Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 298, 26 October 1914 — Page 2
PAGE TWO.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. MONDAY, OCT. 26. 1914.
BIG RECEIPTS WRECK PRICES ON ALL STOCK
Rapid Decline Frightens the Fanners Who Put Cattle on Market to Realize Before Greater Decrease. Few Optimistic Traders Predict Short Duration for Heavy Run-Experts See No Relief Signs. "The Indianapolis stockyard's market Is completely demoralized in all departments, with no relief in sight, and the packers are predicting 6-cent hogs if the receipts continue heavy," said V. O. Mattern of Indianapolis, who was a visitor at the Glen Miller yards Saturday. Mr. Mattern said this condition was true for all the large markets In the county. "In Indianapolis 1,000 to 1 1,100-pound grass-fed steers that have ' been selling for 8 to 8 cents a pound, are hard to sell at 6 and 7 cents. I Heavy cows that have been selling J at 7 to IV2 cents are now slow sale at 5 to 6 cents, and feeders that sold ten days ago at 7 and 7 cents can now ! be had at 6 and 6 cents," he continued. Farmers Swamp Market. Receipts in all the' large markets have been unusually large in the last ten days. ' Farmers " have become alarmed at the dropping prices, and are attempting to eover up threatened losses on feeders bought at 9 cents in August. ' A local feeder who is carrying 150 hogs, has feed twenty acres of corn to them already, and last week ; weighed his stuff, and found that at j present prices the hogs would fall i short $1.50 a head of the cost price in j August. I Conditions In the large markets are j reflected in the . smaller shipping points. Dl Hackett, who was a visitor at the local yards Saturday, reported ihat carloads of hogs were loaded at Lynn last week, with many more offered for sale. The receipts at the Glen Miller yards last week was double that of the week before. There are some traders of the more optimistic class, who predict that this heavy run will be of short duration, but those who are in a position to know say low prices will prevail until after the holidays. Ship Several Cars. Several carlods of live stock were shipped out of the local yards last week. Receipts for the week were as follows: Ho(is, 468, top price Saturday, 6c. Cattle, 29; top price Saturday, 7. Calves, 32; top price Saturday, 9c. Lambs, 12; top price Saturday, 6c. The top sale of hogs for the Week was credited to George Hodgin, on the M. C. Henley farm north of Richmond, who delivered 70 hogs of his own raising that averaged 260 pounds, and brought $7, the top price for the week: Walter Farlow lost a valuable steer on the road to the market Friday, on account of the hot weather, an unusual accident at this time of year. The following farmers had livestock on the market last week: George Miller, J. P. Bishop, Walter Richey, M. L. White, Joe L. King, Joel Moore, Charles Bullerdick, Dick Conway, J. F. Thompson, Thad Nichols, Walter Farlow, O. M. Jennings, J. F. Edwards, James Thompson, Miles Shute, Frank Huffman, Forest Meeks, Harvey Osborne, E. S. Wright, Fred Statts, Fred Tice, Jesse GibHon, Dan I'lankenhorn, Charles Surface, J. Higgins, W. H. Edwards, D. M. Hodgins, James Johnston, James Deffenbaugh, John BeeBon, Cyrus Vandergriff, John Jones, William Kinsey, John Moody, Omer I Manning. O. F. Bales, Earl Price, Al'len Huff, A. L. Baldwin, Orval Ellis, Milton Morris. OFFICERS OF C, k 0, iiAsk Works Board for Hearing on Proposed Crossing at Piano Plant. The board of public works today I received a letter from V. L. Booth of iPeru, superintendent of the C. & O. division, asking an appointment some day this week to meet the board in regard to the proposal to place a viaduct over the C. & O. tracks at the foot of South B street, which was petitioned for by employes of the Starr Piano company. The board decided to meet Mr. Booth Friday and the piano company officials will be asked to attend this meeting. A petition was filed with the board lor the grading and graveling of South 1) street between Fifteenth and Sixteenth streets, and cement curbs, gutters and sidewalks. This was referred to the engineer. Possibly this improvement will be made next year. Wednesday evening the board will meet with the public Improvement committee of the West Richmond association to discuss plans for the abatement of the Randolph street dump nuisance. BARREL EXPLODES JONEVILLE, Ind., Oct. 26. August Erck Bescher is dead. He used a hot poker to enlarge the bung-hole of a whisky barrel ana tne Darrei ex ploded. When HOUKWO 15 Burdensome when yon tire easily and nerves are excitable, 70a need medicinal food not i drug or stimulants. SCOTT'S EMULSION is rich fat food ralae; it supplies the liPV arw a im . i the blood, restore strength
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' ... I . 1 ' ' . Goeben Flying the Turkish Flag n rn iiwumiui 1 1 i 1.1 iinnMjMii-Liii.ij.ji-ii-i-iLiLijiii."ijJwu imi . nu ,T'if.""l.' ' iL""" I ' 'l'.' i " 1 juiiiWM-CTts:;? "EM ! r - - "1 , ' " - " , 4 " . . v! H v m 1 - - ..M. !;, - . y
This picture, made in the Dardanelles, shows the German cruiser Goeben, which was sold by the Kaiser to Turkey, flying ship still has its German crew and the Sultan refuses to dismiss it. Reports from Constantinople declare that 600 German army the Sultan's domain is "practically a German province." The Dardanelles forts are said to be under German commanders.
LATE MARKET NEWS
t. A-t-AS .'I f 4 Edited by A. D. Cobb, CHICAGO GRAIN Furnished by Correll and Thompson. I. O. O. F. Bldg. Phone 1446. WHEAT Open. Close December 117V2 115 May 122 120 CORN December 69 68 May 71 71 OATS December 50 50 May 53 53 CHICAGO WHEAT CHICAGO, Oct. 26. Wheat: No. 2 red $1.14V41.1.5.,.N0. 3 red $1.12 1.14, No. 2 hard winter $1.14 1.15, No. 3 hard winter $1.12 1.14, No. 4 northern spring $1. Corn: No. 2 mixea7376, No. 2 yellow 744 74, JS'o. 3 7575ii, No. 3 white 7374i4, No. 3 yellow 7272, No. 4 7373. No. 4 yellow 7474. Oats No. 2 white 47, No. 4 4748, standard 47 49 14. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK UNION STOCK YARDS, 111.. Oct. 26. Hogs Receipts 35,000; market 5c higher; mixed and butchers $6.90 and $7.65; good heavies $7.20 and $7.65; rough heavies $6.70 and $7.15; light $7 and $7.60; pigs $5 and $7.20; bulk of sales $7.25 and $7.55. Cattle Receipts 1,000; market steady to strong; beeves $6.40 and $10.85; cows and heifers $3.50 and $9; stockers and feeders $5.65 and $8; Texans $7.40 and $8J30; calves $8.60 and $11.00. Sheep Receipts 50,000; market 10c lower; natives and-westerns $5.15 and $5.90; lambs $5.40 and $7.70. PITTSBURG LIVESTOCK PITTSBURG, Oct. 26. Cattle supply 100; market strong; choice steers $9.20 and $9.25; prime steers $8.50 and $8,90; good steers $8 and $8.40; tidy butchers $7.75 and $8; common $5.50 and $8; common to fat bulls $5 and $7.50; common to fat cows $3.50 and $6.50; heifers, choice $7 and $7.25; fresh cows and. springers $50 and $80; veal calves $7 and $8. Sheep and lamb supply 30; prime wethers $5.50 and $5.75; good mixed $5 and $5.40; fair mixed $4.25 and $4.85; culls tnd common $2 and $3; lambs $5.50 and $8; heavy ewes $4 and $4.50. Hogs Receipts 65; market slow; prime heavy $7.70 and $7.75; mediums $7.70 and $7.75; heavy yorkers $7.65 and $7.75; light yorkers $7 and $7.25; pigs $6.50 and $6.75; roughs $6.50 and $7.80; stags $6 and $6.25; -heavy mixed $7.70 and 7.75.
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Agricultural Expert. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK INDIANAPOLIS. Oct. 26 HogsReceipts 3,000; market 5 and 10c higher; best hogs $7.65; heavies $7.40 and $7.55; pigs $6.50 and $7; bulk of sales $7.40 and $7.50. Cattle Receipts 450; market steady; choice heavy steers $9 and $9.75; light steers $8.50 and $9; heifers $6.50 and $7.75; cows $5.75 and $6.75; bulls $6.25 and $6.75; calves $5 and $10.50. Sheep and lambs Receipts 100; market steady; prime sheep $4.50 and $4.75; lambs $7.20 and $7.50. CINCINNATI LIVESTOCK CINCINNATI, Oct. 26. Hogs Receipts T5.100; strong; packers and butchers $7.45 and $7.60; common to choice $4.75 and $7.10; pigs and lights $4.75 and $7.30; stags $4.25 and $6.50. Cattle Receipts 2,600; alow; steers $5.25 and $8.00; heifers $4.50 and $7; cows $3.00 and $6.00; calves steady, $4.50 and $8.50. Sheep Receipts 900; steady, $2.50 and $4.75; lambs steady, $5.05 and $7.85. TOLEDO GRAIN. TOLEDO, Oct. 26. Wheat: Cash $1.13, December $1.16, May $1.24. Corn: Cash 77, December 70M, May 73. Oats: Cash: 50, december 52, May 55. No. 2 rye 93. Cloverseed: Prime cash $9, December $9.10, March $9.27. Alsike: Prime cash $8.55, December $8.65, March $8.85. Timothy: Prime cash $2.47, December $2.52, March 2.62. RICHMOND MARKET LIVE STOCK GLEN MILLER PRICES Phone 2577.) Daily Market Report of Glen Miller Stock Yards. Phone 3744. HOGS. Market lower. Best hogs $6.75 LiKht yorkers, 120 to 140 lbs. $6.00 Heavy Sows $5 and $6 CATTLE. Market steady. Cboico heavy steers $7.60 Light steers $6.50 7.00 Heifers $5.007.00 Cows . $5.006.50 Bulls $5.006.00 Calves 8c and 9c SHEEP AND LAMBS. Market, steady. Prime sheep . .2c and 3o
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8 Main Street
Spring Iambs 6c. COAL PRICES. (Quotations corrected daily by Hackman, Klefsth & Co. Anthracite nut, $8.60; Anthracite No. 4 and egg, $8.35; Pocahontas lump or egg, $5.50; Pocahontas mine run, $1.50; Pocahontas slack, $4.00; Jackson lump or egr. $5.75; Winifred, $4.76; Jewel, $5.00; Tennessee, $5.25; coke. $7.00; Winifrede Washed pea, Hocking Valley, $4.50; Indiana, $3.75; $4.00; nut and slack. $3.00. FEED QUOTATIONS Timothy hay, paying $19. Straw, paying 5. Oats, paying 45c.
Corn, paying 70c. Rye 75c. Red clover seed, paying $7.50 bu. Timothy seed, paying $2.50 bushel. Bran selling $27 ton. Middlings, selling $29 ton. Salt, $1.40 barrel. GRAIN MARKET (Corrected daily by Richmond Roller Mills. Phone 2019.) Wheat paying $1.00, oats paying 40c, corn, paying 75c; rye, paying 75c; bran, selling $28 cwt.; middlings, selling $30 cwt. PRODUCE (Corrected dally by Eu Cooper. EAT CABBAGE, FISH, SAUSAGE, NEW BREAD "Pape's Diapepsin" digests food when stomach can't Cures indigestion. Do some foods you eat hit hack taste good, but work badly; ferment into stubborn lumps and cause a sick, sour, gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape's Diapepsin digests everything, leaving nothing to sour and upset you. There never was anything so safely quick, so certainly effective. No difference how badly your stomach is disordered you will get happy relief in five minutes, but what pleases you most is that it strengthens and regulates your stomach so you can eat your favorite foods without fear. Most remedies give you relief sometimes they are slow, but not sure. "Pape's Diapepsin" is quick, positive and puts your stomach In a healthy condition so the misery won't come back. You feel different as soon as "Pape's Diapepsin" comes in contact with the stomach distress just vanishes your stomach gets sweet, no gases, no belching, no eructations of undigested food, your head clears and you feel fine. So now, make the best investment you ever made, by getting a large fifty-! cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any j drug store. You realize in five min-' utes how needless it is to suffer from ' indigestion, dyspepsia or any stomach disorder. Adv. 4
OVERS. S3. 50 t'o $6
$2.50 and S3.00
Old chickens dressed paying 20 to 22c; selling 25c to 25c. Young chickens dressed, paying 25c, Belling 35c. Country butter paying 15 to 25c; selling 30c to 35c.
CHOLERA IN ARMY LONDON, Oct. , 26. Cholera is spreading rapidly in Austria, according to a Bucharest dispatch to the Daily Telegraph. Yesterday four new cases were reported in Moravia, 12 in Galicia and 3 in Vienna.
UNDOUBTEDLY Cold Weather is here to stay, and that will mean heavy weight clothing. Come to this store where you are sure to 4 ' Suiiyourself. 1 ' You'll need a suit like one of these These suits aren't just "something to wear" they're designed for men and young men for whom the best is none too good. But they aren't priced prohibitively far from it. They'll cost you but
You'll need a new overcoat, too, mighty soon You'd better not wait until you need it you may endanger your health if you do. But there's still another reason that makes it unwise to wait the good dressers are snapping up our good styles with a rush and we can't guarantee that the best styles will be here much longer
the Sultan's crescent flag The officers are in Turkey and that
AUSTRIAN ATTACKS REPELLED BY SERBS NISH, Oct. 26. The Austrian attacks along the Bosian front have been repulsed, It is stated, by the Servian war office. The following statement was eiven out todav: "During recent fighting the whole Austrian army in Bosnia was repulsed with heavy losses. An Austrian monitor struck a mine near Skelansla Ada and sunk. A motor launch saved the crew. To To
TO MEET Polo Club Heads Prepare for League. Six managers, will attend the polo meeting to be held tomorrow evening with George Brehm. The D. & K. Kitchen Cabinet company team is the latest to apply for a berth In the league. Preston Coggsball who was figuring on putting a team in the league has hooked up with Zlndorf and Torbeck and will be backed by them. Geyer had not found a backer today. Some of the managers who will be present at the meeting are Perry Zlndorf, The Smoke House; Skinner, Quigley's; John Ulrick, A. S. M.; Vic Newman, Greeks; Batel Geyer. By the use of steel Instead of brass in rifle cartridges, the Germany army has increased the unmber of rounds of amunition that a soldier can carry from 120 to 160 . A GOOD MEDICINE FOR POOR BLOOD Mrs. Brunson of Beliefontaine, Ohio, Believes Vinol is the Best Remedy in the World Her Per sonal Experience. Beliefontaine, Ohio. "My blood was very poor and I was In a weak, nervous, run-down condition. I tried different medicines without benefit and one day my druggist told me about Vinol. In all I took four bottles and certainly got the results I was looking for. It built me up In every way, blood, strength and nerves, and I tell my friends it is the best medicine on earth. Many of them have used it and found it so." Mrs. Earl Branson, Beliefontaine, Ohio. As long as the blood is impoverish ed, thin and poor you will be weak, pale and tired all the time. Vinol, our delicious cod liver and iron tonic supplies iron to the blood, purifies and enriches it, while the cod liver elements contained in Vinol creates strength and rebuilds wasting tissues. Vinol is not a secret nostrum, simply the medicinal elements of the cods' livers with the useless nauseating oil eliminated, and tonic iron added. Try a bottle of Vinol with the understanding that your money will be returned of it does not make your stronger, feel younger and give you an added interest m me. Leo H. Fihe, druggist. Richmond, Ind. NOTE3 You can get Vinol at the leading drug store In every town where this paper circulates. Adv.
MANAGERS
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and tne courage or Health. eijiJ
