Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
w0 P AR St LG o S R R VIR yse No. 2 mixed, I’A°7l%c No. GRAIN AND PRODUCE S Storsumtserss Sitine year, but extremely light receipts _else- where and a steady advance all around the local “upturn, ce! H‘ht Run of Oattle Sold Out l’i’;.‘."\:r?' threo duyy auppiles have beer | Wheat Run Oontinues Hesvy:z, “at 40 Oents Higher Than and yeariings have sold in about the same| ond the Demand for Good | Feedor 0c; Quality of the offerings the early part of 78%011" Oats: No. 2 white, II'A o4 t the lllndll’d 394 @39%¢c; No. 3 white, %0 the week was anything but good, But the NG, 4 white, 38% @38%c. Barley: ting, 64@66c; No. 1 feed, 58@62c. Rye: 2, 94@%c . 3, 93@94c OMAHA FUTURE MARKET. jambs soared notches all week. a 26c upturn the first two- days of the Wheat Remains Stron, R Last Week. youk. and since (Ren have Beld_abost 4 Qs Bediin e Wit fmcic B Quotations on wsheep and lam . Reports Continue, ml? HOLD FOR MORE PAY | sood to cholce, $10.35610.65; Ia {aod $9.76@10.35; o LITTLE CORN ON FLOOR, Grading in wheat was rather quiet. and | both " the" September and Decemebr options | were lower. Although Teports of black rust continue, they are, in a measure offest today were very heavy|py the present dry weather. which ls Omaha, July 28, 1916, 5; $7.00@7. ifl, year- Omaha, July 28, 1916 wethers, fair to Wheat receipts :Racelpts were: Cattls. Hogs. Bhes) g0ood to chofes, |and the demand for good wheat continued '{deal for the harv of winter wheat. Officlal Monday cone L “’,,{, $5.7682.00; | strong. The present run of wheat I the) The corn, hows s badly In need of nmm v“t.":a ey 544 :"m 12394 . | longest ever recelved in this market and|rain, and unless there s a change corn m“"‘”ul .nm"“.;’ T aAT8 1450 i ewes, @9.00; | the quality exceeds that of any previous | prices will continue to soar. L T Ly et R X 1] 95 | ewes, breeders, 2a and up, $6.0007.85. years, fully 80 per cent of the samples| The corn market was strong September Representative sales: grading No, 1 and No. 2 hard winter. advancing %c and December %T. The oats market was rather dull’ but é 355 58,469 Price. | The wheat market today was a fraction ...'.!Z'.i}i'.fl“'.'.‘:;" H ;:? ;3.;)1 40,262 | 243 Idaho wethers 7 80 | lower, only a few cars selling at yesterday's | advanced in sympathy with wheat and ¥s 3 woeks ago16.483 44,126 30,145 | 236 Idaho wethsrs 7 80 | prices. corn, the September closing 3¢ and De- Bame Gays § weeks ago)0.352 42,073 346111269 Idaho wethers 96 780| No. 1 hard sold around $1.18 today and | cember advancing %c. u.m 49.387 | 65 Tdaho wethers . 92 780 the bulk of the No. 2 sold at $1.17% and Omlhl closing prices on futures for this Seme days 4 weeks l‘ol; ll: 12 native e 106 7 26 | $1.18, There was very little corn on the floor da. Art |_Open. rlllh [Low.| Close.| Yes. and the market ruled steady to a quarter | Whe, ] hisRlionl i higher, with a moderate cash demand. The | Bept | 1-18Y [ 1 18fr1e%| 11s% | 117% [ bt ST R (T R :m\m Mu:fi 1208 i H\l(l,"fl' o Corn: 7!“‘ 16| 76 ‘ 6% 6% i ats recelpts were pretty light nd the | Sept| | 6% | | deamnd for this grain was fairly active, | Dec. i Wi 6an| oo%| mai [ The rye marl was strong, i b h z | 39 3 cente, whils berley was quoted mominally | SePt b1 9%/ 39 ? : - | unchanged. Dec. Gyl 41| 0wl 40K| 4% Chicago closing prices, furnished The Bee b{ Logan & Bryan, atock and grain brokers, 5 36; Texas. snd Okla- Liverpool closed "‘Ilh wheat 2%d to 34 10, prime yearling South Sixteenth street: $5.76010,25; cows and S b0 A g Ak ot Qs s et 'I 2pen “ High. ‘“‘“": T 'lhl L 0"0'“& ln:"":oofl'"' 0@11.75. shipments of 706,000 bushels last year, July | 1224 122%0120%( 1 20%121% ev recelpts, Primary corn receipts were 941,000 bush-| Sept | 1 21"21 § uuuzzwfil:uru‘llm 00; | els and shipments 3 0 bushels, against| Dec. | 1 27%| 1 11%1125%1 1 26%(126% receipts of 607,000 bu nd shipments of | Corn | | 2173000 bushels st July | 's‘:-&: ;:w 2. 5. s o ey e g B rimary oats recel were 1,086,000 | Sept | T0%- 4| 4 TN Kansas City Tive Stock Market. bushels and shipments 642,000 bushels, | Dec. | 69%-63] 69%) 68% 63%) 63% Kansas City, no, July $8—Cattle—Re. againet recelpts of 479,000 bushels and ! Onts: AR AR 400 he shipments of 367,000 bushels last year. YRRt A B T R TT A1 CARLOT RECEIPTS, | 44-43% | A1 43%) 43% % 43% o Wheat. Corn, | “Recetpts and_ disposition of live stock at Chicago ... 310 ! Gt t H H m Union Stock yards, Omaha, for twenty- Minneapolls 1290 5 00 r bun ending at 3 o'clock, p. m, yes- , | Duluth Al ot AT bR ) o Omaha 314 20 12 70 80 RECEIPTS—CARS, Kansas City a7 “ 12 67 62 Cattle.Hogs.Shsep. i |8t Loufs . i 12 70 o 2 ] be, § :‘ ";Oy‘le" Wianipeg . P 12 40 30 1 g8, ) wethers, § H 1 % * | owes #7.00@1.60, Th?ll sales were remrled (Ddly ;: :g :7' Chicago Live Btock Market. Chicago, July 28.—Cattle—Receipts 2,000 native be Minneapolls Grain Market. Minneapolls, July 28, — Wheat—July, $1.26%; September, $1.27%. Cash: No. 1 hard, $1.32%; No. 1 northern, $1.27%@ 1.30%; No. 2 northern, $1.24% @ 1.27%. Flour—~Unchanged. Barley—b7@ 6! Rye—d41% @96% Bran—$17.60@18.00. Corn—No. 2 yellow, 83@84c. Oats—No. 3 white 39@39%4c Flazseed—$2.04% @ 2.08%. St. Louls Grain Market. No, 6 white: 1 car, 76c. [ §t. Loufs, July 25.—Wheat—No. 3 red, No. 1 yellow: 3|3$1.27@1.34; No. 2 hard, $1.22@1.23; July, 9 6| $1.19; September, $1.20%. Cofn—iNo. 3, 81%¢c: No. 2 white, 1% @ 82%c; July, 82c; September, 78%c. Oats—No. 2, new, 40@43c; No. 2 white new, 43c. Kansas City General I-rlut ar 1 car, u 14; 6 3-5 cars, §1, n. 3 onr, $1.12; 1 car, §111%; v 4 hard winter: ; 10 cai $1.! L n.u; 1 oar, $1.0 car, $1.03; 2 cars, $1.02; 2 cars, $1.00; 1 r ’ll‘ 2-6 car, 9bc. No 3 mixed: 1 car, DlmllTION—HM D. Cl!llo ".'l T car, 18%e. No. 1 No. 3 white: 1 car, 1 car, 77%c. No. § white: 3 cars, 78%c. 78%e. No. 4 white: white: 1 car, 77c, 3,000 hea market bulk of sales, 39550 heep and Lambs—R i market steady; lambs, §1 3 i 14 cars, 39c. No. 4 ; 1 car, 38%c. Sample jeat: No. ard, -rd. %: No. re Sloux City Live Mock. $.0101,18%; No. 3 hard $1.10%@1.17%; 16 semmber, $1.75% ' Decamber, City, Ia., July 28,—~Cattle, receipts| No, ‘ hard, $1.03@1.10; No, 2 spring, $1.17 ‘l l'\fi'l 19% rk tendy native steers |'g i No. 3 spring, $1.14@1.22. Corn: Oats—No. 1 white, 43%@43%¢c; No. 2 2 l Wh“. 78% @78%e; No. 3 white, 78@ | mixed, 33@42c. ¢; No. ‘ white, 71@77%¢; No. & white, Butter—Creamery, 28c; firsts, 26c; sec- run of cattle 'Q‘l' elghteen loa, ‘a .11C; No. § white, 76% @76¢c; No. 2|onds 23c; packing, 21%c. the of ngs Include yellow, 784 @79c; No. 3 yellow, 8% @ Eggs—Firsts, 21%e. t l“ l“'lfl“'l to the | @ 7 i No. 4 yellow, 114 @78%c: No. 6 Corn—Unchange No. 2 mixed, T9%@ for o o oy gl ycllow 17% @78%c; No. 6 yellow, 77/80%¢; No. 2 white, 80%c; No. 2 yellow, T Cs .lo—mn was the - ususl very Ji cnlcmn nlAl! AND PROVISIONS, Prices High, but lufifi Starts on the Down Grade., 0, July 28.—Despite the fact that onetimetoday touched the hig! this season the market excopt dur- nll the first hour ‘was on the down e. Bears made much of assertions by a prom jort that crop losses would perhup: Dakotas lnll ast, “been & duplicate of condith markets. D!-::'d has imp) m:::. been due more to the 1@1%¢ nut been | lower, with September $1.33% @1.22% and ember §1.35%. Corn finlshed 1%¢ off to K@ %o up, oats Ko down to X O % and provisions unchanged to 160 At first the wheat pit was doml mews (hat black rust damage was increas- 1 enlarged. that advances in prices :-r act as & decided check on of buyers. ‘At this juncture hea the.part of half a dosen big huuul ]olttd SAVINGS SATURDAY LADIES TAKE NOTICE SILK TAFFETA SKIRTS— $3 95 In the Newest Stripes or Plain Colors—All to goin AND Two Big Lots—worth $7.50 34 95 mdSlOOO | NSRRI "LOOK FOR THE BIG YELLOW SlGNS! THE NOVELTY CO., NRowih cuarce. 214-16 N. 16th St. t b- nmnnt authoritative ‘ad- «he tbu harvest in the three prin- h'ut might prove much hu of late been generally as- Interest was taken by wheat m‘fu‘“fl. clrcumatances that many mlm!u of damage in the northwest were founded on comparisons with Iast abnormally large large crop. The Yield Dakotes ul lllanmu in 000, buahe! e Corn valies ‘swaysd @ good deal tn sym- pathy with wi Healdes, ’o'onunuo flg :‘: 1"2:“ ‘k‘f: had been boug! ntine corn bt ts euu 1‘. Md Btates to be nllllu; w latively easy throughout th ”&Tn aslen were n Jm:-. g Iudllll wesl ous than' last week ‘or a year Virginla bulk, 1t live, lower l‘::l.:.- 1.1..'"{ ) o 3 neitye. s iy . Coffeo Market New' York, a-‘z ffee futures opened “‘fi'ul 1 n“vl:lu of l"polnt asa firmness of ‘Brasilian m nnrh_\l. but there see tained buying, ling b :}:h _cotio Your Summers Go Better d\nnhtothe.odn.fo\mhin—ndnfmmhiu- are better, thanks to lose 'rn purchased A y ugus the best lights and butch- Tl h $9.66, and for the fourth 88 many days the top landed at mtlu hogs sold a pread with & good showing of the 8.710; 8470, Bpot cotl- steady: Rio Ts, 9%0c; Santos It was rumored that Santos May, confirmed and there vnnm=o open ofters -M: dia ) sody 108, ~the drink that made the soda fountain a national A ! institution. Thub.auonmthunlnuful M market s bmlseun r the | of wholesome, delicious and refreshing beverage to serve. ."“f; while the top Is d0c B bent wl« paid this year, Boston Wool Market. RIS dates Boston, July 38.—The Commerclal Bul- letin tomorrow will say: ‘“The wool market this week has con- that 1t at: the slackened pace Probably - the total ek will hardly reach 334 000,000 pounds. Prices, however, are gen- 0..264 erdlly firm. In’ the west operations are PIGE. ntly dwindling, but prices romaln 875 months, 0. Demand the genuine by full name— nicknames encourage substitution. THE COCA-COLA CO.. ATLANTA, GA. Send for free dooklet—"The Romanee of Coea-Cola." No. Av. ‘I 283 adopted w week ;rnl-(on for the ot a1 peing b1 Ny ‘This largest of the year to the heaviest recelved th of July in recent » little draggy. 3 No. z.h‘ oL % m Jul y28. o “..‘.."‘; “z. ‘:hmmhn firm B i o B uu ¥. by a + O, WO $5.655 W, Sh0; AR | * THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, JULY 29, 81c; July 79%c; September, 76@75%c: De- 1916. mber, 67%c. Poultry—Hens, 16c; roosters, 10%c; broll- | $1.65; Indiana. $1.48; W ers, 2lc. Price of Crude Oil. Findlay, 0O, July 28.—The Ohio Ofl company this morning marked down eight /f_ Store Hours: 8:30 A. M. to 5 P.M S.turduyl “Till 9 P. M \ BURGESS NASH COMPANY. different grades of ofl 10 cents a barrel. The new prices are North and South Lima. ooster, $1.90; Prince- ton and TIllinols, i Plymouth, $1.68. Metal Market. New York, July 28.—Lead, $6.35 asked. Spelter easy; spot Bast St. Louls delivery, $10.00 asked. Copper firm: $24.50@27.00, Iron steady and unchanged Tin quiet: spot offered at $38.50, At London: Spot copper. ‘(111 £108; electrolytic, £12 tures, £168 10s; lead, Bee Want Ads produce results. pelter, £60. electrolytic, futures, tin, £168; fu- “EVERYBODY'S STORE" Friday, July 28, 1916. STORE NEWS FOR SATURDAY. Phone Douglas 137. A going Saturday. Four groups: | now $1.95. Clearing Men’s and Young Men’s SUMMER SVUITS At Extreme Price Reductions DETERMINED effort to clear our decks of every summer garment before inventory and if price has anything to do with it there will be a great out- MEN’S SUMMER SUITS Were.$10.00 to $12.00, now $6.95 INCLUDING Palm Beach, cool cloth, crash and hot weather materialg, in pinch back or plain styles. MEN’S SUMMER SUITS Were $13.65 to $16.50, now $9.95 INCLUDING Palm Beach, mohair, cool cloth, air pore and other hot weather weaves. MEN’S SUMMER SUITS Were $20.00 to $22.50, now $13.65 INCLUDING mohairs, cool cloth, silk mixtures and unlined coats and-pants, pinch back or plain styles. MEN’S SUMMER SUITS Were $25.00 to $35.00, now $16.50 INCLUDING Men’s Silk Suits, in pinch back or plain styles; were $25.00 to $35.00. Men’s fancy palm beach outing pants, were $3.00, Men’s all wool serge outing pants; were $5.00 to g $6.00, now $3.95. urgess-Nash Co.—Fourth Floor. Line Up Men! Choice of Any| Boy’s Straw Hats Straw Hat That Was to $5 a50c OME straw hat sales look very good in the announcement, but there is always a disappointment afterwards— There will be no disappointment in this sale, we assure you. Positively every straw hat in stock (Panamas excepted) including hats to $5.00, choiee tur- day, at 80c. Men’s Panamas, to $7.50, at $1.95 Every Panama in stock enters into this sale for Saturday. A style and shape to suit your own individual taste. For- merly priced to $7.50, Saturday, $1.95. I‘rlcu-Nuh Co.—Fourth * Floor. Manufacturer’s Samples of Men’s lengths, c! sleeve, knee length. The lot consists o ton oxfords. oxfords. uarter ‘sleeves, three-quarter and ankle osed crotch; also athletic and ou’ll find a splendi tion to choose from, at............vouuun Clearawa Men s Bathing Suits, 95¢ both one and two-plece styles, A back order just received makes this sale possible. stock over we offer bathing suits at less than half price, Sat., 95¢. A Great Clearaway of Men’s $3 to $5 Low SHOES in the Down Stairs Store at $1 95 HE surplus stock of a large wholesale shoe house “picked up” at an under price is the reason for offer- ing these, the season’s best values in men’s shoes Saturday. Right in the face of a constant and rapidly rising market mlkes it doubly attractive. Sizes 6, 614, 7, T1%. Including— Men's patent but-) Were $3.00 to Men’s black ve- lour calf, button Men’s tan Russia calf, lace oxfords. *1.95 Burgess-Nash Co.—Dewn-Stairs Store. Burgess-Nash Co.—Everybody’s Shn—_‘leth and Harney. SUMMER UNDERWEAR, Includ- ing Values to $2.50, at 59¢ E were very fortunate in securing the sample line of a promi- nent underwear manufacturer at “‘a price” that enables us to offer you special underwear inducements Saturday. Knitted weaves, long and ? uarter selec- 59c Men's $2.50 Shirts, $1.50 Bought before the recent advance if price and offered as if there was no ad- vance. Wide range of patterns and color- ings, best foreign dyes used in coloring, sizes 14 to 18%, perfect fitting, and an ex- ceptional value at $1.50. Men’s 50c Neckwear, 25¢ Manhattans, tubulars and de joinvilles, All unlined. Just the kind to give perfect wnh and wear satisfaction. ther than carry the $5.00, at/ | ;g rubber heels. Were to $3.50, at 50c IS includes all the well made favored shapes in straw hats for boys in our stock. Boys’ $5 Panamas, $1.00 A splendid selection of Panama hats for boys, were to $5.00, Sat- urday, choice from the stock, $1.00 Boys’ $5.00 Suits, $3.95. Boys’.suits, made of Panama Palm Beach and Cool Cloth, sizes for ages 6 to 16 years, Norfolk and pinch-back coats, knicker pants; were $5.00, Snturday, $3.95 Boys’ Sport Shirts, 50c. Boys’ $1.50 and $2 wash suits, . at 95c. Boys’ wash suits, to $3.00, $1.45 Boys’ $1.50 to $2 Wash Suits at 9Be. Boys’ wash pants, % Price. Boys’ Sport Blouses, 50ec. Bu Nash Co.—Fourth Floor. Vacation Trulil'{sWere. $16.50 and $17.50 $10.95 RUNKS that look well and serve better, specially reduced for Saturday. For instance, the well known Hartman steamer or % dress trunks, canvas covered, fiber bound, this season's goodu, also 36 to 40-inch dress trunks from regular stock, formerly $16.50 and $17.50, Saturday, at $10.95. Dress trunks, $3.95 to $50. Steamer trunks, $8.95 to $55. Wardrobe trunks, $20 to $128 Traveling bags, 95c to $125. Suit cases, $1.00 to $50. Week-end cases, $4.95 to $55. Burgess-Nish Co—Fourth Floor. Men’s black Rus- sia calf, button ox- Men’s tan Russia calf oxfords with