 Denver 5 48% 491/, Des Moines 5% .!!. 41 45 First Carolina First Ft. Wayne SCT. 4514 491., First Montgomery 5% 32% 36% First New Orleans 5% 36% 40% First Texas 5% 43 47 First Tr Chicago 5G< 47 51 Fletcher S’"/ 63% 68% Greenbrier 5% 48% 52% Greensboro Illinois Monticello 5% 55 60 Illinois-Midwest 5 % 40 44 Indianapolis 5% 72 76 lowa 5% 50 54 Kentucky 5% 571, 61% Lafayette 5% 45 2 50 Lincoln 5G- 43 47 Louisville 5G 50% 541, Maryland-Virginia 5% 60 65 MississipDi s r 'c 42 45 New York 5% 45% 491^ North Carolina 5% 38 42 Oregon Washington 5% 34 38 Pacific Portland S'". 41 45 Pacific Salt Lake 5% 43% 47% Pacific San Francisco S r ’c 43% 47% Pennsvlvania 55 59 Phoenix 5% 63 67 Potomac SCo 45 49 I ‘St. Louis 5% 17 20 1 Son Antonio S'". 50 54 ♦Southern Minnesota 5% ... 14 17 Southwest 5G> 37% 41% Tennessee 5% 42 45 Union Detroit 5% 44% 48% Union Louisville 50 51 54 Virginia Carolina 5% 43 47 Virginian 50 49 53 •Flat.
UTILITY HEADS ELECTED Morse Dell Plain Named President of Two Indiana Companies. Annual election of officers of two Indiana utility companies was announced today after a meeting cf the boards of directors. Morse DellPlain of Hammond, president of the Northern Indiana Public Service Company, was re-elected and also appointed to head the Indiana Service Corporation of Ft. Wayne. John N. Shannahan, former president of the latter concern, was elected chairman, and Samuel E. Mulholland of Ft. Wayne, re-elected vice-president of both companies. Mulholland will be in direct charge of operations of both companies, according to an announcement made by DeilPWun.
Bloated Salaries Among First to Go in ‘New Deal’ for Nation’s Carriers
Hill \
U. S. Rule Blamed for Most of Today’s Financial • Ills. This Is the second of three stories on the nation's railroad problem and what lies behind it, BY MORRIS GILBERT NEA Service Writer WASHINGTON, April 25. Bloated salaries 10 railroad executives must go. That's the Rooseveltian prescription. It doesn’t seem rijjht —to apostles of the new deal—to pay some rail executives $109,000 a year for the privilege of running the lines at a loss. Senator C. C. Dill says $25,000 is enough for any rail executive. He is chairman of the senate interstate commerce committee, and he embodied this figure in a bill defining under what conditions the Reconstruction Finance Corporation should lend money to the carriers. But more important—and worse news to investors—is the suggested program for cutting railroads fixed charges. Capital stock is due to be “re-organized,” possibly through conversion to lower interest rates or otherwise adjusted to be less of a burden than it has been. Ills Are Many “It is ridiculous to suppose that the Reconstruction Finance Corporation can go on indefinitely making loans to railroads to enable them to pay off 100 cents on the dollar on their debt obligations,” is the grave warning of Jesse H. Jones, “strong man” of the R. F. &. and a close adviser of President Roosevelt. “Writing down” is the order of the day. Meanwhile, what is the cause ol the disease? Why this anemia? The doctors, of course, disagree. But if you take all their diagnoses and put them together you will get an appalling list of infections like this: Skullduggery by grasping financiers. Vaulting ambition and overexpansion. Stupid extravagance, including monstrous salaries to high executives. Ba d‘ management. Artificial, government-stimulated competition. Unbearable government restrictions. Rivalry of new means of transportation. And, of course, the depression. Rivalry Is Forced Unhappily, it seems as if all these brutal charges are all too true. The railroads were undoubtedly victims, in the bad old days, of excessive unregulation, so that it was not surprising for Samuel Untermyer in a speech last February to accuse the late Edward H. Harriman of being “a stock broker, speculator and operator of railroads,” who
- THIS CURIOUS WORLD -
Beetles grow so large Hi l l! CHINA'SMOST SACRED /MOUNTAIN, V nHHrapf STEPS LEADING TO ITS SUMMIT./ ‘'’Mnfv* . I=o6 CENTURIES ' HAVE PRAIRIE DOGS CATTLESAJA/CESf WHEN A / . \ \ \ gktX // - /]t&\ RATTLER IS SEEN TO ENTER A / \\\ \fmf* l/f'y/f \ PRAIRIE DOG'S HOLE, THE A u ll ml* . \ ANIMALS QUICKLY RAKE DIRT ~ \ INTO THE HOLE AND EAJTOM& y I 1 THE S/yAK£ AL/'SE/ t -.^OA I Dice, v/ere rolled as long a — ARCHAEOLOGICAL EXPEOmON UNCOVERED ONE OF THE DC£. 6AWBA;;, C IMS *r K> mmtKS. me ' '* Centuries before Confucius journeyed alike to the sacred was bom, men climbed Tai shan spot, 5.000 feet above the sea, to mountain to worship. Emperor in tbe presence of heaven, and prince, scholar and states- A man, peasant and coolie, all have VwJ *4l"rmk’"
died worth $250,000,000 “and never built a mile of road.” But the complete license of pioneer times has been followed by an era of almost equally inordinate curbing. Railroad men feel It amounts to persecution. No other national industry has been so harried by congress, they say. One result is that railroads have been not only encouraged but forced into uneconomic rivalry for the sake of preserving the principle of competition. There are four railroads running between Chicago and St Louis. Control Is Rigid Restrictions, indeed, extend far beyond the mandate for artificial competition. Raiiroad financing, for instance, is grewsomely shackled. Extreme suspicion—based, no doubt, on accurate historical precedent—has forced it into the rigid control of the I. C. C. Freight rates—the fundamental cash return for which railroads work—are fixed by law not on cost of service plus reasonable profit, but on an-abstruse calculation based on the value of their property. Railroads are compelled, being “common carriers” under the law, to maintain uneconomic services and to transport goods, if necessary at a loss. Since 1920, railroads have been prohibited from keeping profits above 5% per cent. Any surplus must be returned to the government for distribution among unprofitable lines, the law asserts. This “recapture clause” hasn't worked well. Out of some $360,000,000 which the government felt it should have received in this way up to 1931, the railroads had paid in less than $11,000,000 by the end of 1931. With all these embarrassments, the railroads also face today the lithe, strenuous comparatively unsupervised, rivalry of the automobile. Subsidies Are Blamed All this, rail men say, has been actively stimulated by the government, through development of national highways and by neglect to tax road-users proportionately to their profits. The government, too, has spent many millions in developing waterways. It runs a fleet of Mississippi In the Cotton Markets /* CHICAGO —April 24 High. Low. Close. January 8.34 8 22 8.23 March 8 48 8.35 8 37 May 7.74 7,56 7.56 July 7.89 7.22 7.75 October 8.12 7.96 7.96 December 8.23 8.13 8 18 NEW YORK January 8.25 8.09 8 09 March 8.42 8 25 8 25 May 7.65 7.47 7 47 July 7.82 7.65 7.65 October 8.04 7.87 7.89 December 8 19 8 00 8 01 NEW ORLEANS January 8 14 8.13 8.03 March 8.37 8.25 8 18 May 7.62 7 41 7.42 July 7.78 7.60 7.62 October 8.01 7.81 7 84 December 8.16 7.97 7.97
barges in direct competition—and at a loss, according to railroad men. The Panama Canal has slashed the railroads’ trans-conti-nental freight service. Direct government subsidy to air lines has played havoc with passenger traffic as well as light freight. But all these miseries would be as nothing, defenders of the rails assert, without the single, great, overwhelming fact of the depression. Stimulus to industry of a mere 10 to 20 per cent would solve their problems, railmen say. Wednesday—Plans for helping the ralroads.
Indianapolis Cash Grain
—April 24 „c T i! e b ! ds . for ca f lots of grain at the call ot the Indianapolis Board of Trade f o b. shipping point, basis 41 %c New' York late, were: No. 1 red. 67*/68c; No. 2 red. 66*/67c: No. 2 hard. 65*/66c. „.i?? rn Tw r .n? : No - 3 w 'hite. 32*/ 33c; No 4 white. 31*/ 32c: No. 3 vellow. 30*/31c No L v TLJIV s % : 29 N c°- 3 mlxcd - 29 ®^ 3 whit7 F 2™2l%c. 2 White ’ 21 *® 22c ; N °' taSn~M t i e^ dv: °'i h. country points Iniikvin 2C Sr r le ? s ratps ' ( > Cincinnati or 9 A timothy. $5.50*16; No. * timothy. ss (lt 5.50. _ —lnspections—--3 3 w H te ' 1 'ao No. 2 white. 3 cars. No. 3 white. 5 cars: No 4 white °* Car 47 ca°rs: 2 3 - Totk?B2' cfrs CarS: N °' 3 mlXed ' 1 car! N° 2 . w h, u f- 33 cars! No. 3 white, 1 rir so hlte 3 cars: No - 2 mixed, l car. Total. 59 cars. CHICAGO CASH GRAIN By United Press ww CA i 0, 9 Al l ril , 24 -—Cash grain close: Wheat—No. 2 hard, 70%c. Corn—No. 3 ? IX r d ' 3 7 3 4,f : No - 4 mixed. 36%® No. 2 yellow. 37%*5 38%c; No. 2 aai °m °i d ' n ß '* c: No ' 3 yellow. 37%*/ *6w N ?. 4 vellow. 35%®37%c: No 5 yellow. k, 1/f 36 2 ,J ?°; S yellow, 35> 4 ®35%c; No. 6 yellow old, 36%c. No. 3 white. 38%*/39c; No. 4 white, 36%c@38c; No. 6 white. 35%c; sample gi-ade 24® 34c; sample grade white oid. 32c. No. 2 white, 25%® 26c; No 3 white. 25®25’ac; No. 4 white. 22%®24c sample grade. 24c Rye—No. 3. 50%c' Barley—36® 58c. Timothy —s2 25*/2 50 Clover—[email protected]. “ • TOLEDO CASH GRAIN By United Press .r T r?m EDC !; A^ ril , 24 -— Cas h grain close: wtA? J elevators, transit billing/. Wheat—No. 2 red. 79® 80c; No. 1 red lc premium. Corn—No. 2 vellow 4l^/44r Oats-Nc. 2 white. 29®30c Ri'e-No 2 55® 56c. Barley—No. 2. 40®41c. /Track 28 ' c ratei ■ Wheat—No. 2 red ' 5 3’ 3 % c; nominal 1 red. 76®76%c. Corn I y i° W i 39 V 9 No ' 3 vellow. 38 ® 3B %c No. 4 yellow. 37®37%c. Oats—--2 w hUe. 25%®27%c; No. 3 white 25 6 9n c ' a/' T , olea 2, s t €d close >- Clover—Cash, $6.20. Alsike—Cash. $6.20. /Toledo produce/ Butter—Fancy creamery. 26c Eggs—Ex--75c' S ’ 11/2 ® l2c ' Nay—Timothy per cwt., Produce Markets Delivered In Indianapolis prices: Hens, heavy breeds over 4% lbs. 10c: Leghorns. ?/? Colored Springers. 2 to 2% hmn/ 7c i : i 1/, iK to 2 Jbs /, l4c i Springs iLegbs' c UD ', 13^c; Barcbacks. 7c: cox and stags. 6c: Leghorn cov and LegfiPaTwirf 1 ”' w c ' . Ducks - !ar ee white full feathered and fat: /over 4 lbs.. 7c: small and colored, oc. Geese, full feathered and fat. sc. Young Guineas. 20c: old Guineas. ;2 C ' , ,? s —No. 1 fresh country run eggs J ! let L*?? s ',u 6c Each full aee case must weigh 55 lbs. gross: a deduction of 1 0c per lb. for each lb. under 55 lbs gross will be made. Butterfat. 16c: No. 1 21® 22c These prices are for hea thv stock free from feed, no sick poultry accepted. Quoted bv the Wadlev company. BY UNITED PRESS CHICAGO. April 25 Eggs— Market, steady; receipts. 34.380 cases, extra firsts, 13 4C-. firsts 12 1 2^413c; current receipt?, 12c: dirties. m*c. Butter—Market steady receipts. 12.047 tubs; specials, 22 9 4523 1 Vc* njsts 21 1 4 c; standards. 22 J 2 c. PoultryMarket. unchanged; receipts 42 trucks* fowls, 11 | 2 c; springers 14*516c: Leghorns. JiS^ ducks* 10'S 14c: geese. 9c, turkevs, W'albc: roosters 8 3 2 c: broilers. 24cstags. 11c. Chee*se—Twins 12 1 12 r 2c; Longhorns. 12tf5 12 3 4C. Potatoes—On track 323; arrivals. 76: shipments. 707: market old stock supplies liberal; trading slow; market about steady; carlot stock Per 100 weight: Wisconsin sacked Round Whites. 72 '■ 2 77 1 2C: lew higher. Minnesota sacked Round Whites. 70tf)72 , '.c Idaho sacked Russets. new stock supplies liberal; trading slow market weak; Texas and Bliss Triumphs 52.25*? 2.35: few higher.
Other Livestock .BY UNITED PRESS PITTSBURGH. April 25—Hoes—Receipts. 750: market 104/ 15c hizher: 170-240 !bs $4 35® 4,50: 250-300 !bs $47; 425 uies packine sows. $34/3.25. Cattle —Receipts. 10: market unchanged: medium to good steer vearlings, $4 654/5 50 medium and good heifers. $44/5 10: medium to good cows. $2,504/3.25: medium bill’s S3 15 downward. Calves—Receipts. 100; eood t 0 choice vealers. $4 aO a 5.50. Sheep—Receipts. 1 000: mar*elAteadv: ?rs ° d to choice shorn lambs. $5 " 5 50: common to medium. $345450 7 linen S/iecial i/Jr.°°J SV J LLE w Dril 25 —Cattle—Receipts i.™: st f* d ?i, bulk common and medium steers and heifers, $3.75® 4.75: better finished eligibles $a 50 or more: bulk beef t? osV;!oe 0 low ., c .JL u *J s and cutters. $1 254 J 2 25: bulls. $3 25 down Calves— Receipts. 175: market not established undertone weak to lower: too Monday $4 Hogs—Receipts. 1.100: 10c higher 175-240 lbs . $3 80: 245-295 lbs $3.65; 300 lbs up. 53.25: 135-170 lbs.. $3.35: 130 lb?! Sheep—Receipts 150: steady: bulk better handvweight springers. $7: choice light weights eligible higher: bucks mostly wcmedium grades $5: old crop woo’.ed lambs' *4 a5: throwouts $3: fat ewes SIS 2 Monrcceiprs—6l2 cattle. 5 83 calves 2 097 hoes and 106 Mordav's shipments—l 72 cattle. 323 calves and 565 hoes. PROBE NEGRO’S DEATH Report to Coroner Slates Woman Was Kicked Fatally During Brawl. Dr. William E. Arbuckle, Marion j county coroner, today began an investigation into the death of Hortense Hughey. 38, Negro. 534 Leon street, who died early today at city hospital. Dr. Arbuckle said he has not been informed of all the circumstances surrounding the death, but had been told the woman had been kicked in the stomach during a brifvl.
PAGE 13
PROFIT-TAKING FORCES WHEAT MARKET DOWN Sharp Upturn at Winnipeg Expected by Trade: Corn Dips. BY HAROLD E. RAINVILLE United Fress Staff Correspondent CHICAGO. April 25—Wheat’s new "inflation” prices leveled off at opening of the Board of Trade today, profit-taking cutting the grain down % cent to 1% cents compared with Monday's close. Corn, oats and rye followed declines in the major grain, but their losses at the opening were not as great. Corn opened from 1 cent to 1\ cents off. oats was down % cent, rye was off as much as 1 cent, and barley was unchanged to % cent lower. Provisions, following the trend, were weak. Canada’s abandonment of the gold standard finds Winnipeg wheat 9 cents to 10 cents above Chicago prices, and many believe tha* either Chicago will decline or Winnipeg advance. In view of the present inflation psychology, the majority of traders believe Canada will move upward. Rapid advances are looked for. Liv§rpool failed to advance proportionately with the boost upward on the Chicago mart Monday. Corn farmers Monday disposed of some 235,000 bushels of that grain they had been holding several months, realizing prices 10 cents to 15 cents a bushel above what they had expected two months ago. Regardless of the weather to come, it is expected that oats acreage will be decreased because of the long delay incident to wet weather.
Chicago Primary Receipts —April 24 Wheat 908 000 I Corn 1.26?.000 Oats 473,000 Chicago Futures Range —April 25WHEAT— Prer. High. Low. 10 00. close. May 69'* .68'* ,68 T * ,69 3 July 69’, .68 1 2 .69'; ,70 3 Sept 70 s , .70 ,70 s .71 3 CORN— May 36', .SS’i .36..376 7 July 38 s , .38 1 8 .38 '2 .39' '2 Sept 40 \ .40 .40 3 4 .41' OATS— May .24 3 , .24' .24', ,24 3 i July 24 3 , .29'* ,24' 2 25 Sept 25 .24’, .24 3 , .25' RYE— May .. .. .48’a ,49 July 49'i .49 .49* 2 50 Sept 50 .49’, .50 .50'i HARLEY— May .38 ii.. 37,8 7 , July 40 3 , .40 s , 40’, ,40 7 * Sept .. .42 .42 By Times Bperint CHICAGO. April 25.—Carlots- Wheat. 7; corn. 297; oats. 28; rye. 0. and barley. 55. INDIANAPOLIS WAGON WHEAT City grain elevators pavine 67c for No. 2 soft wheat. Other (trades on their merits. Daily Price Index By United Press NEW YORK, April 24.—Dun <Sc Bradstreet's daily weighted price index of 30 basic commodities, compiled for the United Press: 0930-1932' average. IOOt Today 82 67 Saturday 81 60 Wpek ago 75 44 Month ago 72 09 Year ago 77 41 1933 high (April 4) 82 67 1933 low (Jan. 20> 67.86 (Copyright 1933, Dun & Bradstreet. Inc.) INDIANA AUTO SALES UP Monthly Business Review Shows Gain in Industry. Slight gain in automobile sales and operation of auto accessory | plants on fair schedules were enj couraging factors noted in Indiana | business during March, according to ! a review for the month announced today by the bureau of business research of the Indiana university school of commerce and finance. New low r levels were reached in various lines, and employment was at the lowest point thus far. Furniture manufacture, pig iron production, and newspaper advertising, registered new low marks during the month. Births Girls Herbert and Stella Riley. 294 Bright. John and Waneta Edwards, iO9 North Colorado. Alonzo and Freda Hardin. 2247 West Washington. August and Rose Rugenstein, Methodist hospital. Abe and Ida Bornstein. Methodist hospital. Bovs Chalmer and Lillian Stadtfeld, 1505 Union. Lawrence and Mary Cain. 2950 North Chester. Saal and Hattie Silbermann, Methodist hospital. Robert and Anna Simmonds, Methodist hospital. aWyne and Emma Sanford. Methodist hospital. Clarence and Valley Rhoades, Methodist hospital. Lowell and Mary Riddle. Methodist hospital. Walter and Helen Simmons, 3251 North Illinois. Cecil and Virginia Schanz. 1902 North Illinois. Homer and Laura McClung. 2444 North Oxford. Deaths Millie C. Barker. 75. 1005 South Holmes. carcinoma. Florence Sanders. 58. 315 North Senate, cerebral hemorrhage. Margaret Green, 9 Riley hospital, acuts mastoiditis. Henry Jacob Schell. 75. 2331 Hillside, cardio vascular renal disease. Clarence Young. 24. 435 West Abbott acute cardiac dilatation. Tonev Koratls, 54, Christian hospital, carcinoma. Susanna Middleton. 60. 1915 Bloulevard plam. caftinoma. Wliford GUI. 77, 208 North Harding, carcinoma. • Veneras Bronough. 42. 503 West Vermont. acute nephritis Zoe E u Hockett. 45. 522 East Fortyeientn. lobar pneumonia. Robert L*ndauer. 25. city hospital, acute intestinal obstruction. Mattie Anderson Wain wright. 42. 418 Minerva, carcinoma. NEW YORK RAW SUGAR FUTURES —April 24 High. Low. Close. January 1.50 1 46 i 43 March 1 55 1 50 1 52 Mav 1 35 1 30 1 32 July . 141 1,36 137 Sentember 1.45 1.40 1 42 December 1.48 1.45 1 43 LOANS AT REASONABLE RATES FOR ALL WORTHY PURPOSES The Indianapolis Morris Plan Company Delaware and Ohio St. RI. 1530 FOR PROFIT We Offer SEVERAL ATTRACTIVE COMMON STOCKS Write for Details T. P. BURKE & CO. Incorporated SUITE in CIRCLE TOWER . PHONE Riley 833# )
