Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 92, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 18 April 1910 — CHICAGO LITE STOCK AND GRAIN MARKET. [ARTICLE]

CHICAGO LITE STOCK AND GRAIN MARKET.

Chicago xutx noox U. S. Yards, Chicago, 111., April 18Receipts live stock today: H0g5,31,000 cattle, 28,000,' tf sßeep, 12,000. Kansas City, hogs, 7,000, cattle, 6,000, sheep, 7,000. Omaha, hogs, 6,000, cattle, 2,700, sheep, 7,500. Hogs 6c to 10c lower, mixed, $9.30 to $9.70, heavy, $9.55 to $9.65, rough, $9.30 to $9.50, light, $9.30 to $9.70. Cattle 10c to'2oc lower, beeves, $3.50 to $8.50, cows, $2.75 to $7.25, stockers, $4.40 to $6.66, Texans, $5.75 to $6.90, calves, $6.50 to SB.OO. Sheep strong, $4.85 to SB.OO, lambs, $6 50 to $9.60. Estimated tomorrow, hogs, 13,000, cattle, 2,500, sheep, 10,000. ♦ • cash axAnr Whitt No. 2 red, $1.07% to $1.09. No. 3 red, $1.03 to $1.57%. No. 2 hard, $1.06% to $1.09 No. 3 hard, $1.02 to $1.07. No. 3 S, $1.02 to $1.08%. Corn No. 2, 56%c to 57c. No. 2 W, 60c to 61c. No. 2 Y, 67c to 57%c. No. 3 W, 58%c to 59%c. No. 3 Y, 55%c to 56%e. No. 4,48 cto 52c. No. 4Y, 48C to 54c. Oats No. 2, 41%c to 42c. No. 2 W, 43%c to 44%c. No. 3 W, 41c to 43%c. No. 4 W, 40c to 42c. Standard, 43c to 44c.

FUTURES Wheat May July Sept. Open ... 1.07%% 1.01%% 1.0099% High ... 1.07% 1.01% 1.00 Low ...i. 1.05% 1.00% 98% Close ... 1.06%—1 0.1% 99% Oats Open .... 57%% 60%% 62% High .... 57% 60% 62% Low 56% 60 61% Close . ; ... 57% — 60% 61% Cora Open .... 42%% 39%40 37%38 High . ; ... 42% 40% 38% Low ..... 41% 39% — 37% Close .... 42% 40 38% BENSSEDAEB QUOTATIONS Corn —49c. Oats—36c. Rye—6oc. Butter—2sc. ( Eggs—l 7% and 18c. Hens—l3c. Turkeys—l 4,16 c. Chickens—l3c. Roosters—sc. i NEWS IN PARAGRAPHS. The new 26,000-ton battleship North Dakota was placed in commission yesterday at the Charleston navy yard. Commander Charles P. Plunkett assumed temporary charge. Thomas Nye, of Greenfield, bought and shipped to eastern markets during the last six weeks twelve carloads of eggs, a total of 864,000 eggs, or 72,000 dozen. He paid 19 cents for most of them The Thrall Steamship company, of Michigan City, has filed articles of incorporation in thd office of the secretary of state. The capital stock of the company is $50,000. The directors are P. F. Thrall, A. Harter and M. A. Boyce. Electricians are wondering how William F. Gakle, age 25, escaped death at Elkhart when !4,400 voits passed through his body. He was knocked down and both hands severely burned. Otherwise he is all right. He is chief designer at the Kuhlman electric works and was making a test. Clarence Cutler, the six-year-old son of Albert Cutler, a Bluffton teamster, was caught on the Lake Erie bridge at that place by a passenger train Saturday. The train was stopped with the tender over the child’s body. One leg and one hand were torn oft and other injuries suffered. The boy can not live. The residents of Osceola, the St. Joseph county village which became the nearest “wet” spot to Elkhart and Goshen through the closing of the saloons in Elkhart county, have begun a systematic canvass of Penn township in an effort tQ have the last saloon closed when the license of Thomas Carroll expires in June. Construction work on the new Grand Trunk railway bridge over the SL Joseph river at South Bend, which was held up last summer by litigation in the courts, has been started and a large force of men is engaged in doing preliminary work on the abutments and pillars. The bridge will be wide enough to accommodate two tracks and will be four spans long, each span 124 feet in length.