Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 19, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 January 1910 — CHICAGO LIVE STOCK AND GRAIN MARKET. [ARTICLE]
CHICAGO LIVE STOCK AND GRAIN MARKET.
CKXCAOO XJTI STOCK ■ , ■ ' Chicago, Jan. 22.—Receipts of live stock today: Hogs, 17,000; cattle, 2,000; Bheep, 3,500. Kansas City, hogs, 3,000; cattle, 500. Omaha, hogs, 4,500; cattle, 100; sheep, 1,500. Hogs open steady. • Mixed, 38.20 to 38.65. Heavy, *8.45 to 38.70. Rough, 38.20 to 38.40. Light, 38.20 to 38.50. Cattle weak. " Beeves, 34.25 to 38.00. Cows and heifers, 32.25 to 36.40. Stockers and feeders, 33.25 to 35.40. Texans, 35.00 to 36.25. Calves, 31100 to 39-25. Sheep steady, 33.75 to 36.80. Lambs, 35.75 to 38.90. Estimates Monday: Hogs, 40,000; cattle, 26,000; sheep, 22,000. ♦ ✓ CASH OKA nr Wheat J No. 2 red, 31.25 to 31.26%. / No. 3 red, 3122 to 3125. / No. 2 hard wheat, 31.14 to 31-15%. No. 3 hard wheat, 31-10 to 31.14%. No. 1 northern spring, 1.15% to 1.16. No. 2 northern spring, 31-13% to 31-14%. No. 3 spring, 31-10. __ . » Corn No. 2. 67c to 67 %c. No. 2 white, 69c to 69%c. No. 2 yellow, 68c to 69c. No. 3, 65%c. No. 3 yellow, 65%c to 66%c. No. 4,64 cto 65c. Oats No. 2 white, 50c. No. 3 white, 49%c to 60c. No. 4 white, 49%c. Standard, 43 %c to 60c. put irons Wheat May July Sept. Open ... 1.11%% 1.02-% 98% High .... 1.11% 1.02% 98% Low .... 1.11 1.01% 97% Close ... 1.11% 1.02 97% - Corn Open ... 69-% 68%% 68%j% High .... 69% Il§B% 68% Low .... 68% 67%% 67% — Close ... 68%% 67% — 67%% Oats Open ... 48%% 45 41% High .... 47% 45% 42 Low .... 48 44% 41% Close ... 48— 44% 41% BENSSELAEB QUOTATIONS Corn—6oc. Oats—42c. Rye—6oc. Butter —26c. Eggs—3o-32c. Turkeys—l6c. Chickens —11c Geese—Bc. Ducks—loc. Roosters—6c.
John R. Walsh is serving a fiveyear term in the federal penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kans. He is 72 years of age. He was one of the most energetic railroad builders the nation ever had and he was a power in developing certain sections of Indiana. He was technically guilty of a violation of the United States banking law. His imprisonment would not seem so had were it not so uncommon for men of money and influence to go to the penitentiary. But while he was not responsible for the loss of a cent to an individual he is given severe punishment and is apt to spend his remaining days behind the bars. The day after he reached the prison Paul O. Stensland, who wrecked the Milwaukee Avenue State Bank of Chicago, looting it of over a million dollars, was set free after serving only a little over two years of his sentence. The public generally regrets the imprisonment of John R. Walsh and had it not been for financial reverses after his first trouble caused by the grasping effort of others to get the better of him, he would probably have gone free. Stensland wrecked a bank and fled to a foreign land, where he was arrested and brought back. He is
free. Walfch used the funds of the depositors with which to build railroads but he always had enough of his own to cover what he borrowed. He was always solvent and no depositor lost a cent He staid like a man and faced a trial and is given a penitentiary sentence that probably means his life. Justice cuts some queer capers in this glorious land of the free. Itch! .Itch! Itch! —Scratch! Scratch! Scratch! The more you scratch the worse the itch. Try Doan’s Ointment It cures piles, eczema, any skin itching. All druggists sell it •et rswrasieanta at nTandmia
