Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 44, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 July 1921 — Page 11
BV.'INE VALUES * HOLD FIRM E&*rcntely Light Receipts in Calves and Sheep. Ms RANGE OF HOG PRICES. ■ Good Hood Good Hidf Minu Heavy. Light, ■f. 59.85 5i.7 f-5 8.85 $9,863 8.80 81. 8.859 9.90 .75 8.90 ® S.vu ■>. 8.85© 8.95 4.SO® 8.85 8.00 ■L 9.00 9.00 9-00 ■oty n. 9.15 915 9.15© 9.15 ■>. 9.15 9.15 9.15© 9.20 B Swine prices were steady at tbe opening of the local lire stock exchange ioglay, with receipts close to 7.500 and a ■good demand bv both local packers and Shippers with Eastern house connee■oßs ■ There was a top of $9 20. with the bulk Q,' the sales at $0 15. Pigs brought 51* down and roughs. $7.75 and down. Ol grades of good swine sold at $315. Hero steady. HThere were close to 100 caives on the Htarket. Prices were generally $1.50 Higher, due to extreme light receipts and ■ good Shipping demand. W There was a c-p of $lO, while the bulk Bit the choice calves sold at $9.5(>®10. B With ICO Sheep and lambs on the marHtet, prices were steady. I HOGS, fceat light hogs, 100 to SS"* ■ lbs average $ 91o® 9.20 b to 8>)0 lbs S.ooy. 9.10 pigs, under 140 lbs b.T-Vo. D.OO Hk c-r sales 9.15 l EE CATTI.E. Hme cornfed steers 1,000 tbs and np $.15<3 i.TS fcood to choice ateers, 1.200 D* lbs 50(3 7.50 fcood to cholce'steers. 1.100 to 1,200 lbs 6 50@ . 00 ■ledium steers, 1,000 to l.K*' fibs 6.00 Q 7.00 Common to medium eteers ■ 800 to 1.000 lbs 5.50® 6.50 U —Heifers snd Cows—|bood to choice heifers 7.00(3 8.00 ■Medium heifers 6 o>i;3 6..5 Common to medium heifers.. 5 oO@ 800 fcood to choice cows B.o"<a 6 00 Hair to medium cows.. 4 50 38."" But term 2 00® 3 (SI *) .T 9 LOOB 1-5 ■ —Bulls Good to choice batcher nulls s.on® 5.25 Bologna bulls 4.003 4.73 Light to common bulls 4 00| 4.50 —Calves— Choice veals bightweight veals £jjj} Common heavyweight veals... 6.00(0. *.OO Stockers and Feeders — Good to choice steers under 800 lbs 5 9-SJJ Medium cowg S : Good cows 159 Good heifers 6 99® 999 Medium to good heifen 4.00< 5.50 j Good milkers 30.>(j75.00 SHEEP AND LAMBS. J£wes I.oo® 2.00 Junba *-<**£ ±OO - Other Livestock CHICAGO. July 2.—Hogs—Receipts. 4.00 o; market. 10c higher: bulk of sales, 98.75®0.25: butchers. 9sSsfii>: packers.: IdlOfiSAO; lights. 90.10fi0.35; pigs. $8 35 fib 73; roughs, $7.75fi8 10- Cattle—Receipts, 500; market, steady; beeves. s6fi 885, butchers, $4 25® S: canners and cutters $1.50 <i 3.73: st.-i k-rs and •'eeders, $3.75fi7 ; cows $5 75®0 30; cnlvei (7 50 -i p. 50 Sheep—Receipts. 1,000; arkets, steady: lambs. $7.75®10; ewes. ? ®5. ■ CINCINNATI. July 2.—H< ,3-Re-ceipts, i,500; market strong and 2tfisoc higher all grades good hogs, $0.50;: roughs $7.50; stags, $5.00. Cattle— Receipts.! 150; market steady; bulls steady; yalvesi #0 Sheep and iambs—Receipts. |$.D >; /market strong. -CLEVELAND, July 2.—Hogs K© 'ceipts, 1.500; market active atd 15c higher; yorkers, $0 65; mixed, $1 .6* ; mediums. $0.65; pigs. $9 65: roughs, 87.50; Stags. $5.50 Cattle —Receipts, iSO. market, slow. Sheep and lambs —Receipts, 300; market, steady; top. sll Calves —Receipt*. 150; market, steady ;j t top. ?1L54). Weather The following table shows the state of the weather at 7 a. in. July 2. Station. Bar. Temp. Weather. Indianapolis. Ind.. 29.89 80 Clear Atlanta. Gn 29.88 72 PtCldy Amarillo. Texas... 20 60 70 Clear Bismarck. N. D.... 30.50 64 Clear Boston. Mass 29 82 62 Rain 1 Chicago. 11l 20.84 80 Clear ■Cincinnati, 0hi0... *9 90 80 Clear Cleveland. Ohio .. 28 92 74 PtCldy er. Colo 30.52 66 Clear Dodge City, Kan... 30 56 72 Clear Helena. Mont 29.68 44 Cloudy Jacksonville. Fla... 29.94 74 Cloudy Kansas City, Mo.. 29.70 76 Cloudy Louisville. Ky 29 92 78 Clear Little Rock. Ark... 29 86 74 Clear ,I.o* Angeies. Cal... 29 82 62 Cloudy [Mobile, Ala 29 94 80 Clear New Orleans. La... 29.96 80 Clear Oklahoma City 29 20 74 Clear Lew York. N. Y 29 86 70 Cloudy Norfolk, Va 29 ,*6 7S Cloudy ] Oklahoma City 29.20 74 Clear Omaha. Neb 29 62 72 Cloudy Philadelphia, Pa... 29 86 72 Cloudy Pittsburgh. 1*a.... 29 92 70 Clear Portland. Ore 30 36 52 Cloudy Rapid City. S D... 30 52 60 Clear Kosebnrg. Ore 30.36 42 Clear pan Antonio. Texas 29. M 76 PtCldy Fan Francisco, Cal. 29 82 62 Clear Bt. Louis. Mo 29 84 76 Clear St. Paul. Minn 29 OS 76 Clear Tampa. Fla 29 96 76 Cloudy Washington, D. C.. 29 86 76 Clear HEATHER CONDITIONS. Since Friday morning scattered showers and thunderstorms have oecarred in the Atlantic roast States, and also irom the upper and middle Mississippi Valley northwestward. Warm weather has continued in all sections from the Rocky Mountains eastward, the temperatures in the great central valleys again ranging generall. above 90 degrees Friday aiternoon. West of the middle and northern Bsrldes. however, it is considerately Wtiir In connection with a Acid of high baregnetrie pressure now* tooting in from the north Pacific. AND WHEAT BULLETIN. J For the twenty-four hours ending at fi a. m. ninetieth meridian time, Satur- ' day, July 2. 1921: [Temperature a ; =-*- c Station* of > _r sf _ „ Indianapolie * -?. £ 3 *= _3 * District. Jc >- =■*£ Z~ % It ill lit 12 > -3.5 ~— .= CiJS Eouth Bend 94 73 0 Good ►Angola 92 70 0 Good Ft. Wavne 9*> 72 0 Wheatfield 95 68 0 Good Royal Center ... .'2 8S 0 Good Marion 95 69 ! 0 Good , Lafayette 94 72 0 Good Farmland 95 t 77 0 Good Indianapolis 94 7 6 0 Good Cambridge City.. 94 <54 j 0 Good Terre Haute 94 74 0 Good Bloomington :94 65 0 Good Columbus 94 66 0 Good Vincennes 1 98 71 0.01 Good Paoil 93 6ft 0 Good Evansville 94 74 0 . ' J H. ARMINGTOJL Meteorologist. Weather Bureau. Escapes Death Twice ■f®Y'DNEY, July 2.—A case unique In Australian law was completed here when Stewart, holder of a good war .sTJcord. was found not guilty of charges ■ having attacked his niece after hav***2 had three trials. On his first trial major was found guilty and sentenced death, but he appealed. At the second EBal he was found guilty again and was item ed to death. The high court conviction and ordered a This time the jury found WSfSW 1 "-
WOULD SCRAP WOMAN’S VANITY BOX
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Pr Frank Mpnagban. deput; • ealth commisioner of New York City, would scrap the vanity box and beaut 'y complexions through a change of diet. He recommended milk and fruits a© cosmetics. He receives thousands of letters from girls who want to get back to natu.v.
ARTESIAN WELL ‘RUNNING WILD’ Spouter in Black Hills Will Have to Be Capped. i SIOUX FALLS, S. D.. July I—The j great Bear Butte artesian well, struck ’ a short distance north of the Black Hills, ■ has developed Into what is believed to j be the greatest artesian well on the ■ American continent so far as tbe volume of flow and Immense water pressure is concerned. Tbl immense artesian spouter now is running wild, and strenuous off rts are being bade to control it. This will be done by capping it. When the flow of water was first struck lin this now celebrated artesian well it flowed at the rrte of 50,000 barrels a day. Recent measurements of the water show the flow now hRS Increased to more than 100.000 barrels a day. ■ Tbe flow of water has increased to such an extent during the last ten days that the well now is beyond control and ; is on a real rampage. The immense amount of watet from the spouter is cutting deep fissures In the field where the well Is. The owner of the land fears that unless the well is soon placed under control the field of eighty acres xi'l be ruined and converted Into .1 , lake. It is expected there will be great diffi culty lu capping the well and thus securing control of the immense flow of water. Farmers of the Bear Butte district have started a movement to adopt some plan • by which the water underlying the dis- | trict can be utilized for irrigation of i crops, and f<-r other farm and ran-h - purposes. This would necessitate the construction of reservoirs, so the surplus (water from his and other wells to be drilled could be stored for use during the dry portions of each season. Tests Children on Ten Commandments i NEW YORK. July 2.—District Attor- | ; ney Lewis, speaking before the South j Congregational Church. Brooklyn, told of a recent test in a Brooklyn public school, 'made at his request, to ascertain how ! many of tbe pupiis knew the ten vom : mandnients. j Out of 1,373 children questioned 490 : did not know the commandments and 331 children had never beard it them, j Asked to repeat the commandments i some ts the pupils gave these answer*: i Tbe first commandment is not to | shoot craps. Don't marry. Do lot make love to your neghbor's i wife. There shall be light. The ten commandments were the ten amendments to the constitution. Children must keep off the steps of street' cars. Not to swear for anything. Don't hitch on wagons. Don't crook anything. Love thy neighbor's wife. Don't swindle. There shall be water. Mr. Lewis declined to give the mim- . ber of the school in which the test was made, but be declared It Illustrated the need of some sort of moral and religious training for these children. ‘Spooners’ Bliss’ Goes Up in Flames ! CHICAGO, July 2. —Oak Park is lr. the throes of a desperate dispute—all tinging on a mysterious fire. An abandoned cnnrc'n property t*cently caught fire at night. It was snveu from total loss only through tile valiant work of volunteer fireman —all very young men. The youthful gromen said the building j had been fired by an incendiary and are ; ‘ now staging amateur sleuth hunts throughout the fashionable suburb. They are aided by scores of blithesome lassies. ! You guessed it—the building was Oak Park's “Spooners' Paradise." Neighbors recently appealed to police j to chase the spooners from the church 1 property, but the police remained neu •' : tral. Now Cupid's followers declare the I neighbors tried to take the law into their j own hands.
Blind Read by ‘Ear’ by This Invention LONDON. June 2.—Blind persons will now be enabled to read their favorite daily newspaper along with the other members of the family, according to Archibald Barr, emeritus proft*ssor of engineering at Glasgow- University. Reading by the blind has been accomplished by producing In a telephone re-.-elver a series of musical notes representing the rations letters as these were passed over by the Instrument In traversing a line it printing. PILGRIMAGE OF MERCY. YREKA, Cal.. July 2.—Dr. Robert H. Heaney made a seventy-miie trip on the back of a mule through snow-covered mountains and performed an operation for cppendicitls on Miss Georgia Smith, who will recover.
ENGLAND TESTS LATEST PLANE Can Soar Straight Up and Hovei Motionless. LONDON. July I.—Extraordinary are the precautions being taken by the authorities to keep the secret of the new “helicopter" the "hushhush" aircraft designed by Mr. Louis Brennau, the monorail Inventor. The machine is now undergoing tests at Farnborough alrdome. This remark able invention, which has long been visualized but never previously achieved by aero engineers, possesses two great ad vantages over the ordinary airplane. It has a direct lift and can soar straight up from any confined space. It can hover motionless in tiie air like a hawk. An important problem in course of solution ;• t) prevent toe machine Dora falling i-. 0 astone If the engine stops. Principles of gyroscopic control are being applied to solve difficulties of stability while the ma -hlne is in actual motion. InteiiM* military Interest is being taken in the experiments. It is believed that a successful helicopter, hovering, if necessary. for hours above any given .©rri tory. Immensely high in the air and almost invisible, would be a magnificent p. itfor:q for detailed reconnaissance, while with a very large helicopter, powerfully engined and capable of lifting great weights, It would be p ssihle to send up and maintain lu the air at any requires height "aerial forts" which might he used with demoralizing effect against an enemy. The success of the new invention is said to be assured, and experimental flights are to take place shortly. Courts Should Prove Sanity CHICAGO, July 2.—A criminal should te presumed insane until proven sane. This psychoanalytical contention Just made public by I>r. William N. Hicksen. head of the psychopathic laboratory of the Municipal Court, has aroused n storm of discussion atuoug lawyers, ulientists aud Jurists. Dr. Hicksen has recommended that his contention be made a part of the crirn Inal code, with as much weight as the basic presumption, a man Is presumed innocent until proven guilty.'" Dr. Hicksen, in his report, holds that it is *ntire!y wrong under the prevent procedure to place tne burden of proving iusanity upon the defense in such ca.e* where sar.lty of tile defendant is questioned. He contends that the burden of proving the defendant sane should rest on tl e prosecution. “There is 11 gradual realization of the complete inefficacy and breakdown of our present id-as and methods of han filing 'Times—a complete realization that our present methods are futile, costly, demoralizing aaJ Inhuman, both to the public and to delinquents," he said. Almost all our murderers and most of our suicides give plenty of warning. v w that we know that a typical criminal is a mental defective, ours is the fault if we do not segregate him.” Dr. Hicksen then declared that the Criminal Court code was at fault in presuming criminals suite.
Baroness Works in California Hotel LOS ANGELES, July 2—Baroness Ottily de Ropp, Russian noblewoman, whose fortune was swept away by the war, and who is now working as a needlewoman In a fashionable local hotel, Is battling life with a smile. The baroness, who formerly had servants to do her every bidding, has hopes of soon ndvat ing from her preser.t position to much better circumstances. “It Is a little hard to take up this work,” she said ' However. I am devoting myself to It and hope to learn.” The baroness is the wife of the Baron YY'l'Jlam (le Ropp, who was an intimate of many of the illustrious men of the imperial Russian regime and who Is said to have owned a 10.000-acre estate in Lithuania The couple came to America In 3915. The estate was devastated during the war and finally seized.
Parisian Women Now Going Jnto Business PARIS, July 2.—The entrance of women into the field of directing French theatrical enterprises has taken on the aspect of real Invasion. Mme. Sarah Bernhardt and the late Mme. Rejane were the first French women to direct their own theaters. Today Mile. Rolle directs the Dejazet Theater. Mme. Cora Laparrerie. who formerly directed the Bouffes-Parisians, is now at the Renaissance. Mile. Constance Maille directs the Marigy and Mme. liasimi the Ba-Ta-Cian, besides supervising numerous revues. Jane Renouardt's nftw theater is nearing completion and Maud Loti is about to assume the directorship of the Imperial. To date most of the enterprises conducted by jromen have been quite successful.
INDIANA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, JULY 2,1921.
WON $2,070 CASE, BUT DIES PAUPER Michigan Mother Unable to Collect From Daughter. PONTIAC, Mich., July 2.—Possessed of a Julgment for $2,070 against her daughter, Mrs. Anna Corbin died penniless lu the county poor farm here. She was 75 and had been at the poor form for nearly a year, where she took refuge after court proceedings revealed her unhappy situation. The aged woman sued her daughter, Mrs. Fred Squlrreal, in Circuit Court, to collect money for services rendered in tbe Squlrreal boarding house, where she had lived, and for money loaned to her daughter. Testimony at that time was that she was turned out of the house because Mrs. bquirrenl could not get | along with her. A son living in Canada sent her back to Pontiac when she ap- j pealed to him, and she was compelled to j take refuge at the poor farm. A judgment of $2,070 was awarded the I aged mother, but she could find no property on which to levy. The daughter was haled to court and declared she had sold the boarding house and spent all th" receipts, having nothing left with which to satisfy tbe judgment. She and her husband were called back later, witn the same results. Meantime the mother sickened and died, without funds or friends. Before her death she assigned the claim against her daughter to the county and steps have been taken to have a special ad ministrator appointed to seek property on which a levy cau be made.
Sends Woman Home to Wash Off Rouge DENY ER. Jnne 2.—When Mrs. Myrtle Lockwood, her cheeks hidden beneath a layer of rouge, her lips greased with carmine lipstick, her lashes darkened and her brows plucked, called upon District Attorney Philip Van Oise to induce him to drop the charges of assault to kill pending against her husband, Paul, Van Cisa said: "Madam, shame on you! If you wish to talk to me about dropping these charges, go home and wash that etnff off your face." Mrs. Lockwood went home She ceme back, mlnua the paint, lipstick and pow der. Y'sn Clse listened to her story, latter he annouueod he would file reasons for ssking the court to dismiss the case against Ixtckwood. i/ockwood was charged with shooting his father-in-law, F. R. Clayton, follow ing a quarrel over the custody of Mrs Lo-kwood’s son by a former marriage, Gotald Clayton. 4 years old.
16,000 Tons Used by Home Brewers WASHINGTON, July 2 Home brewers used up more than 16.1X10 tons of raisins In 1919. YV M Giffen. president of the California Associated Raisin Com pany. estimated today in giving a Seuatp subcommittee his views on the pend lng bill to authorize collective bargaining by farmers He placed the raisin grape crop of 1918 at 16701X1 tons end of 1919 at IS3.<xxi tons, representing demand from home brewers This demand was now decreas ing. he added, the "hobby" for homo browing apparently having wo.u itself out to some extent. Robbed of S2O, Ends Life on Wife’s Grave PEB MOINES, June 2.--J. A. Ridley, aft"'*. 72. a printer, was found on his (fifes grave, where be had committed sul eld -. He had reported to the police that h- had been robbed of s2‘'. FARADINF, FOR BABIES. SACRAMENTO. Cal.. July 2. San Francisco’s infant death rate of 6.1 !a me of the [owes' for large cities In the country, according to L. E. Ross. State statistician. Petaluma. "egg basket” town, has a rat" of only 1.2.
Old Glory is on the Seven AMERICAN SHIPS ARE AVAILABLE FOR YOIK OCEAN VOYAGE Nen -ombiuatlnn Pass' -ger and Freight Ship,. Fast, Luxurious Steamers. Key number brside vhip’ft name Indicate* operator utlioivn bottom of column. EUROPE. Boulogne and London From New York. July 12—Au*uit 16—September 20 —Old North State (lod). Au*u*t 2—September 6 Panhandle State (169). Bremen and Dam If From New York. July 13 —AufUKt 30—Hudson (159). July 23 —Septemler 7 Susquehanna (169 - July 28—September 14—October 20--Potomac (ISV). Naple* and Denoa From New York. August 13—September 21—Pocahontas (IMU. Plymouth, Cherbourg and Bremen From New York. July 23—August 24 —September 28— America (159). July 30—August 27—September 24 — Georg© Washington (169). SOUTH AMERICA. Rio de Janeiro, Montevideo and Ituenot Aire*. FAR EAST. Honolulu, Yokohama, Kobe, Shanghai, Ma- 1 nila, Hongkong From San Fronciwo. July 23—Empire State (105). August 6 —Golden State (106). Yokohama, Kobe, Shanghai, Hongkong, Manila From Seattle July 9—Silver State (106). July 30 —Wenatchee (106). HAWAII, PHILIPPINES, EAST INDIA. | Honolulu. Manila, Saigon, Singapore, Co- i lombe, Calcutta From San Francisco. July 14 —Granite State (105). August 13—Creole State (105). COASTWISE. Havana. Canal, Los Angeles, San Francisco j
80 Matson Navigation Cos. 120 Market Street, San Francisco. Cal. 26 South Gay Street, Baltimore, Md. 91 Munson Steamship Line. 67 Wall Street, N. V. Tel. Bowling Green. 3300. 105 Pacific Mail S. S. Cos. 10 Hanover Sq.. N. Y. Tel. Bowling Green. 4630. 621 Market Street. San Francisco, Cal. 101- The Admiral Line. 17 State Street, N. Y. Tel. Bowling Green 5625. L C Smith Bldg.. Seattle. Wash. 159 l\ S. Mail S. S. Cos., Inc. 45 Broadway. N Y. Tel. Whitehall. 1200.
Q.l SHIPPING BOARD US&Hr*ftOn,PC h 4 SF+ ‘“"t-SALI
Do you know that it is a profitable habit to read the Daily Times classified columns every day—you will often find listed the very things you are wanting to buy. Careful housekeepers and wise business men make it a practice to read the Want Ads thoroughly and intelligently every day because they know many opportunities are offered in the classified columns that will be found in no other manner. Make It a Regular Habit Then there is a “human interest” feature in the want ads—stories of real life. There is the “story” of the lady who has lost her engagement ring—men and women who are out of work and want jobs—the “stories” of those who are in need of help of various kinds—the “stories” of people who have something to sell or trade and so on in an endless number of things. Turn to the Classified Section NOW. Its a Wise Course to follow Phone Main 3500 Just Ask for the Want Ad Clerk
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