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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1922)
THE MORNING OREGONIAN, SATURDAY, JUNE 3, 1923 STORES ON WHEELS 1 TIE NOVELTY New Retail System Makes Rapid Headway in East. SPECIAL CARS ARE USED Specially Constructed Autotrucks . Carry Complete , Stocks About Country on Regular Routes. BY RICHARD SPILLANE. (Copyright by the Public Ledger Company Published by Arrangement.) PHILADELPHIA, Pa., June 2. (Spe cial.) It looks as if stores on wheels will become common. A few years ago a mer chant had a small retail shoe store in a Pennsylvania town. Now he has seven branch stores and more than two dozen peripatetic stores. The stores on wheels go over specified routes in Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia, regularly, and sell shoes to the people in town, village or country. Also the stores on wheels supply stock to the branch houses. The stores on wheels are auto trucks with big specially designed bodies. They carry full stocks of shoes and the salesmen are carefully selected. All business is on a cash basis. In the middle west the store on wheels is making headway. In Toledo tha Piggly Wiggly people are getting competition through the advent of a sort of Piggly Wiggly on wheels. These stores carry a stock that includes meats, vegetables, cereals, cakes, pies, canned goods, etc They have regular routes which they "cover" twice a day. They are roomier than you would suppose, being as big as furniture vans. The buyer enters at one door, passes through the aisle on either side of which the goods on sale, are dis played, and on going out the other end pays for her purchases. The amount of foodstuff carried in one of these vehicles is surprising and it Is remarkable how wonderfully the "stores" have been de signed for advantageous display of the articles on sale. Nine Huge Tracks Used. In Alabama a general merchant has nine huge trucks in service as moving re tail stores, His business has developed fast and promises to keep growing. So it goes the country over. The busi ness of the rolling store is such that va rious of the auto truck manufacturers are giving earnest attention to the produc tion of vehicles of the greatest utility to these merchants. The matter of the chassis is easy. It is in the making of the great variety of huge bodies that the manufacturers have to exercise their brains. Many changes are likely to come in the retail business In America. For many years it has been, so far as what is termed the corner store is concerned, the most loosely and eflciently managed department of merchandising in America. The biggest blessing the small store keeper hua had was the income tax. Be fore it came into force less than one out of five small retailers kept books. If the retailer had bills to pay he kept them on a hook. When he paid a bill, he took it off the hook.' He kept up that method of accounting until he went broke, which was the fate- of the vast majority. That system doesn't work with the in come tax colleotor. The retailers must keep books now. Through being forced to show to the government how much money h has made or lost he has come to know where and how he has a profit und where and how he made losses. He is getting acquainted with a very impor tant end of his business. Bad Debt Percentage Small. Most people think bad debts make a big item in retailers' losses. They do not. In the dry goods business the per centage of bad debts Is 3-10 of 1 per cent. In shoes 2-10 of 1 per cent, in hardware 0-10 of 1 per cent, in jewelry 3-10 of 1 per cent. In the corner grocery and de partment stores less than one-half of 1 per cent. But the delivery cost of the small store is a real, a very real burden of cost, amounting to 23-10 per cent. In taking the store on wheels to the cus tomer it may come to pass that the economy will be greater than thought at first. Nowadays, hundreds of thousands of women make not a few purchases by phone and the cost of delivery is not only In sending the goods by wagon or boy, but the telephone charge has to be considered, too. The old Bystem of the small store must change or the storekeeper will have little chance of prospering. He has difficulty meeting the competition of the chain store. He is under the disadvantage of having to pay more1 for his supplies than the chain tore people for he buys in comparatively smalt quantities while chain stores buy in large volume. He gets closer to the people, as a rule, than the chain store owner and that helps him somewhat. Economists have inveighed for years against the wastes of the small store. What If the income tax and the rolling store wiped out a lot of these wastes and brought profit to the storekeeper and the public? Whether they do or not the rolling store seems today to be a comer. FBBEICH MS BEMI5H CHICAGO WHEAT WEAKENED BY DECLINES AT LIVERPOOL. showed a disposition to belittle reports of rust damage from Texas, Kansas and Mis- ! eouri, as well as from southern Illinois, Indiana and Ohio, but if continued they will probably not be very comforting to shorts. We believe the turn of strength in the cash department, combined with the possibility of crop deterioration, war rant a bullish attitude. Corn Trade of a mixed character and market made little headway in either di rection. Cash demand was quite active at a fractional advance In the basis, and there was evidence of renewed activity in export circles. It seems significant that the cash market should display strength in the face of an increased movement from first hands. Cofn is still an attrac tive feeding proposition and there is no doubt but farm consumption is and will continue to be abnormal as Ions as the present livestock basis is maintained. Oats Selling by leading elevatvr inter ests had a depressing influence early in the day, but the decline was arrested by buying for eastern . account, which was thought to represent export business. Re ceiDts were again small and cash market firm at yesterday's basis. Unfavorable croo reports are coming forward and should stimulate increased activity on the biivine side of futures. Rye Trade slow but market firm, due more to lacK or otzermgs tnan to any consoicuous buying. Seaboard Interests were buyers in a small way. Cash rye was quoted nominally -at cent under July for No. Leading futures ranged as follows WHEAT. Open. High. Low. July $1-18 $1.19 $1.184 Sept. i... l.if'jfc l.io i.xtv Dec. .. L20 1.20.. Close. 1-17 1.20 Ju.lv .... Sept. ..11.65 11.40 11.67 11.85 1L75 Resales in That Market Are Under Prices Offering: on This Side. CHICAGO, June 2. Despite less favor abl domest io crop re ports, t he wheat market here sagged in price today, owins largely to lower quotations at Liverpool and to assertions that Europeon holidays tomorrow and Monday would tend to cur tail export demand. The closing in Chi cago was ateady, but was 4c to c net lower with July $1.184 to $1.18-H and September $1.17 to $1.17. Corn fin ished a shade to c off, oats at c de cline to a like advance azid provisions un changed to a setback of Hc. Successive dips and bulges in the price of whoat followed each other rapidly throughout the day. the bearish foreign news being at times outweighed by re ports of black rust in Texas and by ad vice telling of blight in parts of Kansas and of threatened damage elsewhere in the winter crop belt. On the other hand, sea board mesagfs said that resellers at Liv erpool were offering hard winter wheat I'c to 3c cheaper than was askt'd in cable grams from this side of the Atlantic and t ha t the German government buying agt-ncy had withdrawn from the market. Bullish factors, however, were more or counterbalanced by word of in cre;i.i?d shipments from t Argentina, about tiiret- times larger for the week as com pared with the corresponding period last y-ar. Corn weakened with wheat, notwith standing gossip of export sales of corn lotaMnrf 1.000,000 bushels. tJixul shipping demand helped to up hold the oats market. An increase of lard shocks here had something of a bearish influence on the provision market. The Chicago grain letter received yes terday by the Overbeck & Cooke company o' Portland lollows: Wheat The market was irregular all day, displaying strength at times on dam age reports from various sections of the belt, but finished weak, with more or less liquidation induced by reports from the seaboard of offers by foreigners to reseii wheat bought a month ago. The impor tance of the latter was minimiied by the fact that a fair-sized export business was being done today. Primary receipts were again smaller, t nicago receiving only 3D cars. Cash markets ruled firm and ore- 111 i urns locally were advanced one or two cfnrs "fn contract grades. The trade DAIRY BUTTER 22!2c PER LB. Xet Port In nd Gnarantrfd. Checks by Return Mull. THE SAV1NAR CO., INC. 100 Fro.t St., Portland, Or. 1.21'. - CORN. . July ..... .62 .62- .6114 .617s Sept. - .6474 .85 -64 .64 Dec ..... .63 .63Va .62 -62 OATS. July .1... .38H .38 -3T -8814 Sept 3934 -40 ' -3 -vtt LARD. 11.42 11.40 11.70 11.65 SHORT RIBS. July ,. Sept. uasn prices were as ioiiowb. Wheat No. 2 red. $1.23; No.- 2 hard. Corn No. 2 mixed, 60i460o; No. 2 yellow, 60 61c , ,T - Oats No. 2 white, 3840c; No. 3 white, S63914c. Rye No. 2, $1. - : Barley 6069c Timothy seed $45.50. Clover seed $12 20. - Pork Nominal. Lard $11.30. Ribs tl2.5013.50. ; ' Cash Grain Markets. Furnished by Herrin & Rhodes, Int. Portland. . XT , MINNEAPOLIS!, June 2. Wheat No. 1 dark northern, $1.47l-60; No. 2 dark northern, $1.45 01.36; No. S dark north ern, $L381.53; No. 1 northern, $1.46 152: No. 2 northern, $1.431.52; No. 3 northern, J 1.86 1.47; durum, $L20Va L2Coni No. 2 yellow, 6455c. Oats No. 2 white, 3oli 36c; No. 3 white, 35c. Rye 9596c. Barley 50 61c. Flax $2.532.65. DTJLTJTH, June 2 -Wheat No. 1 dark northern, $1.481.63; No. 3 dark , north ern. $L391.S6. Oats 344 36?4c. Rye 98 c. Barley 44 Flax $2.65 WINNIPEG, June 2. Oats No. 2 white, S5c; No. 1 feed, 5074c; No. 2 feed, 47Wheat No. 1 northern, $1.38 ; No. 2 northern, 81.33; No. 3 northern, $1.24. Primary Beceipts. CHICAGO, June 2. Primary receipts Wheat, 864,000 bushels v I'03'0"0., b,uS;: els Corn, 1,877,000 bushels vs. 1,633.000 bushels. Oats, 766,000 bushels vs. 848, 000 bushels. Shipments Wheat, 1,152,000 bushels vs. , k.i. nn-m 713 000 hnshels vs. 1,150.000 bushels, uats, i,oi.,w vs. 664,000 bushels. Clearances Wheat 164.000 bushels. Corn, 041,000 bushels. Oats, 793,000 bushels. Four, 11.000 barrels. Kansas City Grain Market. iTiwcio PTTY. Mo.. June 2. No. 2 -i i mi Ad- 9 rr.. S1.l9ia3.2l. Corn No. 2 white, 5656c; No. 2 yellow, 57 08. Hav unchanged. Wheat -July. $1.12; September, Sl.13 ; December, Sl.14. Com July, 36 Tic; September, 59&c. Minneapolis Wheat Futures, ' MINNEAPOLIS, June 2. Wheat July, J1.3S; September, $1.25. "Winnipeg Wheat Futures. WINNIPEG, June 2. Wheat July, 51.31 Va; October, 1.21 Grain at San Francisco. , SAN FRANCISCO, June 2. Wheat Milling, $2.102.15; milling, feed, $2S2.10. Barley Feed, J1.33; shipping, 51.40 145. nofo tiaH fri S1.55tSl.65. rwT white EtrvDtian. S22.10; red Hay Wheat, J161S; fair, $14 10; ot 1?l(ffl1R wilri nut. SI 1(8)13: al frjfa, S1518; new, first cutting, S1315; StOCK, J.U(& X4, pi-ittW, JlUiUliItH.. Seattle Grain Market. mi . mrwT T7 W..V T..r.a 9 Who a f Warrl white, soft' white, white club, soft red winter, northern spring, $1.21; hard red winter, l.-: ; eastern reu nuii aua. J3ig cena Diuesiem, Hay and feed unchanged. Cotton Condition, 69.6 Per Cent. WASHINGTON, June 2. Condition of cotton on May 25 wa 89.6 per cent of a normal, compared with 6.0 last year, 62.4 in 1920; 75.6 in 1911 and 74.6 the 10-year average, the department of agriculture an nounced today in its first condition re port of the season. A forecast of produc tion was not issued, but will be an nounced with the first estimate of cotton acreage In July. Condition of cotton May 25 by state -follows: Texas 61, California R4 Arizona SI. ail other states 73. Revised figures for 1921 were announced as follows: Area in cultivation at end of .Tun. 31.678.000 acres; area picked, 30, 509,000 acres and yield per acre 124.5 pounds of lint. Virginia &1, North Caro lina S4, South Carolina bi, Georgia 71, Florida 85, Alabama fcO, Mississippi To, Louisiana 70, Arkansas ib, Tennessee Missouri 90, Oklahoma 67. Coal Advances at Chicago. CHICAGO. June 2. Increase of 25 to 50 eenti a ton for coal on tne retail mar ket Yesterday were forerunners of further advances after existing supplies are ex hausted, according to leading dealers today. Retailers declared the rise was one ot the results of the Washington conference of coal operators Wednesday, when Sec- rotary Hoover approved a maximum price of S3. 50 a ton for spot coal at the West Virginia mines. These retailers predicted that West Virginia coal would go to $9 a ton within a lew aays, an aavance of $1.73. Coffee Futures Higher. NEW YORK, Juno 2. The market for coffee closed 4 to 11 points higher. Sales were estimated at R7.000 bags. July, 10.27c; September, 9.94c; October, 9.83c; December, 9.62c; January, 9.56c; March, 9.44c; May. 9.37c. Spot coffeee was reported in moderate demand at 11c for Rio 7s and 14,frc to 14 c for Santos 4s. Metal Market. NEW YORK, June 2. Copper, steady; electrolytic, spot and futures, 1214c. Tin, firmer; spot and nearby, $32; fu tures. $31.75. Iron, steady and unchanged. Lead, firm; spot, $5.65 & 6. Zinc, steady; East St. Louis, spot and nearby delivery, $5.30. Antimony, spot, $5.37(5.50. " Cotton Market, NEW YORK, June 2, Cotton futures opened steady: July. 20.47c; Oct.. 20.1Sc; December, 20.02c; January, IJhSOc; March, 13.62c. Cotton futures closed strong; July, 20.i2c; October, 20.52; December, 20.39c; January, 20.12c; March, 19.92c Spot steady, middling. 21.35c Sugar Market. NEW YORK, June 2. Raw sugar, cen trifugal, 4.29c ; refined, fine granulated. 5. 60 $i 5.70c. , SAN FRANCISCO, June 2. California Uawaiian raw sugar, 4.265c Dried Fruit at. New York. NEW YORK. June 2. Evaporated ap ples, dulL Prunes, quiet. Peaches, quiet. BRITISH CAN WORRY OVER in Europe Breathes Since Mor atorium Was Granted. .v.1923 99 ...1932 105 ...1922 '10054 ...1938 ...1930 109H .1941 SB;t ..192! ..1923 ..1931 93 107 106 971 115 107 H 63 96 S STABLE MARK IS QUESTION German Manufacturers Dread Re covery of taper Because La borers Would Profit. BY FRANCIS W. HIRST. ICopyriBht, 1922, by Public Ledeer Com pany. Published by Arrangement.) LONDON, Juno 2. (Special Cable.) "With the granting uf the moratorium to Germany Europe breathes again and Brit isher, who indulge in pessimism may con centrate their anxieties on Ireland, where another British occupation is regarded by some as inevitable. Our trade with Ireland, where another British occupation is be lieved to be threatening, larger even than our trade with India, is suffering severely from prolongation of the strife tnat makes life and property insecure in many dis tricts. On the sve of Whitsuntide the stock ex change is marking time in most directions, but the temporary settlement between Prance and Germany, . supported by hopes of an .international loan has given a sharp fillip to German 3 per cent, which have risen to 2. Strangely enough, Prussian 5i . per cents, which have also risen, are only slightly higher than 1. . Both se curities pay interest in paper1 marks" and prospects of appreciation . depend upon the question of whether or not the mark can be stabilized at something better than present values. Low Quotations Prevalent. The present very low Quotations of all German securities suggest that the average London speculator does not anticipate a much higher valuation. Many German manufacturers dread re covery, because .depreciating marks enable them to sell profitably abroad at the ex pense of their workmen, whose real wages diminish faster than their paper wages need be increased. Shallow or unscrupulous publicists are arguing from this collapse of the mark that Germany is prosperous and capable of paying full treaty reparations, because they say this depreciation of the currency has reduced the interest .charge on Ger many's international debt to a small frac tion of the British debt charges. They fail to explain that wholesale confiscation cr private savings not only destroys public credit ana the borrowing power of the German government, but also reduces the aggregate income of Germany as much as it relieves German taxpayers and German revenue. Discount Kates Easy. According to British treasury calcula tions the German imperial debt before the war was about equivalent to 254.000.000. At the end of 1921, at pre-war rate of ex change it had amounted to the prodigious total or more than 15,000,000,000. but at this rate of 770 marks to the pound it was equivalent to only 414,000,000 and at marics to the pound, which was. the rate at the time of calculation, the equiva lent was only 241,000,000. British textile industries especiallv cot ton and wool, maintain improvement, but scneral trade languishes under the engi neering aeaaioctt. mscount rates are easy and a further bank rate reduction is expected. 88 .1930 106 & .1948 W New York Bonds. Furnished by Herrin & Rhivl.. Tne . f Portland: Atch gen 4s 1995 u lj 1952 do is B O gold 4s do con, 4s cv 1933 88 do ref oa aas. Canadian, southern 5s ......... 1962 98 Canadian Nor 64s 194H .11.154 Canadian Nor 7s 1940 1124i Cent Fac 1st 4s l. 194ft fiw. Ches & Ohio cv 4&s ............1930 . 88 do gen 4j5s 1992 S7& do cv 5s . .....1946 94 do con 5s m.ift anov. C B & Q 111 div 4s 1949 9 C & West Ind 4s ...1932 . 74 C G & W 4s 1959 .6 OMItStP 4s 1925 8014 do cv 4s 1932 70 do deb 4a 1934 64 do gen 4s A 1899 75 do cv 5s .2014 7514 do g and'r 4s A ...2014 63 Chgo N W gen 4s 1987 85 do 6s .1936 109 do 7s 1930 105 & C R I & P ref 4s 1934 81 Colo Sou ref ex 4s 1935 874 do 4s 1829 93 Del &. Hudson cv 5s 1935 97& do 7s 1930 109 D & R G cv 4s 1-936 78 do ref 5s 19&5 49 Erie P L 4s ..' ........1996 64 Erie con 4s A..... .......1953 b2 Erie B .1953 60 Erie D , 1953 - 52 Erie Pa C G 4s 1951 91 Gt Nor 4s 1961 91 do 7a, -X "1 ls,36 109 Gt Trunk 6s .........1 .1936 103, do 7s - 1940 112 III Cent H 6s , 1963 94 do ref 4s 1953 87 Keo & Des M 1st 5s 1923 89 i931 82 L, & N 7s 1930 107 do uni 4s - 1940 9054 M St P & S M 6s 1946 102 M K & T 4s.... ,1990 8l M P gen 4s 1975 ' 64 do ref 5s 1923 100 ao rei os ..1926 NYC deb 4s -. 1934 do con 4s 1998 do con imp 4s 2013 do cv deb 6s -. 1935 do coll is , 1930 105 in x in xx u n cv OS. ........ r. IU48 N O Tex & Sfex 5s 1935 NPPL4i 1997 N P 6s 2047 N P Gt Nor Jt 6s 1936 96 89 82 864 103 .1965 ...1900 ...1968 ...1930 ...1930 ...1997 ...1950 . ..1949 ....1945 ...1994 ...1929 ...1955 ...1950 The Oregonian publishes practically all of the want ads printed in the other three Portland papers, in ad dition to thousands of exclusive adver tisements not printed is . any other local paper. ...1931 . ..1950 ...1931 . . .1955 ...I960 ...1952 .. .1932 ...1989 . . . 2000 ...1947 . ..1927 ..200S ..1928 103 ..1930 102 ...1939 .1939 Penn 6s 1938 00 gen 4s do 4s do gen 5s do 7s do 6s Reading gen 4s S A L 4s do 5s do 6s A Southern Ry con 5s... Southern Pacific cv 4s. do ref 4s do sf term 4s ....... do conv 6s StLtSPPLilA.. do Ken 5s : -. do P L 5s B do gen 6s do adj 6s do inc 6s StLSW 1st 5s..'.... do con 4s do 1st 4s Tex Pac 1st 5s Union Pacific 1st 4a... do cv 4s do ref 4s ........... do 6s T-'nion Tank 7s .- Wabash 1st 5s do 2d 5s Western Pacific 5s 1946 Industrials Am A&r Oh 7s ... Am Sm first 5s .... Am Tobacco 7s Armour 4s Beih Steel 7s do ref 5s Cerro de Pasco Ss .. Chile conv 6s A .... do conv 7s ....... Col Graph Ss Copper Exp 8s Colo F & I gen 5s . Colo Ind 5s Cuban Am Sugar Ss Cuban Cane cv 7s .. Distillers Sec cv 5s . Diamond Match 7s Pupont 7s '. Empire Gas Fuel 6s Fisk 8s Gen Elec deb 5s .... do deb 6s Goodrich 7s Goodyear 8s ........ Heinz 7s Hershey 7s Ill Steel dob 4s ... Ind Steel 5s Int Agr 5s Int Marine C T 6s . . Int Paper cv 5s .... Kerneeott 7s ............... 1930 l,ack steel as do first 5s Liggett & Myers 5s . v do 7s Uorillard 5s , . do 7s Midvale 5s Morris & Co 7a Procter & Gamble 7s Republic I & S 5s. .. Sears Ro 7s . . . Steel & Tube 7s ... T'fi Drug 8s U 3 B.ub 1st re! 5s. 82 H"4 86 105 105 109 91 96 99 109 109 85 58 26 57 95 90 87 82 .1934 103 .1950 71 98 87 103 79 62 80 75 78 95 97 94 85 ....1929 ....1946 ....1925 1945 1945 1937 I960 134 ... .1968 ...17968 ....1825 1956 1968 ....1930 1943 ....1941 1937 1942 90 117 13 68 100 96 "6 91 TJ S Hub 7s 1930 108 TJ S Steel sf 5s 1963 U1H va onem os Va Car Chem 7s . West Elec 5s W TJ T -col Tr 5s .... West Union 6s ..... Wilson 1st 6s do cv 6s West Elec 7s ....... Westingbouse 7s . . . . . Public Utilities -Am Tel coll 4s do 5s do 6s Bell Tel of Pa 7s ... B R T 5s Cal Gas uni 5s Cities Service 7s B . , City Service 7s O do D , Con Gas cv 7a ...... Int Met 4s Int R T ref 5s Laclede Gas 7s Mont Power 5s A Northwest Tel 7s .... Pac Tel os Pac Gas 5s OH Bonds Anglo Am 7s ..1925 103 Atlantic iter bs ..1931 103 Galena S Oil 7s 1930 103 Humble 7s 1923 101 Pan Am 7s 1930 101 Mex Pet cv Ss : 1936 107 Sinclair 7a ....1925 104 S O Cal 7s 3931 105 do N X 7s 1931 109t Texas Co 7s ...1923 101 Tidewater Oi! 6s 1981 102 Vacuum Oil 7s 1938 107 Foreign government bonds Argentine 2d 7s 1923 99 uu Ul . .. .............. 00 Belgium Ss 91940 107 Bergen 8s 1945 110 oerne OS .1940 112 Christiana 8s 1945 110 vopeiiiwigen 0.3 ............ .1944 Danish Cortsol 8s 1946 French cities 6s ....1934 Italy 6s A 1925 Rus Ruble 5a 1926 Swedish Govt 6s 1939 TJ S Mex 4s 1954 - do Mex ext 5s 1345 Uruguay Ext 5s........ Zurich 8s .1945 French Internal 4s. ......1917 do Victory 5s.... ......1920 Belgian Restoration 5s......... ... British 2 Consols Ital Cons. War jLoan. ... Curb bonds Allied Packers 6s. ............. ... Am Tel & Tel 6s 1922 100 Am Tell & Tel 6s 1924 101 A-uaconuB. copper OS 1U0 ao is 103 Armour & Co 7s 104 eth Steel 7s 1935 102 Copper Ex Assn 8s .....1924 102 t-ujJliBr ejh. Ajsaua 03. ......... .Xtfd ltlti Grand Trunk 6s loii Gulf Oil Co S...7 ... 104 Mum'Dle Oil 7s 101 Sears Roe 7s 3-jear 1923 101 ho West Tel 7s 102 siana uu n. 1 og .1933 106 OO IS 1926 lOfili Swift & Co 7s 1925 101 do 1931 102 Texas Co 7s Notes 20l 97 86 87 91 111 86 95 4 102 54 65 1 J 112 57 7l3 76 03 43 83 iT IS BETTER MILLS ASI EXPORTERS AGATV IN MARKET. BONO MJSILT UNCERTAIN INVESTMENT SITUATION STIXL STRONG. IS "European Dealers Giving Close Attention to Progress of Grow ing Crop in America. The weekly wheat review of Logan & Bryan of Chicago, received yesterday by Overbeck & Cooke company of Portland, lollows: Bearish sentiment predominated and the prices recorded during the past week were tee lowest in some time. Tne outstand ing feature was the complete upsetting: of bullish ideaaK concerning May contracts This was brought about by a deluge or grain from -all directions, for which the futures proved the most profitable medium of marketing. This was well emphasized in the fact- that May went out at a dis count under July, a new crop delivery. On the surface this appears to be a. bearigh consideration, but it remains to be seen whether or not the movement repre sented a clean-up of wheat in various po sitions and whether the grain will con tinue a drug on the market for the re mainder of this month. Yesterday and today, or since May passed out of the picture, all cash mar kets have displayed a better tone, with millers and exporters showing: more in clination, to take hold. Charters have been taken the past two days for more than 1,000,000 bnshels to be moved out of Chicago. This is a local condition and the world's position of wheat will, as always, dominate the ultimate course of prices. With Russia listed among the import ers, instead of being a leading exporter as formerly, it is not reasonable to ex pect that pre-war prices will obtain for the next lew years, regaraiess 01 reau justments in other directions. European dealers are undoubtedly giv inur r.inse attention to the progress of the United States growing crop, because of thA acknowledged close adjustment of sup plies from the world's 1921 outturn. Hence any signs of deterioration will likely be followed by active ioreign uuyms m turn petition with a broader domestic demand. To date crop reports have been uni formly favorable, but at this writing some disquieting reports are beginning to come in from various sections of the belt. Excessive moisture and the appearance of rust in. the southwest, as well as south ern Illinois, Indiana and Ohio, is causing more or less apprenension. Liberties Affected by Realizing Sales French Offerings Are bull and Rails Irregular. NEW YORK, June 2. Trading in bonds today was mixed and uncertain through out the session, but the" investment situation.,-retained all its recent strength, as evidencea toy the speedy sale ot the re public of Bolivia (24,000.000 loan and sev eral other new underwriting. Liberty bonds were active, bat realiz ing sales in that division deterred from their strength, all but two of the entire series closing' unchanged or at slight re actions. British loans failed to reflect the further strength of sterling exchange and-French offerings were relatively dull. Mexican government 4s lost 1 point while the Ss were firm to strong with Havana Electric 5s, Brazil- 8a, Denmark 8s, Neth- ecland 6s and Japanese 4s. The strongest feature among domestic bonds was Peoria & Eastern .income 4b, which rose 3 points to the accompani ment of the higher price quoted for the common stock. Chesapeake & Ohio 4s, New Haven 3 s, Pennsylvania 7s and St. Louis & San Francisco incomes also were higher, but most underlying jails ana mausiTiais were irregular. Total bond sales, par value, aggre gated $16,875,000. Trading on the stock exchange today was characterized by extensive and com prehensive dealings, mainly at higher prices, but Interest in the market itself was overshadowed by interesting develop ments in the domestic and foreign money market. Call loans opened at 5 per cent, the highest initial figure in three months, re laxing when all early demands had been met to 4 per cent. Time money hardened fractionally and accommodations again were limited to short maturities. British exchange continued to feature international currencies, demand bills on London rising to ti.4.7, an overnight ad vance of two cents to the pound and the highest quotation in three years. Other European exchanges shared only slightly in the strength of sterling, allied bills gaining an average of about two points, witn a reaction in the German rate. Neu trals, especially the Dutch rate, rallied from yesterday's setback, although pri vate cables reported additional with drawals of German financial reserves from those countries. Announcement of the Republic-Midvale- Inland Steel merger evoked little enthu siasm for independent steels, Midvale be ing under constant pressure. Crucible was steadily bought, however, and United States Steel scored a new high for two years at 103 shortly after Chairman Gary's statement before a legislative committee that the corporation's surplus probably amounted to $400,000,000. Oils, as a group, dominated the mar ket's speculative side, the later dealings being accompanied by extreme gains of two to eight points in California Petrol eum, Pacific Oil, Freeport-Texas and sev eral of the lower priced issues. ; Studebaker advanced to a high, for the year and other motors and their subsi diaries rose 1 to 2 points. Tobaccos and food specialties eased one to three points. profit-taking being most pronounced in coca coia, bumatra Tobacco and several or the chemicals and fertilizers. Miscellaneous issues were represented by Columbia Graphophone preferred, which reacted, and DuPont, the latter making tne greater part or its net gain or 7, points just before the close. Kalis continued to lag. activity in that division being confined to junior issues, Peoria & Eastern being the most con spicuous example at a gain of 3 points. Sales amounted to 1,500,000 shares.. CLOSING STOCK QUOTATIONS. Furnished by the Overbeck & Cooke company of Portland - Closing Low. Bid. Oregon Banking and Bond News. ..1941 ..1947 ..1923 ...3939 ...1923 ...1942 . ..1931 ...1932 .. .1923 .. .1925 .. .1923 ...1943 ...1934 .. .1927 ...1935 108 ...1931 10' ...1924 ...1941 ...1952 . ..1940 ...1925 ...1941 ...1930 . . . 1930 ...1940 ...1952 ...1932 ...1941 .1935 1V8 lft5 1923 99" 1950 90 1951 9fi .....1944 - 113 1951 95 . . . ..1936 1830 .....1923 ,...1940 ,..-..1922 3951 103 924 102 S9 104 95 122 91 107 45 202 90 77 106 86 47 100, 106 100 106 99 115 104 103 90 99 80 ' 97 Stock. Advance .Rum Agr Chem.... no ptd Ajax Rubber.. Alaska Gold.. Alaska Jun. . . Allied Chem.. Allis-Chal ... do pid.:.... Am Beet Sug. Am Bosch. . .. Am Can Co. Sales. High. 100 17 3,700 42 . 41 42 100 67 . 67 C7 1,100 18 17 17 100 100 -1 1 1 2,300 T0 69 70 5,800 . 50 49 49 iou so ao 800 47 47 47 600 46 46 46 6.800 50 " 48 50 do Dfd . 104 Am Car & Fd 400 166 166 166 ! Correspond. Jjr , enct tickler ! in this lbe sieriograpj : and ))er tools HOW about your typewriter desks? Are they comfortable? Business-like? Do they have ample drawer room compact, neat space for stationery and card records? A typewriter support that doesn t vibrate with every stroke of the keys ? ' West-Made is the ideal stenographic desk. One exclusive feature is the correspondence tickler or 'worry-saver." This alone In creases the efficiency of many stenographers 50. Companies like the Durant Motor Company, Standard Oil, Shell Oil, Federal Re serve Banks, that employ many stenographers, use West-Made desks. West-Made is a complete, line of office desks. Styles for executive or general offices for business and professional people. But every style, sturdy, well-made, good-looking. Added to the recognized merit is a substantial saving in freight, : because West-Made desks are built on the Pacific Coast. Sold under unlimited guarantee! V ' These dealers will be glad to show you the West-Made line. WEST-MADE DESK COMPANY Manufacturers Portland, U. S. A. KOham Stationery & Printing Co. Glass & Prudhomme Co. , Bushon? & Co. "The Tilty-Year Desk L & N Mackay MarhLr.cl Oil : . . Martin & Par. May Stores... 200 200 7.800 5,900 2UU Mex Pet ' 4,800 auo 1,700 J.900 800 800 800 900 200 1,100 118 9314 39 30 118 141 311. 1514 4114 18 41 73 23 23 58 118 9214 3814 83 118 13951 31 14 38 18 41 118 9214 '. .3914 .. 35 118 14114 30 1B14 I 38 38 41 Ahroeek . Aleom&h so 69 15 7a do Dfd . Am Cot Oil... 2,400 do pfd 100 Am Drug Sya . ... 300 Am Hide & L. 8110 do Dfd 1.400 Am Ioe 1,200 109 Am Intl Corp. 4.700 30 Am Linseed.. 1.900 S9 do pfd i 69 Am Loco 2,600 116 115 . 115 do pfd . 115 Am Sat Raz. 400 6 6 Am Ship & C. 800 24 . " 23 23 Am smelter.. l,iuu t oo to4 400 38 800 3874 800 Sl 200 107 6,800 43 123 143 141 33 2,700 1,900 i.soo "ioo 3.400 4,300 128 800 100 ' 100 91 100 105 3.500 41 20 38 1 1"5 101 95 I'm v. .1941 HIK Lumber conditions are Improving to the extent that there is no problem of unem- nlovment and money is plentiful in Ray mond. Wash. This is the opinion of Fred Eichner, cashier or me iJirst .National Bank of Raymond, who was in Portland yesterday. "For a . lon-g time Raymond was hard hit, as were an other rowns ana cities that are almost entirely dependent upon lumber." said Mr. Eichner, "but now conditions are improving. All of the mills axe iw running and there is more real prosperity in our section, or Washington than in many montns." . 'There is one of the best bankers in this state," declared a vice-president of one .of the Portland banks, as he pointed at a woman m the institution yesterday afternoon. He was referring to Marie Barnett Cooper, president of the "W. M. Earnett Bank of Wasco. She is one of few women bank presidents in the entire country and has gained the reputation - of beinE highly successiui in a business way. In addition to being a banker, Mrs. Cooper runs a larfire wheat ranch. Jshe reported that the prospects for wheat in Sherman county this year axe equally as good as they were last, The bond department of the Security Savines & Trust company Thursday pur chased $188,695 worth of district interest bonds from State Treasurer rioit. Tne Angio-London-Paris Bank of San Fran cisco participated in the purchase. ' The companies bid a premium of 91350 for the 41 per cent securities. The bonds were sold to pay guaranteed interest charges on the state irrigation Donas. At an organization meeting held Thurs day in the First National bank, A. Lu Mills was chosen president oi tne newiy or ganized Pacific Coast Joint Stock Land Bank of Portland. Other officers were chosen as follows: W. L. Thompson and E. R. Corbett, vice-presidents; E-. H. Geary, treasurer, and Roger MacVeagh, secretary. The new bank will not start active opera tions before July 1. according to Mr. Mills. An issue of 40.000,000 guilders . Anton Jurgens' United Margarine Works bonds will be sold today with a number of local bond houses and banks participating. The bonds will bear 6 per cent interest, are due July 1, 1947, and are non-callable be fore January 1, 1928. White. Weld & Co. and the Union Trust company of Cleve land, O., are the underwriting companies. Demand for the 8 per cent 25-year bonds of the republic of Bolivia, when the issue was placed on the market yesterday, was so great that before noon the entire amount Qf 525,000,000 was sold. Most of the bond houses of the city participated in the eale. Blyth, Witter & Co. was one of the underwriting companies. . ' Glenn E. Miller, president of G. E. Miller & Co., left last night for San, Francisco, where he will remain for a few days trans acting business for his concern. ,. . W. A. Tyler, vice-president of the Asr toria National bank, was in Portland yes terday for a few hours. . . . Chicago Potato Market. CHICAGO, June 2. Potatoes Receipts, 36 cars: total United States shipments. 596- market, stronger; Wisconsin sacked round white, JL401.56 cwt. ; Michigan sacked bulk, 1.451.S5 cwt.; Idaho sacked russets. S1.90ffl2 cwt.; Louisiana., sacked Bliss Triumphs, $2.802.73 cwt.; Alabama, sacked Bliss Triumphs, $2.75 2.90 cwt. : Texas sacked Bliss Triumphs, $2.302.50 cwt.; South Carolina, Irish Cob blers iio. 1. $5.65, do Pfd Am Snuff Am Steel Fdy Am Sugar . . . do pfd Am Sumatra. Am Tel & Tel 3,300 Am Tobacco.. do "B" Am Wool Am W P pfd. Am Zino Anaconda . . . Assd Oil Atchison do pfd Atl Coast Line Baldwin Loco 6,100 117 do pfd B & O do pfd Barnsdell ' . . .. Beth Steel 'B' Booth Fish B R T Butte C & 2. . Butte & Sup.. Barnes Bros., Caddo Oil ... Calif Packing Calif Pet do pfd Can Pac . Cent Leather. Cerro de Pas.. Chandler Mot Chi & N Wf.. Chgo Gt W .. do pfd Chill Cop . . . 29 9 -6 15 71 108 49 39 98 119 29 59 15 71 108 49 39 C M St P do pfd. .... Coco Cola C & O Colo F & I. .. Colo Southern Col Gas & EL Col Graph ... Con Gas Cons Cigars. - do pfd Cont Can Cities S oc B. Corn Prod . . do pfd Cosden Oil C R I & P.- do "A" pfd do "B" pfd Crucible do pfd Cuba Cane .. do -pfd Cuban Am S Dome Mines.. Del & Lack.. Davis Chem.. Endl Johnson Erie do 1st pfd.. Elec Stor- Bty Famous Play. Fed Mn & Sm do pfd Fisk Tire. . . . Gaston Wms. . Gen Cigars .. Gen Elec .... GeV Motor ... do 6 Gen Asphalt.. Goodrich Goodyear Granby . Great Nor Or. do pfd Gre Cananea.. Gulf S Steel.. Glen Alden Houston Oil.. Hupp Motor.. His Cent Inspiration ... Int Ag Cp cm do pfd Interboro . do pfd Inter Call Int Harv .... do pfd Int Mr Mar.. do pfd Int Nickel Int Paper ... do pfd Invincible Oil. Island Oil ... Jewel Tea . . . K C Southern. do pfd Ke.ly-Sprfld .. Kennecott . Keystone Tire. Lacka Steel... Lee Tire Lehigh Valley. LoriUard jjowe -Xheatera 106 40 123 142 140 92 "26"" 66 123 89 91 105 50 116 "49' 61 47 77 7 ' 27 "32" 138 13 78 ' 63 i39" 40 39 75 75 9 22 33 27 42 67 66 33 49 So.. 6 116 31 2,400 69 66 98 130 38 - 38 79 . so-ji 2,800 SO 100 61 900 47 1,900 78 1.800 7 3,800 . 27 "466 'S2 4,100 139 100 . 13 300 78 47.800 71 "066 i39 6,800 41 2,700 ,40 . 7,800 76 800 75 300 9 "5,760 23 1,400 33 100 27 1,600 43 12,300 70 40O 66 3,700 35 100 49 t.200 88 16.S00 5 300 116 600 32 1,200 103 100 115 31,900 47 3,400 45 100 . 98 400 84 3,800 76 "l'ioo 17 1,800 37 16,800 . 26 200 29 200 124 600 59 1,700 84 900 17 900 25 9,900 . 48 800, 85 ""266 51 , 900 IS "2,4O0 78 200 167 2,100 .15 13,100 67 1,300 . 43 '"266 33 2,000 42 900 77 200 34 900 85 8,800 82 800 20 200 106 700 44 700 . 11 "200 41 500 2 .900 4 4,400 - 10 800 106 " 2, 100 25 1,900 86 900 18 800 51 """900 is 1,000 1 100 21 900 26 l'.-ioo 51 3,900 39 4,900 21 1,000 77 5,966 66 900 158 1,400 16 102 115 46 44 : 98 '84 -73 17 36 25 29 . 124 58 83 16 25 46 85 50 17 76 167 WA 66 42 33" 40 76 34 82 81 20 106 44 . 11 - 41 1 4 10 105 24 84 17 52 18' 1 20 2 si " 38 .20 . 7 65 158 .16 106 42 123 142 140 93 33 20 56 128 99 91 104 40 116 111 49 61 47 78 7 27 7 32 138 13 78 70 97 139 41 39 75 75 20 2S 32 ,27 62 68 66 ' 34 49 87 6 116 32 67 68 23 102 115 47 44 97 83 75 94 ' 17 37 26 29 124 59 83 16 25 47 85 10 50 17 77 166 14 82 66 43 12 33 41 76 34 S4 5.1 . 82 20 3 106 44 11 . 41 1 - 4 10 105 112 24 B4 18 62 So 18 1 20 26 07 51 38 21 77 S3 65 158 16 1,700 900 900 1,200 '200 1,100 6,300 900 1,500 300 900 1,100 5,100 .2.800 7.600 1,400 3,900 300 700 1.300 9,800 600 3,100 67 147 65 19 33 108 76 - 78' 91 4 8 27 14 9 72 48 68 72 65 42 85 34 84 66 20 10 66 37 ' 89 -. 79 122 19 76 23 23 . 67 . 66 146 52 18 32 107 75 78 90 3 ' 8 26 14 9 71 46 04 ' 71 64 41 84, 33 33 53 19 10 65 86 S8 79 122 18 75 Miami Mid States Oil Midvale Steel.. M K & T WI.. do pfd Mont -Power. . . Mont Ward... . Mo Pacific. . . . do pfd. MStP&SSM Nor Amer 1.80O JNat .Biscuit. . . 500 Nat Enamel. . 2.800 Nat Lead Nevada Con... New Haven. . .. Nor & West. . . Nor Pacific... Nova Sco Steel N Y Air Brake N Y Central. . Okla Prod ref. Ont Silver Ont & West. . Otis Steel Paoif ic Dev. . . Pao G & E Punta Allegro. Pacific Oil Pan Amn Pet. do "B" Penn Peoples Gas. .. Pere Marq .Pure oil Phillips Pete.. Pierce Arrow. . Pierce Oil Pitts Coal 8,000 Pitts & W Va. 4,200 do Dfd 200 P Steel Car... 100 Pullman 200 Ray Con 1,700 Reading 2,600 Remington Replogle Steel. 3,600 RepUb 1 Q., 44.2UU do pfd a.iuo Rep Motors. ... 6,100 Koyai XJ uiu. xa.ow Rv Steel Spg.. 100 Stand Oil Ky Sears Roebuck Shattuck, Aria Shell T & T. . . Sinclair Stand Oil Ina. Sloss Shef .... So Pac So Ry Stand Oil Cal. StLiSF... Strom Garb... Studebaker ... 45,800 Swift & Co Tenn uop c u. 1,400 Texas Oil .... 43,800 Texas Pac . . . 1,000 Tex P O & O. 1,800 Tob Prod 12,600 Tran Cont Oil 9,600 Union Oil Del 14,200 Union Pao ... 300 United Alloy . low United Drug.. 100 Un Fd Prod.. 8,600 Un Fruit 100 Un B & P TJ S O I Pipe Un Ret Stores. 16,700 U S Ind Alco. 2,900 TJ s Rub 2,100 do 1st Did TJ S Smelt ... 200 TJ S Steel .... 45,600 do pfd Va onem .... ,000 do ofd ivu Vanad Steel . 4,100 Vivandou .... 800 Wabash 3,800 do A pfd... iw do B pfd Wells Fargo... 1,400 Was Pao ... 300 do Pfd "l West Union... 100 98 98 97 Westghse A B ...... o do E &M... l.ouo oz) , - o West Md 900 12 11 12 White Motora.2.900 51 50 60 Willys-Over... 8,600 9 9 9 do ma ouo '- Wilson Pack..' 200 46 45-- 45 WIh Cent 80 ' Woolworth ... . 100 157 157 157 Worth Pump... 1.300 W & Lt t2. .. . 0,300 White Oil ... 1,600 Cal & Ariz 400 900 200 3,900 '466 3,900 4,300 8,400 118 4UO 2914 500 65 34 75 84 13 62 104 104 1 79 11 -44 : 36 119 48 : 90 24 117 29 54 , 125 123 124 .... JAM 12 49 32 40 80 18 38 78 95 14 64 104 108 79 12 44 37 120 49 80 24 23 23 66 68 66 146 63 95 19 2 107 76 36 78 ' 3 8 27 .14 9 . 72 47 68 72 65 41 84 83 34 64 19 1U 65 3b 89 . 78 122 18 75 34 35 77 95 14 64 103 104 79 11 44 37 120 49 90 24 117 29 64 Daly West . East Butte Franklin Mi: Hancock . . , Helvetia . . . Island Creel Keewanaw . Kerr Lake Lake Cop .. La Salle ... Mohawk. May Old Colony Mason Valley ... North Lake Oseola Mng .... Obijawa ....... Quincy Mng ... Isle Royal South Lake . . . Sup & Boston . Un Shoe Mach do pfd Superior Cop ... Trinity Cop ... Utah Con Utah Apex Ventura . . . Wolverine ,64 65 , 20 50 .28 29 , 4 4 . 15 16 . 64 . 65 287 290 ,20 20 . 11 ' 12 , 8 8 15-16 , 2 2 , 11 11 .-2, 2 , 3 3 1 1 .112 113 . 2 3 , 3 3 . 4 4 ; 1 2 . 2 3 . 7 8 . 5 5 . 2 2 . 14 14 . 6 6 . 30 50 . 27 28 . 26' 27 . 3 8 . 38 39 . 26 26 . 47 48 . 1 . 1 . 40 40 . 26 27 . 4 4 .15-16 1 . SO 85 . 1 1 .3 3 . 44 44 . 3 3 . 33 83 . 1 - 2 . 15 16 12 50 32 32 81 19 24 189 38 78 ' 9 141 12 50 32 32 80 1 68 58 65 44 103 300 120 2,600 68 33 70 61 12 12 32 "78'" 21 24 . 24 189 139 38 38 . 78 78 8 140 , 66 34 66 57 64 104 44 -02 119 68 32 70 . 50 12 12 32. 22 78 20 8 141 66 66 64 '44 100 119 68 32 69 50 12 12 31 "76 64 14 10 f Liberty Bond Quotations. Liberty bond and victory note ouota- tions furnished by the Overbeck & Cooke company, Portland: Open. High. Low. Close. Liberty 3 .... 98.88 100.00 99.88 100.00 do first 4s 99.80 do second 4s " 99.86 do first 4s.. 99.96 89.98 99.90 99.92 do second 4s 99.92 99.98 '99.92 99.94 do third 4s. 99.94 99.98 99.92 99.92 do fourth 4s. 99.94 99.98 99.94 99.96 Victory 4 8 ....100.60 100.62 1O0.5S 100.60 do 3s 100.02 Honey, Silver, Etc. 1 NEW YORK, June Z. Call money easier. High, 6; low, 4; ruling rate, 6; closing bid, 4; offered at 5; last loan. 4: call loans against acceptances, 4 Time loans firmer. Sixty days and 90 days, 4; six months, 44. Prime mercantile paper, 4. Foreign bar silver, 71c. Mexican dollars, 54 c. LONDON, June 2. Bar silver, 36d per ounce. Money z per cent- Discount rates, short bills, 2 5-16 per cent; three-montns bills, 2Z 7-16 per cent. - Swift Co. Stocks. Closing prices of Swift & Co. stocks at Chicago were reported Dy tne overbeck & Cooke company of Portland, as follows: Swift & Co .....103 National Leather 2 do new 8 Swift International 20 Libby. McNeill & Libby 2 Bolivia, Loan Oversubscribed, NEW YORK, June 2. Bankers an nounced today that the issue of $24, 000,000 Republic of Bolivia external 25 year 8 per cent gold bonds had been over subscribed. - Mining Stocks at Boston. Furnished by Overbeck & Cooke Co. of Portland. Bid. Ask. Ariz Com . . ... .... ... .. . 10 10 Adv&ature 65 11 Foreign Xixchange. Foreign exchange rates at the close ot business yesterday, furnished by the North western National bank of Portland. The amount quoted is the equivalent of the foreign unit in United States tunds: country and unit. . Rate. Austria, kronen ....r; ......S .00025 Belgium, francs .08510 Bulgaria, leva '...1.. . .00800 Czecho-Slovakia, kronen. .02000 .Denmark, kroner .21850 England, pound sterling. ....... 4.49625 Finland, rinmark ... France, francs .... Germany, marks Greece, drachmas .. Holland, guilders .. Hungary, kronen . . Italy, lire Jugo-Slavla, kronen Norway, kroner .... Portugal, escudos .. noumama, lei .02200 .09160 .00400 .04290 .38830 .00180 .05260 .00400 .17910 .08550 .00730 Serbia, dinara .01560 Spain, pesetas .15880 Sweden, kroner 25920 Switzerland, franca .19160 China Hongkong, local currency.. .58250 Shanghai, taels .82000 Japan, yen 48250 NEW YORK, June 2. Foreign exchange irregular. Great Britain, demand $4.47. cables $4.47, 60-day bills on banks $4.45; France, demand 9.12, cables 9.12; Italy, demand 6.22, cables 5.22; Belgium, demand 8.43, cables 8.43; Ger many, demand 37, cables 31; Holland- demand 38.85, cables 38.80; Norway, de mand 17.8o; Sweden, demand 25.90; Den- mark, demand 21.78; Switzerland, demand 19.14; Spain, demand 15.85; Greece, de mand 42.22; Poland, demand .02; Czecho slovakia, demand 1.92; Argentine, demand 36.37; Brazil, demand 14.00; Montreal, 80 1-16. Standard Oil Stocks. Standard Oil Quotations furnished by Overbeck; .& Cooke company of Portland : Bid. Asked, Anglo 21 22 orne escrysmer ...... .aya Buckeye 95 Cheesebrough 195 do pfd ..........110 Continental ................. .144 Crescent ..................... 64 Cumberland ............. ... . . 130 Eureka 95 : Galena com 56 do Old pfd 107 do New pfd ......100 Illinois Pipe 173 Indiana Pipe 98 National Transit 29 N Y Transit 175 : Northern Pipe 107 Ohio Oil .....308 International Pete 27 Penn Mex 38 Prairie Oil 640 Prairie Pipe 264 Solar, Refg ...360 Southern pipe , 97 South Penn Oil 230 - S W Penn Oil 83 S O Ind . 119 S O Kansas ........560 S O Kentucky 105 SONY 438 S O Ohio .-,.....460 S O Ohio pfd 116 Swan & Finch 30 Vacuum ................. .445 - Washington 20 - S O Nebraska ..18a Imperial Oil .... 124 405 97 205 112 147 36 140 98 58 110 104 178 98 30 180 109 312 27 42 650 268 370 99 234 65 119 OYO 110 442 "475 118 33 450 30 195 126 Foreign Bonds. Furnished by the Overbeck & Cooke-com- pany of Portland. "Belgian rest 5s do prem 5s do 7s 1945 ,. do 8s 1941 do 6s 1925 British 6s 1922 .. do 5s -1927 Bid. 71 ....... 75 .......109 107 102 90 93 do 5s 1929 93 do vky 4s l do ref 4s 77 Bordeaux 6s 1934 86 Canadian 5s 1937 98 do 5s 1926 99 do 5s 1929 100 do 5s 1931 98 do 5s 1927 99 Chinese 5s 1951 53 Chilean 8s 1941 104 Denmark 8s 1945 110 Dan muni 8s 1945 110 French 4s 01 do 5s 1920 do 5s 1931 do 7s 1941 do 8s 1945 German W L 5s ..... Berlin 48 Hamburg 4s , do 4s Letpslg 4s do 5s Munich 4s do 5s ......... .. Frankfort 4s ... 81 ... 69 102 104 ... 2 ... 2 ... 3 ... 3 ... 3 ... 3 ... 3 ... 3 Ask. 74 79 109 107 102 93 V6 " 96 80 87 . 99 .99 101 98 100 54 105 111 1U 08 83 70 102 104 8 - 3 ' 3 4 4 4 4 4 Italian 6s 1918 41 42i Japanese 4s 1931 77 771: do 1st 4s 1925 90 91V; do 2d 4s 1925 89 90 Norway 8s 1940 110 110 Russian 5s 1921 18 21 do 53 1926 4 5 do 6s 1818 18 22 Swiss 6s 1929 101 102 do SS 1940 .....117 118 San Paulo 8s 103 104 U K 5s 1922 108 108'-. A lO'lO THUS do 5s 1937 t'."".!I"'.'."!'.102 102' Swedish s 1939 101 101 SAN FRANCISCO PBODBCK MARKET Pri crs Current on Vegetables, Fresh Fruits, Etc.. at Bay City. SAN FRANCISCO, June 2. (State Di- : vision of Markets. Fruit Apples, 3 04 tier, s2.lD3o; navel oranges, so.oo(tfb; Valencias, $6.508; lemons, 15 07; grape fruit, t34.25; strawberries, $1.101.30: cherries, box, $1.251.75; apricotB, pound 1014c; raspberries, drawer, 85c$l. gooseberries, pound, 1012c; cantaloupes standard crate, $15; rigs, small box, $1.50 2.25; peaches, small box, $2.753. Wa termelons, 89o pound; plums, $2.50 box Vegetables Artichokes, large crate, $4 6; asparagus, pound. 310c; beans pound, 610c; carrots, sack, $3.504; celery, nominal; cucumbers, dozen, 75c rooms, nominal; white onions, crate, $1.25 1.50; yellow, hundredweight, $11.15; parsnips, sack, $33.25; peas,' pound, 4c; potatoes, 11.602.75; new, 8 gr 4c; rhubarb, box, $1-351.50; enmmei squash, crate, 8575c; spinach, pound, 2 4c; tomatoes, $33.25; turnips, $22.25 Receipts Flour, 3580 sacks; wheat, 800 centals: barley. 6171 centals; corn, 160(' centals; potatoes, 1500 sacks; onions. 844 sacks; hay, 240 tons; hides, 2072; livestock. 75 head. Receipts Flour, 1168 Quarter sacks: barley, 8671 centals; corn, 1752 centals: potatoes, 330 sacks; onions, 1021 sacks: bay, 110 tons; hides. 408. QUOTATIONS ON DAIRY PRODUCE Current Market Ruling on Butter, Cneese and Eggs. SAM FRANCISCO. JUM 2. TJBdted States Bureau of Markets,) Butterr-E tras, 40c; prime Iirets, 88c. Eees Extras. Z7o; extra iirera, aoc; extra pullets, 22c; undersized do, 19c uneese oailiorzua xi&is, xancy, .lotoi lb,; Young Americas, fancy, 24c. NEW YORK. June 3. Butter Firm Creamery higher than extrae, 35 (836c, -packing stock current make jxo. a Eggs Weak. Fresh gathered- extru firsts. 2827o: firsts. 25826o; storag' packed extra firsts, 2S28o; firsts, 261 tfzic Cheese-Steady. uriAr.o June 2. Butter Higher. Re oeipts, 1358 tubs; creamery extras, ac firsts, soB33c; eeooaaa, ioiao; si&uu ards, 34c Eggs Unchanged. Receipts, 25,21 cases; firsts, 2323c; ordinary first. 21 22c; miscellaneous, 2222c. storage packed firsts, 24 . Cheese uncnangea. SEATTLE, June 2. Butter and eggs un changed. GAINS IN BUSINESS MAINTAINS!! Month Opens With Promise of Forth: . Improvement. NEW YORK, June 2. Dun's Review t o morrow will say: "Another month has opened with rece. gains in business maintained and wu: promise of further Improvement to follow Current reports from different trades ai i sections of the country give rise to co: -fident expectations and support the mo' general belief that recovery from previo:. depression has definitely developed. "Revival in some basic lines this yc:. has steadily gathered momentum, desp' -various drawbacks and idleness amo -workers has appreciably diminished wi . the increased opportunities for emplt . ment. Labor troubles in the coal mini' : and textile fields, continuing for ma : weeks, have tended to prevent a f .- measure of progress, but the position most operations is more closely approac ing capacity. "Weekly bank clearings were $5,747, 513,000." , Naval Stores. SAVANNAH, Juno 2. Turpentine stea.i 90c. Sales, 371 barrels; receipts 459; sh:-'-ments, 680; stock, 1575. Rosin firm; sales, 545; receipts, 13C. . shipments, 1853; stock, 59,113. uotatior : B, $4.45; D, $4.70; E, $4.90; F, G, H, $5.1 I, $5.15: K, $5.45; M, $5.60; N, $5.75; ':., $6.35; WW, $6.75. Cottonseed Oil Futures. Cottonseed oil futures at New York, fur nished by Herrin & Rhodes, Inc.. Portlai. June, $lli&11.50; July, $11.5511.5 August, $11.6011.01; September, $11.6S II. 60; October, $10.9610.97: Novembn $9.719.73; December, $9 529.63; Jan' ary, $9.519.53; spot bid, 1111.17; tot. saies, 5700 barrel HERRIN & RHODES, Inc. Established 1896. STOCKS, BONDS, COTTON, GRAIN Correspondents E. F. HTJTTON ft CO., N. T Members all leading exchanges, Babeon's Service on File. Bdwy. 4725. 201 Hallway Exchange Bids Swift & Company Onion Stock Yards, Chicane Dividend No. 146 Dividend of TWO DOLLARS ($2.00) per share or the capital stock of Swift ft Company, will b paid en July 1, 1922. to stockholders of record. June 10, 1922, as shown on the books of the Company. C A. PEACOCK. Secretary