Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 78, 10 February 1915 — Page 2
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 10, 1915 n
PAGE TWO
3 3
Stock Quotations and Market News
Edited by A. D. Cobb, Agricultural Expert.
Leased Wire Report.
MAY WHEAT-CLOSES-. AT $1.63 MARKER Grain Market Rules Dull and Closes With Very Small Lossese.
BY LEASED WIRE. CHICAGO, Feb. 10. The grain market ruled dull during the entire session today and closed with losses of to ?ic for wheat, to c for corn and to 3 for oats. The premium for each wheat was unchanged, but the cash article declined with the futures. May wheat was "pegged" at $1.63, as there were buying orders in large amounts at that figure at the close of ten dry. A Baltimore export house was offering 25,000 bushels of No. 2 rye, bought here some days since. Cash transactions were one cargo for export via the Gulf. Here the sales were 225,000 bushels of corn and 330,000 bushels of oatsr, of which 125,000 of corn and 330,000 bushels of oats were for export. The close was: Wheat, May $1.6314, July $i.38. Corn, May 80, July 82 V. Oats, May 61 y8, July 57.
Bulletins on Live Stock
- CHICAGO. Receipts Hogs, 45,000; cattle, 12,000; sheep, 10,000. Market Hogs, 10c lower; cattle 10 to 15c lower; sheep, steady. INDIANAPOLIS. Receipts Hogs, 8,000; cattle, 400; sheep 100. Market Hogs, 15c lower; cattle, 10c to 15c lower; sheep steady
The quarantine against the foot and mouth disease closed the Cincinnati and Pittsburg stock yards.
WARMER DAYS HELP SWELL SALE CROWDS
Horses Bring Especially Good Prices at O. T. McConaha and Bonn Farms.
HELMS SHIPS SEED FOR PURDUE FARM
The seed firm of Brehm and Helms shipped twenty-one bushels of clover seed to Purdue university today, to be used on the main farm owned by the school. The order was placed by Dean
.1. It. Skinner, of the agricultural col-
Three farm sales of universal interest were held today within a radius of ten miles of Richmond. The sunshine and milder weather brought out a good attendance at each place, and the livestock, especially the horses, brought good prices. At the O. T. McConaha farm, one mile south of Centerville, CO head of hogs, 13 horses, 5 head of cattle and 12 sheep were sold, as well as a good supply of alfalfa and clover hay. Vanderbcck and So? conducted the sale, with Frank Jones of Richmond, as clerk, and Thomas Ahl of Centerville, as cashier. Henry Bonn, on the J. B. Unthank farm north of WY'jster, sold 65 good hogs, 30 head of cattle and 5 horses, also several hundred bushels of corn in the crib, some clover and timothy hay, and 25 tons of baled straw. The
Live Stock Sales
CATTLE Live stock, February 22, John Coyne farm, 3 miles south of Milton. GENERAL STOCK Thirty-eight hogs, 7 cattle, 4 horses, 26 mules, Feb. 17, Kitterman farm, 4 miles east of Cambridge City. HORSES Twenty head, 6 Jersey cows, 30 hogs, Feb. 16. John A. Gephart farm, 2 miles southeast of Straughn. HORSES Cattle, hogs, Feb. 27. W. V. Myer, Lewisville. GENERAL STOCK Eleven Holstein cattle, hogs, horses, Moore & F ..ul, March 1, one mile south of Cambridge City. LIVE STOCK Thirty mules, eight horses, one hundre dhogs, February 17, Jesse T. Druley farm, one mile north of Boston.
. CHICAGO CASH CHICAGO, Feb. 10. Wheat: No. 2 red $1.634 $1.63, No. 2 hard winter $1.631.64.Corn: No. 3 yellow 7878, No. 4 yellow 7677. Oats: No. 4 6960U, ' No 4 white 5960. ,
CHICAGO LIVE STOCK . UNION STOCK YARDS, 111., Feb. 10. Hogs: Receipts 45,000, market 10c lower, mixed and butchers $6.50 6.75, good heavies $6.406.75, rough heavies $6.006.30, light $6.456 75, pigs ?5.606.40, bulk of sales $6.60 6.70. Cattle: Receipts 12,000, market 10 15c lower; beeves $5.759.00, cows and .heifers. $3.508.25, stockers and feeders $4.506.25, calves $9.0010.00. Sheep: Receipts 10,000, market steady, natives' $4.007.10, lambs $6.409.00.
INDIANAPOLIS LIVE STOCK INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Feb. 10. Hogs: Receipts 8,000, market 15c lower, best hogs $6.606.70, heavies $6.60 6.75, pigs $5.506.C5, bulk of sales $6.606.75. Cattle: Receipts 400, market. 10 15c lower; choice heavy steers $7.75 8.25, light steers $7.50(fi8.00, heifers $6.35(?7.25, cows $5.50ff.25, bulls $6.006.50, calves $6.00?i9.50. Sheep and lambs: Receipts 100, market steady, prime sheep $4.50 5.25, lambs $7.758.50.
Frenchman Keeps Sense of Humor
fx-?
H , if ssfZ
That the French artilleryman has a sense of humor is shown by this picture of a French gun in operation during the shelling of Steinbach. The Frenchmen have given the big piece of ordnance the name of "Kultur."
NEW YORK PRODUCE ' NEW YORK, Feb. 10. Dressed Poultry firm; chickens 1228, fowls 15 18c. Live poultry, firmer; chickens 16. I6V2, fowls 18 and up, turkeys 17 18. Butter, easier, creamery extras 31 34c. Eggs, unsettled; white fancy 33.
LOYD OSBORN DIES
ECONOMY, Ind. Edwin Osborn, 78, was found dead Monday morning by his son, Loyd Osborn. Funeral was held Tuesday afternoon in the Friends' church. Rev. Oliver Frazer officiated.
Mr. Osborn was a very eccentric man j
FLOOD OF
MEASURES
NIGHT WOR
j by colored photographic slides taken j by Underwood and Underwood in the countries through which Paul iour-
V i neyed. The talk of the evenine w as
! given by Lyman Lyboult and the slide j were displayed by Arthur M. Roach.
BY LEASED WIRE
INDIANAPOLIS, Feb. 10. Thirty-
NEW YORK EXCHANGE STOCK QUOTATIONS
lego, who said that the samples 0f ! rc ,iao ' ' Tu h -7, seed which had been submitted to the ! twneer, Col Thomas Connilf and his experiment station for examination, i assistant, ; bimon Y eddle Clarence were the best that he had been ablejPltts acted as clerk, and William fr,,i ir, th utotc I Lewis cashier.
Th cViirinif.nt Timlin tnrl-iv iriflnl(r! : The Sale Cf II
eighteen bushels of little red clover, and three bushels of 'big English clover. The" seed tested as high a.i 90.0 per cent pure, and from 92 to 95 percent germination.
Christman, held at
his farm four miles southeast of El
dorado, Ohio, was not largely attended
Furnished by Carrell & Thompson. I. O. O. F. Building Phone 1446.
American Can Amalgamated Copper American Smelter . . . U. S. Steel Beet Sugar Utah Copper . . . . . . , Atchison
c.f nPnl
OUDERS STOCK SALE
ECEIPTS NET $14,000
Draft Mare Brings Top Price of S312.50 Cows Sell for S79.00.
iivit-t , ......... . .
by farmers from over the Indiana line, I Great Northern, pfd. us the latest quarantine regulations Erie now prevent interstate delivery of ani- Lehigh Valley mals frcm Ohio. Forty' head of Duroc N. Y. Central Jersey hogs were sold, and four N. Pacific horses and nine head of cattle. j Pennsylvania , Reading
C r.-ifirt COO
o. 1 cn-mi; 06g U. Pacific ..' 11914
28 y8 . 53 . 6514. . 41 . 38 . 52 . 93 . 85 .114 22 . .133V2 . 84 .102 . .105
.144
RIGI1I
IKETS
). Perhaps no man in inls part of These new bills, with 25 committee re-! he mUe pink piU tbat has iiana could give such lucid iaterpre-; ports submitted to the house, inade it, known to OP 8lcken.
Hcpreseniatjve Sales At Indianapolis
No. 7 . 14 . 58 .
5:oi:t ?1 4,000 was realized from the ; 63 t-.f I'venock on the Bert Souders . 35
;.r, m.i;e north of Hagerr.town .' y. The Eemi-rnnual livestoc ' :'::)- farm ur the larve -t gen . '. . - ')' iiv.M-,trck hr!d in Wn.vne .. : -: of'cn altiaet buyers from
tx:! 0 !-
r.
... "3 has attained a rL-pu'a-. jv;!gi of gord an! ma's, and :l"oh lh"i;i in 1L0 Bale ring v. csf condition. K:ch year .shipments of .T'Tf.oy caiile
-iiv-.-i and tiir', ugh Ins sales j.-'-b 1 :::-t ruinonml in stocking r;i Wayur- county with good Jor-enws.
d work horses were in demand, t he s:le' y?sH'fd.y, and the top ivi.- pai'l was $312.50 for a draft r:i-.r. The prices paid for the 35 head cf htrses ran from $200 to $300. ; !;. priees paid for the cattle were : rr!(h lower than those paid at the' full sal. when a good cow sold for, $14n. The average price this year ran j from $50 to $70. ' One hundred and fifty brood sows: were sold. The high price of corn and the reaction wrom the foot and mouth rnire kept the average price down to i : 1 S. ' P, t ween four and five hundred per-1 vc.p.s ,-tt ended the sale, taxing tho f - ;: i t v- of the large barns and the; l :! pavilion.
HOGS. Av, 102 11)6 . 244 :104 22C 211 204 :.o ........ 1G7 184 197 145 CATTLE. Steers.
4 o 1 2 4 19
Fleifers.
Cows.
Dk.
40 120 40 40 200 40 80 120
Av. 8i35 857 1005 940 120 1345 632 785 945 712 920 t;03 1043 1018 1058 1100 1161
Pr.
28i,2 54Vi 64 12 42 40 57 94 86 V. 114 22 133U 85 103 ',4
105 ! 143 j C i M
119
GLEN MILLER PRICES HOGS.
Heavies $6.25;
Heavy yorkers
Light yorkers
Pigs Best steers? Good cows Bulls Canners . . .
and was a follower of Thomas Pavne's ! Iive new Dills, tha largest numDer ln-
; teaching. He died in the same room ; troduced in any cne day, were pre-; he was born in sRvPTUv-Pii?ht vrars'scnted in the house tnis morning.!
; ago,
i India
Itation of Shakespeare's writings as j certain that night sessions of that j Mr. Osborn. His favorite poet was;bdy ba necessary in the near j Will Carleton. He held a birthright 1 futureI membership in the Springfield! Or the new measures the most noteFriends' church, but long ae;o gave up I worthy ( was one by Representative ! the orthodox teaching of the Friends. I Vachorne on the housing question, j : His newest measure strikes out all the
previsions of the present state hous-
$6.50; WOMAN HOI PFT? OOFS ing law ard makes all laws on the
HOTKI
Every mother ought to know about
never been
$6.00 I
$5.50
CATTLE.
A CTCO M C V TITI CO : suuject eiiuciive uuiy 111 kuwh ui uiuic
Ai l ii iml w 111 iio . thau 30,000 population.
$7.00; $5.00 and $6.00 i $4.50 and $5.00 j $2.50 and $3.50 j
Calves $8.50 for Saturday delivery.
A lively fight
j is in prospect over the housing question, jvlrs. Albion Fellows Bacon is : here leading the advocates of the
existing statues on that subject.
TOLEDO GRAIN TOLEDO, O., Feb. 10. Wheat: Cash
S'0 $1.64ii, May $1.671,4, July $1.41. Cloverseed: Prime cash $9.15, Feb6.75 j ruary, $9.15, March $9.15, October $8 40. G.S0 Alsike: Prime cash, $9.10, March
6.80 $9.15.
6.85 6.85
6.90;
2; CHICAGO PROVISIONS
a::o GRAIN PRICES
GRAIN MARKET (Corrected daily by Richmond Roller Mills. Phono 2C19.) Pran per ton, $30; wheat, paying $1.50, oats paying 50c. corn paying 75c, 1 ye paying 80c, middlings per ton PRODUCE (Corrected daily by E Cooper Old chickens dressed, paying 18c; selling, i,5c. Youna; chic", -s dressed, payir-r IS':,
:4 T .
END FIRST YEAR OF WEDDED LIFE
If you will try a 10 to 25 cent package of Dr. Price's Com-plex-ion pillj you'll regret that you did not hear o them before. If mothers would give ralthrutly th Com-plex-ion Pills to their children Instead of salts and senna leaves and Buch other strong physics, you wculd find out your children would not havo pimpled and boily faces. The safest pills mothers can take art Com-plex-ion Pills, as they do not contain any calomel, but are more effective than calomel or castor oil. Fir. for chronic constipation. Ten-cent package contains 20 little Com-plex-ion Pills; 25-cent packages 10 pills.
23c.
Timothey: Prime 3.20, April $3.20.
$3.17, March
7.00 i
Pr. I $5.75 ' 6.50 7.00; 7.00 i 7.35 1 8.00 5.50 6.G0: 6.25 6.40 7.00 3.75 5.00 5.25 5.50 5.75 6.10
WHEAT
Country butter, paying 18c to 25c; selling 25c to 30c. Eggs, paying 25c; selling, 35c. Ccuttry lard paying 11c; selling 15c Creamery butter, selling 38c.
NEW PARIS, O., Feb. 10. Mr. and j Mrs. D. O. Baker celebrated their first !
. wedding anniversary eaaesday, ii ' also being the fifth anniversary of the P.c-w and Mrs. E. Knoisley, the pastor who wedded them. The guests were i the Rev. and Mrs. Kneisley and daughi tor, Dorothy, Messrs. and Mesdames H. 11. Hompel and daughter Elsie,
W. G. Ba!:er. E. V. Thompson. George H. Penland and A. E. Peuiand.
La Tausca
P.
par s
Onen. CIobp I May 1631 1G3U I July 139 138i 3 I CORN 1 May 81 80 j July 82 S2 ! OATS ! Ma 61V, 61 i July 5S 57;''t MESS PORK. , i May $18.80 $18.87 1 July $ld-15 $19.30 : URD. i May $10.75 $10.82 July 110.87 $11.00 May $10.10 $10.17 July $10.30 $10.32
FEED QUOTATIONS Timothy hay, paying $19. Rye straw, paying $7. Wheat straw, paying $7. Oats straw, paying $7. Oats, paying 50c. New corn, paying 75c. Red clover seed, paying $7.50. Red clover, selling $9.00:??. 9.50. Timothy seed, paying $3.25 bushel. Timothy seed soiling $4.00 bushel. Bran selling $20 ton. Middlings, selling $30 ton. Salt, $1.40 barrel. Clover hay, $14.
1
LYBOULT SPEAKS 1V T5TTIT W. C
3 W . i. J A.
T C
Eighty-three boys attended the illustrated lecture at the Y. M. C. A. last night. The lecture covered th? travels of Paul, and was illu- 'rated
Croup Relieved in
These Beautiful Pearls are the most perfect representatives of nature's most exquisite jewels.
I They are beautiful in coloring uniform in size and make a most pleasing gift for any occasion. I We show them in small and large strands also in graduated strings at
$3.00 to $5.50 Fred Kennedy
JEWELER.
525 MAIN ST.
Fifteen Minutes
"The Busiest, Biogest Little Store in Town."
Bulls
'Calves.
'!'!( ; are about three mil'ion two hundnd thousand bicycles in i". e in ('ram-;' r.ci.v, as compared with ro-0,t'0o lourtceii yej'.ra ago, when the government began counting them jor taxation.
CHICAGO PRODUCE
4.75, CHICAGO, Feb. 10. Butter: Re5.75 j ceipts 8,004 tubs; extra firsts 30 6.00 j 32 cents. j Eggs: Receipts 8,631 cases; first 24 7.00 j cents. S.00' Live Poultry: Turkeys 15c, chickens 0.50; 15c, springers 16c, roosters llc. 10.00! Potatoes: Receipts 30 cars; reds
40C' 44c, Wisconsin and Michigan white Two British girls applied for posi-; 407 46c.
tirns as Red Cross nurses, but insisted their mother "prefer it is officers we nurse."
600 1150 1230 1S5 115 158 171
HORSE MARKET. rices corrected by Jones and Mings. Telephone 1439. Draft mares, 1400 to li'.uO lbs. $175 to $250. Draft Geldings, "1400 to 1600 lbs, $175 to $225. Farm chunks, 1200 to 1400 lbs, $150 to $200. Express chunks, 1050 to 1200 lbs., $125 to $1.75. Drivers, $75 to $150. Plugs, $40 to $100.
in.
fv,
4
i Miss Lillian B. Hyde, metropolitan i woman golf champion, has failed this
: winter to establish a new record for Riley Bradford, of Friendship, Me., the Palm Beach course, and her best has the oldest continuous subscription performance is one stroke behind the . to a Portland paper. This subscription ' record she set last year 70. Miss has been in the Bradford family ever I Hyde is known as -the longest woman
since the paper was firse issued in : driver in the world." She expects to 'South M.h street.
No need to dose delicate little stomach with nauseous drugs or alcoholic pyrups. Simply rub a littlo Viek's Vax-0-Rub, Salve over the throat end chet. The va. p;rs inhalt-d looaeu the touj;h, choking phlegm and ease the difficult Vrathing. Ouf aptilicatiou nt bedt ime insures a Suuad, night's'sleep. 25c, 50c, or ijjl.U). XaET GENUINE HAS THIS TRADE MARX. T!rxjp7Ft& Croup ar.d C
SPINAL ADJUSTMENTS For Chronic Rheumatism
J. C. Eockman, Chircpractor, Kuo'lenbevg's Annex.
Second Floor
1800.
go to California to play this winter.
Phone 1S6S.
tm mimh
Torle Kryptok
Are what you need when you need bifocals.
Optometrist. 10 North Ninth Street. Phone 2765.
m-v '-"Terse tvff" yy
Looking for Germans in the Sand Dunes
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EVERY ROD GUARANTEED FULL SIZE WIRE COMPLETE-STOCK, ALL STYLES AND HEIGHTSGALVANIZED STEEL'.FENCE POSTS Better and Cheaper Than Woad -
Al
so:
FEBRUARY FREE COUPON Good for a credit of One Cent per Rod and 1 Cent per Post on all Fence and Posts you purchase of us in month of February. Coupons limited one to a purchase.
MAIL US THE COUPON AT ONCE Stating you are contemplating purchasing Fence or Posts, or call us by phone and we will register your name. You can call any time in February.
P El
fell lllfjI'Sl F
A Belgian motorcycle scout on observation duty among the - tnd Dunes South of Ostencl.
EXCLUSIVE AGENTS
