Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 166, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 November 1933 — Page 17
NOV. 21, 1933
Goldman a Brave Man to Suggest Outside Supervision for New York Stock Exchange. Bt RALPH HENDEBSHOT Time* Special Financial Writer
Goldman Jr is a brave man. Few New York Stock Exchange members would have the courage to suggest, as he did, to the senate investigating committee that the exchange should have outside supervision. They would be afraid they would be called on the carpet and told to sell their memberships for the good of the cause as covered in Section 9,999. The governors of the big put-and-take house are very jealous of the fac* that they run the institution in their own way. Efforts in the past to incorporate it or otherwise regulate it have been stepped on with unusual vigor, and they undoubtedly regard Mr. Goldman's action as mutiny or worse. Under ordinary conditions he would be torn limb from limb in a business way, even though his father was once the senior part-
nor of Goldman, Sachs & Cos. But. of course, condttioas are not ordinary in Wall Street these days, and the chances are that he may get away with it. Any disciplinary action at this time might not constitute good politics. But if he aspires to become president of the exchange at some later date he had better forget it. His status from now on so far as the exchange is concerned is likely to be much like that of the ernng daughter of the Methodist deacon. Having cast his lot with the Washington “heathens,” he stands the chance of being pushed out into the cold, cold winter. a a a Russian Recognition Much of the favorable effect of formal recognition of Russia on the security and commodity markets has been lost through the rather long, drawn-out, preliminary proceedings, in the opinion of many Wall Street observers. The Street likes to be surprised with its
Ralph Hrndershot
good news. It may be said, however, that the markets had not discounted the development, the announcement coming too late last week to make itself felt. Strangely enough, no effort was made to anticipate recognition marketwise, even though it had been expected. a a a a a a The Dakota Wheat Embargo Indications are that the North Dakota wheat embargo is breaking down. Announcement has just been made that, it is to be lifted for six days to see what happens. The stop was without point. i> the first place. Designed to help farmers in the state, it could only do them harm. There is too much wheat in the country and in the world for those outside the state to worry much whether or not shipments are possible from North Dakota. Canada seemed to get such benefits as there were in the development.
New York Stocks
, , „ ' (By Abbott. W —Nov. 21— Oil*— Prev. High. Low. 10 30 close. Amerada ...... 4e> * a 4b 1 48% 48’* ATI Kfg 32', 31% 31 % 32' * Barnsdall 10 9 s , 9 9’, Consol Oil 12% 12 1 a 12 ! 2 12', Cont of Del . 19', 19 1 , 19'. 19% Houston told).. .. Indian Rfg . • • • • 3% Mid Cont Pet . 14'* 14 s , 14% 14’, Shell Un .. .-. 9\ 9% Ohio Oil 16', 16 a Pet, Corp 12 s , 12% 12% 12'. Phillips Pet 17’, 17 s . 17% 18 Pure Oil • ■ • 13 s , 13 , Koval Dutch . . .. 38 s * 38 , Sbd Oil • • 38' 38 Simms Pet . 19 * Shelley Oil ... ?' * #% Sac Vac 17 16% 16 7 , 17 S O of Cal . 44 41 1 4 KOof N J . 47', 47 47', 46 * Kun Oil . . ■ •■ • "5 Texas Corp 27'2 27', 27'2 27 s * Tidewater Assn.. . . . fn Oil of Cal . 21', 20% 20% 20’. Steels — Am Koli Mills. . - 18>. 18** Beth Steel ... 34 33 1 33’a 33 livers AM 25 ‘b Col Fuel Iron • • 5 , Cruc Steel ... 21 19 2 Ltidlum Steel McKeesport Tin . ... 88‘s Natl Steel . 42 41’. 42 41'2 Rep Iron & Steel 14’4 14 s *. 14% 1-5% Rep Iron & S pf • • •• • 31 2 U& Smelt.. 102’ 2 101-2 101'a 101% Vanadium 21 s , 21 2 Mid Steel 12', U S Pipe & Fdv IJi, U S Steel . 45 '4 44 s . • 44% 4a U S Steel pfd . 839, 83 Youngstn S& T 20’, 20% 20’, 20 4 Rails — Atchison 48 3 48‘2 48 2 48 2 Atl Coast Line . 32', 31*2 B* O 25 24’, 25 24% Can Pac 12% 12 s , 12% 12% Cll & Ohio 40", 40 3 ,40% 41'2 Chi & Gt W - ... 2,• C M * St P 5 C M & St P pfd 8% 8% Chi N W B', Chi R Isl 3% Deia & Hud 54', 54 54% 537s Brie 16'-', 16', IS 3 . 16 Great Northern 19% 19'4 19 3 * 19% 111 Central .. 28'-, 27*. 28', 27% K C Sou 19’, Lou A- Nash 42 41 M K & T 8 7 8% Mo Pac . . 374 Mo Pac pfd . . . . 5 N Y Cent...... 37 s , 37*, 37 s * 37', N Y Chi & St L 13% N Y Ch & St, L p 15 s . N Y New Haven . ... ITS 17 s , N Y Ont it Wes 9 B’, Norfolk & Wes 155 Nor Pac 20'2 20 3 4 Penn R R 28 s , 28'. 28 s , 27’, Sou Pac 20 s , 20', 2030'4 Sou R R . 23 s . 23% 23% 23 s , Sou R R pfd 25' 2 24 3 , Union Pac Ill'2 111'2 West Maryl . . 9 Motors— Auburn 47'. 47 47'*- 46% Chrysler 49 s , 49% 49>2 49 ', Gen Motors 33 s , 33 s . Graham Mot .... . . . 2>2 Hudson II 3 , 11 s , Hupp ... ... 3% Mack Truck 30’, 31% Nash 21 s , 21 3 8 Packard ... 4 4 Reo ... 3 Stduebaker 5 5 Yellow Truck .... ... ... 5 Motor Access — Bendix ... 15,11 15'2 Bohn Alum 48*. Borg Warner .... ... . 17', Briggs 9’e 9’, Budd Wheel 3', 3', Baton Mfg ... . ll', Eiec Auto Lite 17', 17'2 Houd A 3'2 Mullins Ms" 5' 4 Murrav Boor . 6 6 Stew Warner ... ... 6', 6 s , Timken Roi 30', 30 Mining— Alaska Jun . ... ... 23‘2 23% Am Smelt . 48', 47 3 4 47 3 4 48 Anaconda . ... . 16'2 16'. 16'2 16 s 4 Cal & Hecla . . 5' 2 Cerro De Pasco . .. ... 38% 39% Granby 10', 10 Gt Nor Ore . . . .. . 10', Homestake Min. .. . . ... 325 Howe Sound 34', 34' 4 Ins Copper s'-, Int Nickel .... . . 22% 22% Isl Creek Coal . 26 Kennecott Cop 23 5 , 23', 23', 23'a Notanda Cop 36 35>2
Safe Deposit Boxes $3 a year and up Bankers Trust Cos.
COLLATERAL I % LOANS * /\J No Co-^i:ikert KepaUl Orrr a W hot* War The Indianapolis Morris Plan Cos. 5. E. Corner Delaware and Ohio Sts. RI. 1536.
Statistical Department Offers complete analyses of securities Unbiased opinions based on present-day facts. Inquiries Invited. ALEX J. BOZIC. Statistician. T. P.BURKE & COMPANY INCORPORATE© Investment Securities Circle Tower RI lev 8535 INDIANAPOLIS Ft. Wayne. Lincoln Bank Tower
Annuity If you enjoy a smaller income than an annuity would yield, you are cheating yourself. If you try to secure a larger income you are speculating. Ward H.iiackleman And Associates Massachusetts Mutual Life Ins. Cos. 300 Continental Bank Bldg
Wall Street-
oppin & Cos.) ——————————— Phelps Dodge... 17,, 17'2 17 s , 17'2 Am Sum Tob . . ... 147, Am Tobacco A . .. ... ... 75 Am Tob B 77V, Ligg & Myers B 89 88% Lorrillard 18 17% 18 17 3 /4 Reynolds Tob B 47% 47 % equipments— Allis Chalmers . 20 7/ , 20% 20% Am Car & Fdv 25 25% Am Loco 29 Am Mach & Fdy .. ... 15% 15% Am Steel Fdy. .. ... ... 19', Bald Loco 12% 12 *4 Burroughs .. . ... 16*4 16*4 Case J I 75% 75', 75'2 75% Cater Tract 24% 24!, Colgat Palm Peet . ... 13% 13', Congoleum 25' 4 Elec Stor Bat ... 44 44 Foster Wheeler. .. ... ... 17 3 , Gen Am Tank C 31 30% Gen Elec ... ... 22 Gen R R Sig .... ... 34 Ingsol Rand 63 Int Bus Mach . .. .. ... 146 Int Harvester.. 44% 44', 44'4 44 Kelvinator ... . . 11 Natl Cash Reg 16'4 16', 16', 16 Proc & Gamble ... 42% 42'/, Pullman Inc 46 45 Simmons Bed 18'* 18 >4 Und Elliot 33 3174 West Air B ... 28 28 Westingh Elec . 41 s/ , 41 41 41*4 Worthingtn Pmp 25 24*4 Utilities— Am 4, For Pwr 10% 10 3 4 Am Power & Lit 7 6 7 , AT&T 121% 121’a Am Wat Wks 17'a 17 Brook Un Gas .. gii/ 2 Col Gas & Elec 10''2 10'2 Col G & E pfd 53-2 Com & Sou I’4 1 3 * Consol Gas 38% 38'4 Elec Pwr & Lie 5 5 E P & L pfd 9 Int T&T 14% 1434 Lou G & E A’ 15V, Nat Pwr & Lit 9% North Amer 14% 14 % Pac G & E . ... 1774 167, Pub Serv N J 33% 33 s 4 So Cal Edison 14 7 a 15 Std Gas ... ... 714 Std Gas pfd 9 United Corp ... ... 5 Un Gas Imp... 15*4 15'4 15'-, 15'4 Ut Pwr & Lit A' 33 Western Union.. 58% 57% 57% 5% Rubbers— Rirestone 22% 22% 22 3 4 22% Goodrich 1574 15‘/2 Goodyear ... .. ... 4040 U S Rubber ... 1914 1914 U S Rubber pfd 30'2 30°, Kel Spring 3 Amusements— Loews 1nc337,1 7 ,3 31 s , 30 s , Radio Corp . . . 7 s , 7*2 7 s , 7% RKO 2 3 b Warner Bros 6% 674 Foods— Am Sugar 58'2 58 Armour A ... 3a* 33, Beatrice Cream. 12'2 12*4 12'4 12'2 Borden Prod . . 22' 4 21 7 , 22 22% CBI Packing ... ... 23'* Can Dry G Ale . . . 28 28'4 Coca Cola 97 s * Cont Bak A 9 3 * Corn Prod . 71*4 72 Crm of Wheat.. 29 3 , 29>4 297, 297, Gen Foods 35 7 8 337,5 7 , Gold Dust 20'b 19 s * G W Sugar 38 7 a 39 Int Salt ... . . 23% Loose Wiles ... 42’ 2 42 Natl Biscuit ... 48 7 a 48'* Natl D Prod 1574 Purity Bak 15 7 , S Porto Rico Sug .. ... 38% 38 3 4 Std Brands 24 7 , 24 5 , 24 5 , 25', United Fruit 65% 65', Wrigley 56 56 Retail Stores— Asso Dry Goods 13 Best & Cos 28 s , 28 Glmbel Bros ... . . 5 7 , Gr Un Tea..... . . .. 4*4 Hahn Dept Sts 674 674 Jewel Tea ...... 32 Kresge S S 13*4 Kroger Groc .. 22' 2 22** 22*4 22-/2 Macy R H 51'2 Mav Dept St . 28*4 28 s , 28 s , 284 Mont Ward . . . 24', 23 s * 24 24', Penny J C 51 *4 Safeway St 43 3 4 43 Sears Roebuck.. .. ... 45*4 45', Woolworth 41*2 4i* a Aviation— Aviation Corp 8 B'k Douglass Air ... ... t4 3 * Curtiss Wright .. ... 33 Curtiss Wri lA) 6', 6 Nor Am Av s’. 53. United Aircraft.. 35',337,4 7 ,34 7 , 35', Chemicals— Air Reduction 107 Allied Chem . . ... 143'. Am Com Alcohol .. 50’i 51 3 , Col Carbon 62'2 62 7 * Com Solvents. 33 s , 33*4 33* 33'* gipont 89 s , 89 89 89*, Freport Tex 477* iquid Carb '26 s * 06.1" Math Alkali 49 4 Tex Gulf 'Sulph 45 fi'* 44> 2 451: Union Carbide 4qi„ Ini* U S Indus Alco. 67H 67' 2 67’ 2 67'2 Natl Dist .new 1 28 3 28 28 2^l Drugs— “ City Inc 44 4 3 , Lambert ,* Lehn & Fmk.. .. []] s Zonite Prod ... 7y 3 , "7s. Si. Financial— ‘ * Adams Exp 0 3 Allegheny Corp. Sj* Chesa Corp .35 34 3 , 35 34 3 i Transamerica 6*. 6‘, 6', 5 7 . Tr Conti Corp Jr? t,* Building— " * Am Radiator .. 14*. 14', 14'* 14', Gen Asphalt 573* I’*" Int Cement nj, „' * Johns Manville. . . 571* Libby Owens Gls 32'* 32 32 317. Otis Elev iei. i*J Ulen Const ' " 1 § 1 * Miscellaneous— z 2 Am Bank Note. .. . 13 3 , Am Can . ; iL* Anchor Cap ’ -?** csnt? n Can an 30 29 ’’ 2°l s Eastman Kodak . . 7 3 Owens Bottle 07v. 07 Gillette • ?2,‘ ?S 1 Glidden 11 " H * Indus Rayon 79 78*2 '7B>, -a Inter Ra ß id Tr .. .. . fj.
U. S. Government Bonds
By United Fre>s NEW YORK. Nov. 20—Closing libera onds* ,DeCimals reDresent thirtv-sec- „„ Liberty 3 ;S 132-4 i > .AT Q First 4'. s .32-471 inj. ; n Fourth 4s ,33-38. ini Fourth 4'- s called Jo} J® Treasury L* s .i 4 J: 52 ' 105.18 !; J 44 102.24 3 3 s . 41-431 March 7. .7.7 99 14 3 3 s (40-43. June 9915 3 i *s,; 4 6:' :::: sis '<s. 99 u NEW YORK RAW SC GAR FI'TI'RES —Nov. 20— High. Low Close January 1.14 t.ia 112 March 1.20 1 18 I.l* May 1.26 1 24 1.24 July 1 31 1.30 1.30 September .. 1.36 1 35 1.3S December 1.12 1.09 1.09
ISSUES RESUME FIRM TREND IN ACTIVE SESSION Majority of Shares Show Gains Ranging Over a Point.
Average Stock Prices
Average of thirty Industrials for Batur- ; dav: High 99 49. low 98 31. last 98.67. un ' 58; average of twenty rails; 38.63. 38 19. ! 38.29, off .32, average ot twenty utilities: 23 39, 22 88. 23 03, oft .18; average of ( tony bonds 79.04. up 24. BY ELMER C. WALZER United Press Financial Editor NEW YORK, Nov. 21.—Stocks maintained a firm tone at the opening today after a substantial rise in the previous session. The dollai continued to decline in terms of foreign exchange and in terms of gold. The R. F. C. gold price was raised 10 cents an ounce to a record high of $33.76 an ounce. Gains at the outset were noted in a majority of issues. They extended above a point with the best showing in the mining issues, where U. S. Smelting was at 102 I y, up I'* points. Farm equipments were fractionally higher. Wet stocks regained their equilibrium after profit-taking yesterday. Automobile issues were steady to firm, while electrical equipments were higher. Steel common rose *4 to 45 74 on the first sale. Rails were firm. Trading quieted down moderately after the opening and prices held ground opening levels. There was a period of more than a minute when tickers were stopped. Then they resumed operations at a pace that necessitated abbreviation ot quotations. Some profit-taking came into a few of the leaders and they dipped from the highs. No wide breaks occurred. Business news continued favorable. Aggregate earnings of 103 telephone companies for September reported to the Interstate commerce commisison showed net operating income only slightly under 1932.
Bank Clearings
INDIANAPOLIS STATEMENT —Nov. 21Clearings $1,664,000.00 Debits 4.919,000.00 TREASURY STATEMENT —Nov. 21Net balance $1,254,312,321.97 Misc. int. rev. repts 1,754,009.21 Customs repts. mo. to date 17,532,366.27 New York Curb (By Abbott. Hoppin & Cos.) —Nov. 20— , Close/ Close. Alum Cos of Am 31 %| Glen Alden Coil 14% Am Cyanide B. 13%’Gulf Oil of Pa.. 59 A & Fo Pr Wa 7 V*! Hiram Walker.. 37% Am Gas & El.. 19% Hud Bay Min.. 10*2 Am Superpower 2% i Humble Oil S5 Atlas Corp 13%!Imperial Oil Ltd 15% Brit Am Tob A2C ilnt Petrol 32% Can Ddu Acl A *6% Lake Shore Min 49% Can Marc 3%|Lone Star Gas.. 5% Cities Serv 2% Natl Bellas Hess 2 s , Common Ed... 32 i Newmont Min.. 55 Con Gas of Bal 48 ! Nia Hud Pwr... 5% Cord Corp 7%; Park Davis ~.. 22% Creole Petrol., ll 7 , Penn Road .... 2% Crown Cork Int 7 Ist Regis Paper. 3% Deere & Cos ... 34 I Sal Crk Prod... 6% Distillers Lim. 21'® Sherwin Wms .. 44% Distillers Corp. 21 | Std of Ind 32% Dow Chem 7C I Std of Kv 16 E! Bond & Sh.. 13 | Stutz Mts 6% Fisk Rubber .. 7%; Teck Hughes Gd 5% Ford of Can A. 12%i Un P&LA ... 2% Ford of Europe 5%| W Hargraves Mi 7% Grt A & P 130 |
Foreign Exchange
By Abbott, Hoppin & Cos. —Nov. 20Close. Sterling. England $5.29% Franc, France 0637% Lira. Italy 0860% Belgas, Belgium 2275 Mark, Germany 3895 Guilder, Holland 6580 Peseta, Spain 1330 Krone, Norway 2666 Krone, Denmark 2369
Federal Farm Loan Bonds
(By Blyth & Cos., Inc.) Bid sic 4s Nov. 1, 1957-37 80% Bi% 4s Mav 1. 1958-38 80% 81% 4>*s July 1, 1956-36 81% 82% 4'*s Jan. 1, 1957-37 81% 82% 4'*s Mav 1. 1957-37. 81% 82% 4>*s Nov. 1. 1956-36 81% 82% 4%s Dec. 1, 1933-32 99% 1007, 4%s May 1, 1942-32 86 87% 4%s Jan. 1, 1943-33 83 84V* 4%s Jan. 1, 1953-33 83 84% 4%s July 1, 1953-33 83 84% 4%s Jan. 1. 1955-35 83 84% 4%s July 1, 1955-35 83 84% 4%s Jan. 1, 1956-36 83 84% 4%s July 1, 1953-33 86 87% 4%s Jan. 1. 1954-34 86 87% 4%s July 1. 1954-34 86 87% 5s May 1, 1941-31...* 92% 93% 5s Nov. 1. 1941-31 92% 93% Home Loan 4s. July 1, 1951 82% 83%
In the Cotton Markets
—Nov. 20. CHICAGO High. Low. Close. January 10.14 10.07 10.14 March 10.35 10.28 10 35 May 10.51 10.41 10.50 July 10.62 10.54 10 62 October 10 77 10 72 10.77 December 10.10 10.00 1.10 NEW YORK. January 10.13 10.04 10.13 March 10.29 10.20 10.29 May 10.44 10.35 10.42 July 10.56 10.47 10.55
Hourly Wage of 19 Cents Wanted for Restaurants
Owners in Marion County to Present Scale to NRA Heads. Minimum wages of 19 cents an hour and a maximum week of fiftyfour hours were the stipulations of a code approved by Marion county members of the Indiana State Restaurant Association at a meeting in the Severin last night.
Tuberculosis Unit to Be Added to City Hospital
Flower Mission to Finance Care of Open and Advanced Cases. A hospital for the care of open an advanced cases of tuberculosis, to be operated as a unit of the city hospital, will be constructed with the financial aid of the Indianapolis Flower Mission. Plans for the care of such cases were completed yesterday, when the board of directors of the mission met with members of the city health department.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
On Commission Row
—Nor. 21Fruit, Cranberries—Cape Cod early blacks. 25lb. box. $2. Grapes California emperor*, crate. 11 *5, New York, 12-qt. basket 50c. Melons—California Honeydews 0-12s), $2 50 Casabes igs> per case. 12 Pears—Washlng'on D Anjou 'BO-16551, 12 75: Washington Bose iloo-1355.i. $2.75. Avaco*. Fla. ■ 10-16s'. crate, 12. Bananas—Per pound 572 C. Apples—Wealthy. Wolf Grimes Golden. Jonathan Florida. $1 1581.75 a bjishel: fancy Jonathans, 12 a box. Grapefgruit—*3 25 Prunes—ldaho Italian. 18-lb lugs. 11.10. Oranges—California Valencias. $3 5084 a box. Lemons—(36os>, $5,75. Vegetable, Cabbage—Eastern Danish, 50-lb. bag; $1 35 Onions—Utah Spanish, 50-lb. bag $1 25: western white. 50-lb. bag $1.40; Indiana White. 50-lb bag SI 25; Indiana, yellow. 50-lb. bag. 85e: 10-lb. bag 18c Beans—Round stringless, hamper. $2; flat stringless, $1.25 Beets—Bulk per bushel. 85c Carrots—Caltfocnia. $3 25 crate. Cauliflower—California Uoslls-12s). crate $1.65. Celery—Michigan Mammoth, bunch. 65c: medium bunch. 45c; hearts. $1; 15-bunch flat crate. $1; California. $3 crate. Lettuce—lceberg best (4s-ss< crate, $4.25; hothouse. 15-lb. basket. 75c. Radishes--Hothouse button. 40c dozen. Spinach—Broadleaf. per bushel. 90c. Turnips—Per bushel. 75c. Tomatoes—Hothouse. 90c 8-lb. basket. Potatoes—Northern Round Whites, 100lb bag $1.60: R. R. Ohios. 100-lb. bag. $1 60: 15-lb. bag. 33c; Wyoming triumphs. 100-lb. bag. $2.10. Sweet Potatoes —Indiana Jerseys, No. 1 bushel, $1.60. Nancy Halls, per bushel. $1.25.
Retail Coal Prices
The following prices represent quotations from leading Indianapolis coal dealers. A cash discount of 25 cents per ton is allowed DOMESTIC RETAIL PRICES Anthracite HI Coke, nut size Coke, egg size f75 Indiana, forktd lump 5.509 5.75 Indiana, egg 5.25® 5.50 Indiana, mine run >4 75 Kentucky lump 7.00 Pocahontas lump 8 25 Pocahontas egg 8.25 Pocahontas forked lump 925 Pocahontas mine run *•*•> New River smokeless 825 West Virginia lump £. i5 West Virginia egg Jj-50 Island Creek 7 00 Extra charge of 50c a ton for whaeling coal, and $1 a ton for coal carried to bin.
Produce Markets
Delivered in Indianapolis prices—Hens, 9c; Leghorn hens, 6c; heavy breed springers. 8c; Leghorn springers. sc; cocks. 5 lbs. and up, 6c; under 5 lbs.. 4c; ducks. 4*2 lbs. and over, full feathered and fat, 6c; under 4' 2 lbs.. 4c; geese, full feathered and fat, sc. Turkeys—No. 1 young hens, 8 lbs. and over. 11c; young toms, 12 to 20 lbs.. 11c; No. 1 young toms over 20 lbs., 9c: old toms. 7c; No. 2 thin crooked breasted. sc: No. 1 strictly fresh country | run eggs, 27c; strictly rots off; each lull I egg case must weigh 55 lbs. gross; a deduction of 10c a pound for each pound under 55 lbs. will be made. Butter—No. 1. 250 26c; No. 2. 22® 23c. Butter—No. 1, 25®26c; No. 2, 22® 23c. Butterfat—lßc. Quoted by the Wadley Company. BY UNITED PRESS CHICAGO. Nov. 21.—Eggs—Market, weak; receipts, 2,403; extra firsts, 25c; dirties, 12@,14'/ic; current receipts, 20@21c. Butter—Market, unsettled; receipts, 9.228; I specials. 22'2®;23' 4 c; extras. 22',*c; firsts, | 18*2® 20c; seconds, 17@17'.4c; standards, 21*4C. Poultry—Market, firm; receipts, 45 trucks, 1 car; hens, 7®9!ic; Leghorn j broilers, 7c; Plymouth Rocks, 9c; ducks, I 7®9c: geese, 9c; turkeys, 10913'ic; roost- | ers, 6' 2 c. Cheese —Twins, ll 3 ,4®12c; Longhorns, 12'2®12 s 4 c. Potatoes—Supply, moderate; demand and trading slow; about I steady: Wisconsin Round Whites. $1.20® 1.30- Minnesota and North Dakota Red River Ohios. $1.1501.20; South Dakota and Early Ohios, partly graded. 95c®$l: Colorado McClures, sl6o® 1.65; Idaho Russets. $1.600 1.65; shipments. 437; arrivals, 44; on track, 288. NEW YORK, Nov. 21.—PotatoesSteady; Long Island, $1(3:3.60 per barrel; Maine. sl@3 per barrel; Idaho. [email protected] per sack; Canada, [email protected] per barrel. Sw-eet potatoes—Dull; Jersey basket. 40c@ $1.25; southern barrel. $101.50; southern basket. 40085 c. Flour—Steady: springs, patents. $6.7506.90 per sack. Pork— Steady: mess, $16.50 per barrel. Lard— Weak; middle west spot, $5.850 5.95 per 100 lbs. Dressed poultry—Steady and firm: turkeys. 10®20c; chickens, 10018 c: broilers, 10 0 20c; capons. 20028 c; fowls, 9 @lsc: ducks. 1114 c: Long Island ducks. 15‘/2® 16c. Live poultry—Quiet; geese, 10c; turkeys. 10018 c: roosters. 9c; ducks. 10c; fowls. 9014 c: chickens. 9® 14c: capons, 16 ®2oc; broilers. 10015 c. Cheese —Dull: state whole milk, fancy to specials, 20 Vi ® 21'2c: young America fresh, 12 3 / 4 013*2C. Butter—Receipts, 19.041 packages: market, steady; creamery, higher than extras. 23’ 2 ®24’4c: extra. 92 score. 23'*c; first. 90-91 score. 21 3 *®22 3 *c: first. 88-89 score. 19' 2 ® 20 3 4c: seconds. 17'/2®TB'2C. Eggs Receipts. 28.887 cases: market steady: special packs, including unusual hennery selections. 30036 c; standards, 27029 c: firsts, 25®26c; mediums, 17V2C; dirties. 17® 18c; checks. 16c. Other Livestock By Times Special LOUISVILLE, Nov. 21.—Cattle—Receipts, 150: fresh receipts, light; carryover from yesterday mostly heavy steers; low grade killers and Stockers and feeders; moderate trading very slow, but around steady at yesterday’s decline; bulk common to medium steers and heifers, $2.50® 3.50; best fed lightweights eligible around $5; bulk beef cows. $1.7502.25; sausage bulls mostly $2.50 down: native Stockers and feeders salable mostly at $1.75 0 2.75: desirable Hereford stock calves mostly $4.50. Calves —51.75; steady; bulk better vealers, s4®; 4.50; medium and lower grades. $3.50 down. Hogs—Receipts. 1,100; market. 10c lower: 180-275 lbs., *3.90: 280 lbs. up. $3.30: 140-175 lbs.. $3.65; 110-135 lbs.. $2.90; 105 lbs. down, $2.40; sows, $2.60; stags. $1.35. Sheep—Receipts. 100; steady; mostly $5.50 ®6 for medium to good lambs: c hoice kinds eligible higher; bucks mostly $4.50 05: throwouts. $3.50: fat ewes. $lO2. Receipts yesterday: Cattle, 1.274: calves. 319: hogs, 1.607; sheep. 122. Shipments yesterday: Cattle, 497; calves. 115; hogs, 272; sheep, none
Daily Price Index
By United Press NEW YORK. Nov. 20.—Dun & Bradstreet's daily weighted price index of thirty basic commodities, compiled for the United Press: 1930-1932 Average, 100) Today 101.03 Saturday 101.23 Week ago 102.30 Month ago 97.90 Year ago 75.56 1933 high (July 18) 113.52 1933 low (Jan. 20) 67.85 Copyright. 1933, Dun & Bradstreet. Inc.
The code will be presented to the NRA authorities in Washington next week, when a hearing on the national restaurant code will be held. Restaurant operators now pay an average of 30 per cent of each dollar in wages under the temporary code, and as a result are losing money, Irving Fendrick and J. F. O'Mahoney, members of the survey committee which prepared the statistics. asserted.
Management and control of the ! new hospital unit will rest entirely with the health department, according to terms by which the gift is to be made. Statistics given by Dr. Herman G. Morgan, secretary of the health department. at the meeting yesterday showed that there are about 450 open and advanced cases of tuberculosis in Indianapolis. Lack of facilities to care for them properly now is causing the infection of hunj dreds of children daily, Dr. Morgan ‘said.
PORKER PRICES DROP 15 TO 25 CENTSAT PENS Cattle Slow and Mostly Steady; Veals Move Upward. With large receipts and a weak demand evident at the city stockyards this morning, porker prices showed a decline of from 15 to 25 cents under yesterday's average. The bulk, 160 to 275 pounds, sold for $3.75 to $4. Hogs weighing from 275 poupds up were salable at $3.50 to $3.70. while lighter kinds scaling 130 to 160 pounds brought $3.60 to $3.85. Light lights weighing 100 to 130 pounds were available at $3.25 to $3.50. Receipts were stimated at 12,000; holdovers, 1,763. Light supply of all classes prevailed in the cattle market, with most salesmen asking slightly higher prices than the previous session. Initial trading was light and mostly unchanged. Choice vealers were strong to 50 cents higher, selling at $6. Other classes remained stationary at $5.50 down. Receipts numbered 500; cattle, 800. Steady prices featured trading in the lamb market, while ewe and wether grades sold at $6.50 to $7. Bucks were discounted at sl. Throwouts ranged down to $3.50, while wooled yearlings were selling at $6.75. Receipts were 1,200. Few sales on hogs at Chicago held around steady at yesterday's average. Early top was $4.20. Trade on most all classes was slow in developing. Receipts were estimated at 25,000, including 5,000 directs; holdovers, 5,000; cattle receipts, 6,000; calves, 2,000; market strong. Sheep receipts numbered 7,000; market unchanged. HOGS Nov. Bulk. Top. Receipts. 15. $4,050 4.10 $4.15 12.000 16. 4.05® 4 10 "* 4 15 8 000 17. 4.05® 4.10 4.15 7.000 18. 4.00® 4.15 4.15 4,000 20. 4.00® 4.15 4 15 5.000 21. 3.75 0 4.00 4.00 12,000 Market, lower. (140-160) Good and choice $ 3.75® 7.85 —Light Weights—-(l6o-180) Good and choice.... 4.00 (180-200) Good and choice... 4.00 —Medium Weights—-(2oo-220) Good and choice.... 3.90 (220-250) Good and choice.. . 3.75@ 3.90 —Heavy Weights—-(2so-290) Good and choice 3.700 3.75 (290-350) Good and choice.... 3.600 3.70 —Packing Sows— / (350 down) Good 3.250 3.40 (350 up 1 Good 3.00® 3.35 (All weights) Medium 2.75® 3,10 —Slaughter Pigs—-(loo-130) Good and choice.... 3.250 3.50 CATTLE Receipts. 800; market, steady. (1,050-1,100: Good and choice $ 4.50® 5.75 Common and medium 2.25® 4.50 (1.100-1,5001-Good and choice 4 00® 5.50 Common and medium 2.75® 4.00 (650-750! Good and choice 4 50® 6.00 Common and medium 2.00® 4.00 (750-900) Good and choice 4.00® 675 Common and medium 2.00@ 4.00 —Cows— Good 2.750 3 25 Common and medium 1.75® 2.75 Low cutter and medium I.oo® 1 75 --Bulls (yearlings excluded! Good (beef) 2.000 2.55 Cutter, common and medium.. I.oo® 2.00 VEALERS Receipts, 500; market, higher. Good and choice $ 5.00 0 6.00 Medium 3.00® 4.50 Qull and common 1.000 3.00 —Calves—-(2so-500) — Good and choice 3 500 4.50 Common and medium 1.50® 3.50 —Feeder and Stocker Cattle—-(soo-8001 Good and choice 3.500 4 50 1 Common and medium 2.00® 3.50 (800-1,500) Good and choice 3.50® 4,50 Common and medium 2.00® 3.50 SHEEP AND LAMBS Receipts, 1,200; market, steadv. (90 lbs. down) Good & choice..s 6.50® 7.00 (90 lbs.down) Com. and med... 3 50® 6.00 (90-110 lbs 1 Good and choice.. 6.00 0 6.75 —Ewes— Good and choice 1.75 0 2.75 Common and medium I.oo® 1.75
Other Livestock BY UNITED PRESS CHICAGO. Nov. 21.—Hogs—Receipts, 25.000. including 9,000 directs; slow, 10® I 25c lower then yesterday's average; 200300 lbs , $4®4.15; top. $4.20; 160-196 lbs., $3.75®4; pigs and light lights. $303.75; bulk packing sows, $3.2503.50; light lights, 140-160 lbs., good and choice, $3.50®3.90; light weight 160-200 lbs., good and choice, $3.750 4.10; medium weights. 200-250 lbs , good and choice. $4®4.20; heavy weights, 250-350 lbs., good and choice, $3.750.4.15: packing sows, 275-550 lbs., medium and choice, $303.65; slaughter pigs, 100-130 ; lbs., good and choice, $2.7503.50. Cattle —Receipts, 6,000; calves, receipts, 2,000; i general market on steers, steady to strong; : demand broadest meager supply, medium and weighty kinds; best medium steers, ; $5.65; 1.400-lb. kinds. $5.25; 1,500 lbs., I 54.85; long yearlings, good to choice, steady, best $5.75; light yearlings up to ; 56.10; other killers unevenly steady to strong; slaughter cattle and vealers: steers, 550-900 lbs., good and choice, | 55.256.50, 900-1,100 lbs., good and choice, 1 ; $4.5006.25; 1.100-1,300 lbs., good and j choice, $4.5005.90; 1,300-1.500 lbs., good i and choice, $3.7505.75: 550-1,300 lbs., common and medium, $2.75® 4.50; heifers, 550-750 lbs., good and choice, $506.50; common and medium, $2.75®5; cows, good, ! $2.7503.75; common and medium, $1 76® 2.75; low cutter and cutter, $1.2501.75; I bulls, yearlings excluded, good beef. , $2.7503.25; cutter, common and medium, $2(53; vealers, good and choice, $405.50; medium, $3.5004; cull and common, $2.5003.50; Stocker and feeder cattle: steers. 550-1,050 lbs., good and choice, $3.2504.75; common and medium. $2.50®. 3.25. Sheep—Receipts, 7,000; fat lambs, opening 15®25c higher on light run; desirable natives, $6.75® 7; best held above, $7.15; sheep and feeding lambs, steady; slaughter sheep and lambs, lambs 90 lbs. down, good and choice. $6.7507.15; common and medium, 6.75; ewes. 90-150 lbs., good and choice. $1.7503: all weights, common and medium, $1.2502 25; feeding lambs. 50-75 lbs., good and choice, $5.7506.10. EAST ST. LOUIS. 111.. Nov. 21.—Hogs— Receipts, 11.500, including 1.500 direct; ! market, slow; most bids and a few sales, i 10® 15c lower; sows steadv to weak; no; actions on pigs; bulk 160 to 210 lbs . I early $494.10; few sows, $303 15; odd head up to $3.30. Cattle—Receipts, 2.500; , calves, 1,000: market, moderately active: I vealers steady with top $5.50; other classes 1 unevenly steady to strong with little inquiry for the tew weighty steers on sale; I a few light weight steers, $4.5004.85; mixed yearlings and heifers. s3® 5; cows. | $202.75; low cutters, $101.50; top [ sausage bulls 10c higher at $2 60; ! slaughter steers. 550 to 1.100 lbs., good j ana choice, common and medium, $2.750 5; 1.100 to 1.500 lbs , choice, $4.50 0 5.50; good $49 5 ?5; medium. $3.25® j 4.75 Sheep—Receipts. 2.000. market, not 1 established: asking steadv or $6.75 for l better grade lambs; scattered bids around ! 25c lower: indications steadv on throwouts and sheen; lambs. 90 lbs., down, good and choice, $6.2507; common and medium $3.5006.50; yearlings. 90 to 110 lbs . good i and choice, 54.250 150; ewes, 90 to 150 lbs. good and choice $1.5002 75; all weights! common and medium. s*l®2 FT. WAYNE. Nov. 21.—Hogs—25c lower: i 180-250 lbs . $3.75: 250-300 lbs . $3.65; 300350 lbs.. S3 55: 160-180 lbs.. $3.65; 150-180 lbs.. $3 50: 140-150 lbs.. $3 40; 100-130 lbs., I $2.75; roughs. $3; stags, $2; calves. $5.50; lambs. $6.50. .PITTSBURG, Nov. 21.—Hogs—Receipts, 600; holdovers. 1.050; very alow; nothing done at this writing; asking price steady at $4.40 for 170-250 lb. weights; undertone weak; indications $3 50 down for packing sows or steady. Cattle—Receipts. 20: nominal. Calves—Receipts. 100; slow and steady; good and choice vealers, $5 500 6; cull sort mediums. $150.5 Sheep —Receipts. 800. around steadv bulk good and choice fat lambs. 66-90 lb. weights. $6.5007; weight and quality considered; medium grades. S4O 5; aged stock, steadv; wethers. $3.25 down LAFAYETTE, Nov. 21 .—Hogs—Market. 1 5 0 30c lower: 170-200 lbs., $3 85; 200-225 lbs., $3.70: 225-275 lbs $3 50: 275-300 lbs.. $3.45: 300-325 lbs., $3 40; 150-170 lbs . 1 $3 75 140-150 lbs $3.50; 130-140 lbs.. S3 25: 100-130 lbs., $3; roughs. $3 down. Lambs J and calves—Steadv. 9 CLEVELAND. Nov. 21.—Cattle—Receipts, ! 250; slow and steadv; steers $3.250 6 25. according to weigh*.* and grades: common to good heifers s3® 4.75: medium to good cows, s2®3. Calves—Receipts. 400; slow and steadv; undertone weaker: choice to 1 prime. $800.50 choice to good. $5.50 06; common. $2.50 0 4.50. Sheep—Receipts. 2.500; steady; all sold earlv: choice wethers. $2.5093 25; choice spring lambs. $6.750 7: common and cull. $3 05. Hogs— Receipts. 1.500: active and 10c lower; heavies. $404.25; choice and light butchers and choice Yorkers. $4 25; stags. $2; roughs. $363.25. pigs, $3.75.
-Today and Tomorrow-
Men of Diverse Opinions Must Collaborate to Make New Deal Successful. BY WALTER LIPPMANN
AT Savannah the President undertook to put into words the spirit which animates his leadership. He had been accused of great experimentation.” He was proud to plead guilty to the charge. The settlement of America was a great experiment. The independence of the Colonies was a great experiment. The establishment of the American republic
was a great experiment. The objective of those experiments was to provide a broader economic opportunity for all men so that each should have a better chance to show the stuff of which he is made. That also was his objective. The principle of these experiments was that of selfgovernment. That principle was his also. But the problems had changed. When changes are impending, wise statesmen foresee what time is bringing and try to shape Institutions and mold men's thoughts and purposes In accordance with the change that is silently coming on. The unwise are those who bring nothing constructive to the process, and who greatly imperil the future of mankind by leaving great questions to be fought out between ignorant opposition to change on the other. One could ask for no simpler and no sounder conception of the task of an American leader in times like
these: That he should seek to understand the changes that are coming, and then to guide and control them so that they may be wrought out peaceably and in accordance with the American tradition. There surely
is a standard to which most men can repair. ana IN raising this standard, in appealing to the spirit of 1776, in proclaiming the right and the need to experiment, the President is bound to recognize that the very essence of the experimenting spirit is the constant re-examination of premises it is not conducting an experiment. When a democracy enacts anew measure and then proscribes the opposition as unpatriotic or venal, it is not conducting an experiment. Only when the statesman really desires to know every objection to plan, and to modify his plan when the objection is convincing, can he be said to be honestly experimental. Let us dot the i's and cross the t’s. The President has drawn a line, and on one side of it he places the tories and doubting Thomases, on the other his supporters. There is such a line. There are persons who dread all change either because it is contrary to their interests or to their temperaments. But that line can not be drawn so as to put on one side all who say “yes” to every act of the administration and on the outer those who do not say yes to every act. In short, the opposite of a tory is not a yes man. I do not suggest that the President thinks this. He has a deeply tolerant mind and wide and
generous spirit. But I do suggest that one of the great dangers which besets any j ruler of men is the tendency to find himself surrounded entirely by men who have not the wish to disagree with him or the courage to speak j their minds. The power of the chief of a state is so immense and so dazzling that for fear of incurring his disfavor, or in anticipation of favors to come, the men around him are disposed to say yes as often as possible, to say no infrequently and with insufficient emphasis. The wise ruler always will seek to protect the independence of his own i colleagues; for statesmen are more i often ruined by their subservient ; friends than by their avowed oppo- ; nents. That is why experienced political ■ observers, when they study a politij cal leader, look at the outset for j J evidence as to whether he is the j I kind of man who likes to be sur- j | rounded by strong men or by weak ! | men, by colleagues or by courtiers, j by advisers who merely reinforce one another or by advisers who i check and balance one another. an tt
IF there has been of late a growing disquietude in the country, it is not due wholly to toryism; it has deeper roots in the apprehension j that the fervor of the great experimentation is producing in some quarters in Washington a headstrong temper which causes men to feel: So and so does not wholly agree with much that is being done; then off with his head; let only the initiated deal out the new deal. Mr. Roosevelt’s mind is steeped in American history. In speaking to the people of Georgia, he said that in his two weeks’ visit he would! have the “opportunity io improve myself by reading of the makers of I our history.” There is no more useful lesson to be learned from them than that they managed to I carry through their great experi- j ment without insistence upon a deadening uniformity of opinion. There was room in Washington’s ; cabinet for Hamilton and for Jefferson. There was an honorable | place in the new deal which began i in 1778 for Sam Adams and for John Adams, for Patrick Henry and for John Marshall. American statesmanship, in its great periods, has always been inclusive rather than exclusive; the spirit which demands! a purge of the opposition within j the ranks is alien to its best traditions.
When the exclusive spirit has prevailed, as in the latter days of the Federalists, in the latter days of the slave-holders' regime, in the days of Thaddeus Stevens and what Claude Bowers has called the Tragic Era, American statesmanship has been at low ebb, and the verdict of history is unfavorable. And so, if the Roosevelt administration is to follow the high American tradition there must always be room in it for men who seek the same great ends but think differently about methods and measures. If there is no room for them, the new deal is not an experiment; it is a dognatic revelation. a a a OLTTE evidently it is not a revelation, or one could find somewhere its principles set down in orderly and consistent form. They are not set down anywhere. No speeches have been made by the President which expounds, except in very general terms, the principles of the new deal; and there is no book by any members of the Brain Trust which throws light on more than an aspect of the immense undertaking in which the President is engaged. There are indicators of direction, there are attitudes, dispositions, and ideals. But no one has yet done for the new deal what Adam Smith and Jeremy Bentham did for English Liebralism in the nineteenth century*. One may rejoice that the doctrine has not crystallized. For there is much to be learned before our current heories can be treated as more than very tentative hypotheses. It is not probable that any set of minds has yet diagnosed finally what the President has called the chronic illness that has beset us for a dozen years. It follows that if the new meas-
; j
ures are to be carried out as true experiments, and not as shots in the dark, it is most important that men of diverse opinion should collaborate. and that every tendency to factionalism, to dogmatism, and to the establishment of a cult, be resisted. (Copyright. 1933)
The City in Brief
TOMORROW’S EVENTS Kiwanis Club, dinner and election. Columbia Club. , Lions Club luncheon. Washington. Purdue Alumni Association, luncheon, Severin. Indiana Certified Accountants, luncheon. Lincoln. Twelfth District Legion, luncheon, Board of Trade. Home Builders, 8 p. m.. Washington. Mutual Insurance Association, luncheon, Columbia Club.
Chicago Stocks By Abbott. Hoocln & Cos.
(Total Sales 35,000 Shares) •—Nov. 20 ... . , High. Low. Close. Abbot Lab 3g Advance Aluminum * 3 Asbestos Mfg 3% Associated Tel & Tel A’ 4 Associated Tel & Tel 7% 13 Bastian-Blessing 8% 8% B'* Bendix Aviation ! 15% 14 s , 15% Brach & Sons 7 Butler Bros • 4% 4% 4Vi Cent 111 Pub Serv pfd . ... 19 Cent & So West 1 Cent & So West pfd 3 s * Chi & North West 8% 8 8% Chicago Corp Com 2Vi Cities Service ... 2 Commonwealth Edison . 32% 32% 32 s , Consumers ... % Cord Corp 8 7% 7% Crane Cos 7% 6% 7% Dexter Cos * 4% Electric Household 9 Gardner-Denver Cos 18 Great Lakes Aircraft... 1 % 1 Great Lakes Dredge.... 19 18% 19 Grigsby-Grunow 114 Hall Printing 4% 4 4 Hart, S & M 14 Ind Pneu Tool 10 Iron Fireman 6% Kentucky Ut Jr Cum p 10 Leath, pfd 4 Libby-McNeil '3s', "3% 354 Lvnch Corp 31% 31 31% Marshall Field 14% 13% 14% McGraw Electric 4 Middle West Utilities " 14 Monroe Chemical 2a Mosser Leather ’ " q National Leather *" v. Nobhtt-Sparks Indu Inc 26% - 25 26% Northwest Bancorporatn 4® No West. Util 7% pfd.. IV, 1 1 2 Pines Wmterfront 11/, Prlma Cos 12% ‘inu iai ? Public Service 7% pfd.'. 49% 45 45 2 Quaker oats. pfd. .."lie * 114 ill Reliance Mfg Cos 1? Sears Roebuck 4514 'kii/. 44 u So West G & Elec pfd. 41 % 41 41 4 Standard Dredging Cos.. . i? 4 Swift &Cos 15 14% il % ?t V 'D ft^lnternacional 30% 29% 30 U S Gypsum com 46 5_ Utllitv & Ind pfd St, Vortex Cup Cos A 94% Walgreen Cos com 19 13 iq Ward Monteomerv A.. .. 70 Waukesha Motor .... ' 50 Wisconsin Bankshares " S', Yates Machine 1 3 Zenith Radio 2 i% 2
Investment Trust Shares
•By Abbott. Honpin & Cos.) —Nov. 20Bid. Ask. American Bank Stocks Corp. . .60 75 American & General Sec A . 5.50 650 American & Inv Tr sh. iso 2 so Basic Industry shares ....... 329 339 Tvm; Tnv Tr shares.. 45 55 Collateral Truste eshares A 475 500 Corporate Trust shares (oldi.. 2,21 2 25 Cumulative Trust shares 4 00 4 12 Diversified Trust shares A., 625 Diversified Trust shares B .. 7.35 775 Diversified Trust shares C. . . 3.00 3 10 Diversified Trust shares D. . 470 480 First Insurance Stock Corp.. 1.33 139 First Common Stock Corp,. ,83 98 Fixed Trust Oil shares A 8 70 8 80 Fixed Trust Oil shares B. . 7 25 7 35 Investors Inc .. .17,37 17.75 Low* Priced shares 5.60 570 Mass Inv Trust shares 17.37 18 62 Nation Wide Securities 3.10 3 15 North Amer Trust shares <53 1.83 North Amer Trust shar 55-56) 2.33 239 Petroleum Trust shares A... 800 11 00 Selected American shares.. . 2.75 Selected Cumulative shares.. 6.75 700 Selected Income shares 350 3 75 Std American Trust shares A 2.88 2 92 1 Trust Shares of America .... 2 77 2.85 ! Trustee Std Oil A 5 60 5.70 Trustee Std Oil B 5 15 5 25 U S Electric Lt & Pwr A .11.37 11.75 Universal Trust shares 2 92 3.00 Births Girls Theodore and Dorothy Foxworthv, Methodist hospital. Jerome and Helen Brady. 1260 West Thirty-second. Bot Maro and Mabel Twomley, Christian hospital. Deaths Thomas H Wiles, 62. Methodist hospital. pneumonia. Anna Anderson. 73, 1147 Centennial, acute dilatation of heart. Margariet Etta Miller. 80. 53 Whittier place, chronic myocarditis. Hazel F McGuire. 15, city hospital, septicaemia. Marguerite A. Kastrup. 39, Methodist hospital, acute appendicitis. Adolph Blumlein. 79. 2007 North Capitol. chronic myocarditis. Charles Morbarh, 81. 258 North Temple chronic interstitial nephritis. Richard F. Wolf. 78. 3712 East Washington. hypostatic pneumonia. John F. Smithey, 90, 5651 Madison, chronic myocarditis Clara Reynolds. 79. 726 North East, cerebral hemorrhage, Harrison BickeT, 67, 2318 Talbott, chronic myocarditis. Mollie Gray. 59, city hospital, acute endocaritis, Thomas H Hinds, 73, 4920 Sangster, chronic myocarditis. Edgar Bohall, 47, 311 West North, cerebral nemorrhage Frank Rodgers. 72, city hospital, chronic nephritis. Emily Cowherd, 26, city hospital, general peritonitis. NEW YORK COFFEE FUTURES —Nov. 20— SANTOS High. Low. Close. January 8 28 March 8.81 8 47 8 50 1 May 8 80 8 58 8 59 July 8 65 i September 8 86 8 85 8.86 December 833 825 8.25 j RIO January 5 97 March 8.10 8 09 6 10 Mav 6 30 Julv 6 27 September ... 6 34 December 8.00 5 91 5.93 CHICAGO FRirr MARKET By Unit'd Prtt* CHICAGO Nov. 21—Apples—Michigan Jonathans, bushel. $1.2501.30; Baldwins, bushel. 75c® sl.lO. Carrots—lllinois. 2 ! jC bunch: Michigan $1 75 0 2 crate. Spinach —lllinois. 50 0 65c. Beans—Southern, green $1016$: wax. $101.25 Cabbage— Wisconsin. sl2s® 1.50 crate. Mushrooms— Illinois. 150 25c Cucumbers—Southern. $1.25 0 2 25; central western hothouse, s2® 2.50. Tomatoes—California $101.65; 1111-i nois and Ohio hothouse. 65®70c Bee's— Illinois. 2’-c bunch. Leaf lettuce—lllinois hothouse. 10®12 ! 2C. Celery—Michigan, 40 985 c crate. Onion market; Washington and Idaho Valentias. bushel. 75®90c. Wisconsin yellows, bushel. 609 75c: Indiana yellows, bushel. 60®75c: Illinois yellows. 60 0 75c; midwestern whites, bushel, $1.15 @ 1 25.
GRAIN FUTURES SHOW UNEVEN TRADE ACTION Advance in Domestic Gold Price Fails to Aid Initial Sales. BY HARMON W. NICHOLS United Press Staff Correspondent CHICAGO, Nov. 21—Grains were unsettled at the opening of the Board of Trade today. Wheat futures ranged from *4 cent lower to S cent higher, corn was up and oats were unchanged to ls < cent lower. The trade paid little attention to the 10 cents advance in the price of domestic gold and continued firmness in stocks. Liquidation of December deliveries continued. Operations yesterday placed ownership of wheat in more scattered hands. The substantial decrease in the visible supply of corn gives more weight to opinion that movement into the hands of distributors is larger than reported sales indicate. Many are impressed by the statistical situation in this grain but fear that increased country selling will accompany bulges. Chicago Primary Receipts —Nov. 20— Bushels . Today Last week. Wheat *678.000 7 14 000 Gom 1.415 000 1 229 000 ° ats 236,000 268.000 Chicago Futures Range —Nov. 21— WHEAT— High. Low 10:00. close! Dec 89' 2 88 s * 89'* .89 My 92% .92'* .92% .92 3 , July 92 .91% .91% .91% CORN—May 55 .54% 54% .54% July 56% .56% .56% .56 s , OATS— Dec .35% .34% .35 .35 May 38% .38% ,38% .38% July 38 .38 RYE— Dec 62's .62 .62 .62% May 69*2 .69 .69% .69% July .69% .69 .69% ,69% BARLEY— Dec 46% .45% .45% .45 May .51% .50% July 53% .53 .53% .52%
Lippmann
CHICAGO CASH GRAIN By United Press CHICAGO. Nov. 20—Cash grain: Wheat —No. 2 red. 87%C. No. 3 red. 86%c; No. 1 hard. BB'*c: No. 3 hard. 86c; No 4 hard weerily, 84c; No. 5 hard. 83c; No 2 mixed. 86%c Corn <new) -No 2 mixed. 45%®; 45%c: No. 3 mixed. 43043%c: No. 4 mixed, 42%c; No. 2 yellow. 46%®46%c; No. 3 yellow, 43%®44'ic; No. 4 vellow, 42%043%C’ No. 5 yellow, 40%c; No 6 yellow, 40c; No. 3 white, 44®45%c; No. 4 white. 43® 44c; sample grade. 36%c; (old) No. 2 mixed. 46%047c; mew and old) No. 2 mixed. 45%c; No. 2 yellow. 47®47%c; No. 3 yellow. 46%®47c; No. 4 yellow, 46'*c: No. 5. yellow. 45%e; No. 2 white. 41%® 48c: No. 5 white. 46c; sample grade, 37%r. Oats—No 2 white. 34% 0 34%c: No. -3 white. 33%034' 4 c; No. 4 white. 31032%c; sample grade white 30%c. Rve—No. 2 65%c Barley—4s® 73c Timotfiv—ss.so® 6 Clover seed—slo.sool3.so. Cash provisions—Lard, $5.77. loose, $5.52, Leaf. $5.62; D. S. bellies, $6. TOLEDO CASH GRAIN By United Press TOLEDO. Nov. 20.—Grain close: Grain in elevators, transit billing: Wheat—No. 2 red, 910 92c. Corn—No. 2 vellow\ 52®53c. Oats—No. 2 white. 39%040*2C. Rye—No. 2. 76*20 77%c. Track prices, 28%c rate: Wheat—No. 1 red. 67%0 88c; No. 2 red, 86%0 87%c. Corn—No. 2 vellow. 46%® 48%c; No. 3 yellow-, 44047%c; No. t yellow. 42*20 44c; No. 5 vellow. 41042% c . Oats—No. 2 white, 36%037c; No. 3 white, 35%@36%c. Toledo seed close: Clover— Dec., $7.90; March, $8,15. Alsike—Cash, $8.50; Dec , $8.70. ST. LOUIS CASH GRAIN By United Press ST. LOUIS. Nov. 20.— Cash grain; Wheat —ln good demand, lc lower to %c higher; No. 2 red, 89%®92c nominal; No. 3 red, 86%@90c: No. 3 red garlickv, 88c; No. 1 hard. 88%0 9Oc; No. 2 hard, 88 0 89%c. nominal; No. 1 mixed. 88%c; No. 2 mixed, ®7 Vac; sample mixed, 76%c Corn—ln good demand. % to lc higher; No. 3 mixed, new. 44%c; No. 2 yellow, old. 47® 3 vellow, new, 46c; No. 3 vellow, old, 47%c: No. 4 yellow, new. 42%®44c; No 5 yellow, new. 41 %c; No. 2 white, old. 43% c: No. 4 white, new. 44Vic; No. 5 w’hite. new. 41 %c. Oats—ln slow demand, steady to %c lower: No. 3 white. 350 35', m No. 2 mixed, 34%c; No. 4 mixed. 35c. NEW YORK CASH GRAIN By United Press NEW YORK Nov. 20 -Cash grain: W;heat—No. 2 red. $1.06%: No. 2 hard winter $L°6%. Corn-No. 2 mixed, 49%c ? New York ' 44,/2C ' AU quotes
.-Indianapolis Cash Grain
—Nov. 20— car lots of grain at the call of the Indianapolis Board of Trade f- 0. b , shipping point, basis 41V* New York rate, were; WHEAT—Firm; No. 1 red, 82083 c; No 2 red. 81082 c; No. 2 hard, 81®8~2c. Corn—(Oldi firm; No. 2 white, 41942c--40c; No. 3 mixed. 39® 39c. No. 3 yellow, 39 0 40c; No. 2 mixed, 399 No. 3 white, 40®41c, No. 2 yellow, 400410Oats—Steady; No. 2 white, 31®32c : No’. 3 white. 320 33c Hay—Steady. (F. 0. b. country points taking 23‘2c or less rates to Cincinnati or Louisville 1 No 1 timothy, $7.5008; No. 2 timothy, $797 50. —lnspections WHEAT—No. 2 red, 3 cars; No. 2 hard, 2 cars; No. 1 mixed, 2 cars; total 7 cars CORN—No. 2 white, 13 cars; No. 3 white, 17 cars; No 4 white, 10 cars; No. 2 yellow 8 cars; No. 3 yellow, 14 cars; No. 4 yellow. 16 cars: No. 5 yellow. 3 cars; No. 6 yellow, 1 car; No. 2 mixed, 1 car; No. 4 mixed 1 car; total, 74 cars. OATS—No. 2 white, 4 cars; No. 3 white, 9 cars; sample, white, 2 cars; total, 15 cars. INDIANAPOLIS WAGON WHEAT City grain elevators are paving 80 cents for No. 2 sort red wheat, otner grades on their merits TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY AUTOMOTIVE ~ 46 Trucks, Trailers, Tractors. DODGE—2-ton, 1932. 7 50x20 duals, inclosed cab A bargain Int i Harv. Cos., 1325 W Morns st. LI-4803 WE ARE offering a few trucks worth the money To close the accounts this year. Genera! Motors Used Truck bept., 31 West 13th. H Bandvs. LI-7467. We service all makes of trucks.
LEGALS 56 Legal Notices NOTICE TO BIDDERS ON SNOW PLOW3 Notice Is hereby given that sealed proposals will be received bv the State Highway Commission of Indiana at the Commission's office on the Third Floor of the Bta*e House Annex. 102 North Senate avenue. Indianapolis. Indiana, until 10 o’clock a m.. Dec. 5, 1933, for furnishing the following equipment Thirty to 35 Snow Plows, with and without wings and of the following types, all suitable for mounting on trucks: Light Duty Moldboard Blade. Heavy Duty Moldboard Blade. Heavy Dutv V Blade. Prices quoted shall Include snow plows complete ! o. b. certain destinations in the State of Indiana, as described in the proposal Proposal blanks and specifications are on file in the office of the State Highway Commission where same may be obtained without cost upon request. The right is reserved by *he State Highway Commission to reject any or all bids, waive technicalities as to procedure and to award on anv combination of bids that in Its Judgment is most advantageous to the State of Indiana. STATE HIGHWAY COMMISSION OF INDIANA JAMES D. ADAMS. Chairman.
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