Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 106, 16 March 1915 — Page 2

Bulletins on Live Stock; . 1 1 V. 1 -

. CHICAGO. ' Receipts Hogs, 25,000; cattle 3,500; sheep lS.OOO. Market Hogs slow, shade lower; cattle, weak; sheep, steady. , INDIANAPOLIS. : :- Receipts Hogs, 7,000 ; cattle, 700 ; sheep, none. Market Hogs, 10c lower; cattle, steady; sheep, steady. ; PITTSBURG ' ReceiptsHogs, light ; cattle, light ; sheep, light. Markets-Hogs, fair; cattle, steady; sheep, steady. . CINCINNATI. Receipts Hogs, 1600; cattle, none; sheep 200. Market Hogs, steady; cattle, steady; sheep, strong.

HOG PRICES BEGIN TO SHOW INCREASE Shippers Predict Higher Figure as Supply Shows Rapid Decreases. During the last week there has been a marked increase in the price of hogs, and the market has assumed a much steadier tone. On the local market the price advanced on an average of 25 cents a hundred last week. Buyers report that good hogs .are now fast becoming very scarce, and hard to buy, and it is generally agreed that the county. is sold out of good market hogs. It was predicted by local shippers today, that by May or June, high hog prices would prevail, with a strong demand. It is said that the country is now efcort on market hogs, and good stock hogs, and that the high price of corn will be an effectual barrier against feeding operations on any large scale during the spring and early summer. Reports from farmers are to the effect that there is a big crop of little pigs, and little loss has been incurred. These pigs however will not be on the market before fall and early winter, and it is reasonably predicted that until the present crop of pigs comes on the market there will be a shortage of market hogs, and prices will rule strong. WHEAT TOUCHES $1.50 An offer of $1.50 was again made; for -$heat on the local market today, but even this price is not bringing out aLy grain from the farmers, who are said to be too busy with spring work to come to market. While the bulk of the crop was sold long ago, there is some grain held by Wayne county farmers, but buyers do not expect to get it until after April r May when the spring planting is done. Seme Forms of Rheumatism Curable Hiieuiruitism is a disease charact.!r;.:nn by pains in the joints and in the mustOes?. The most common forms nr: Acute and Chronic Rheumatism, K:ti::t,M.ie Headaches, Sciatic Rbeuniuttetn and Lumbago. All of these 11 jt can be beIpJ absolutely by applying some good liniment that penetrates. An application of Sloan's Liniment two or three times a day to the affected part will give instant relief. Sloan'a Liniment is good for pain, and especially Rheumatic Pain, because it penetrates' to the seat of the trouble, noothcs the afflicted part and draws tne pain. '"Sloan's Liniment is all niedit ine." Get a 25c bottle now. Keep it handy in case of emergency, -adv. Live Stock Sales GENERAL STOCK Forty-nine hogs, 17 cattle, 4 horses, March 17, John Copeland farm, 1 mile south of Hagerstown. LIVE STOCK CHICAGO. UNION STOCK YARDS, 111., March 16. Hogs: Receipts 25,000, market slow shade lower, mixed and butchers $6.65 6.95, good heavies $6.65 6.92, rough heavies $6.406.55, light $6.70 (a 6.95, pigs $6.406.80, bulk of sales (6.85 6.90. Cattle: Receipts 3,50b, market weak, beeves ?5.S08.75, cows and heifers $3.307.70, Btockers an 1 feeders $4.50 6.15. calves $6.50 10.00. Sheep: Receipts 15,000. market steady, western $7.10815, lambs $7.60 10.10.

For Sale Every where

E a 11 in

A GOLDEN BROWN LOAF M f v baked in a perfect bake shop. Full of fragrance, energy and strength of the glimmering wheat field. Made for people who would be strong, healthful and happy. Wrapped in sanitary waxed wrapper to keep its goodness in and all badness out. 5c and 10c the Loaf Everywhere. ASK FOR IT AND SEE THAT YOU GET IT. Baked in Richmond by

WHEAT CLOSES WEAK ON CHICAGO MARKET

CHICAGO,' March 16. When the grain market closed today wheat showed losses of c. Corn was off c and oats to lc lower. The provisions closed with losses of 7 to lc. Cash transactions were small in corn and wheat, 20,00 bushels of wheat selling to the exporters at Chicago, and 40,000 of corn to eastern shippers. Export trade was remarkably large, 65.C00 bushels selling to go to. the seaboard. Atlantic ports reported 1,00.000 bushels of oats as taken there. The available supply of breadstuff decreased 1.3 per cent to a total of 171,577,000 bushels, compared with 193,000,000 a year ago. ' CINCINNATI. CINCINNATI, O., March 16. Hogs: Receipts 1,600, market steady, packers and butchers $7.207.35, common to choice $5.25 & 6.25. pigs and lights $5.0 7.40. stags $4.005.25. CaUIe: Receipts none, market steady," calves steady. Sheep: Receipts 200, market strong, labms strong. PITTSBURG. PITTSBURG, Pa., March 16. Cattle supply light, market steady, choice steers $8.258.60, prime steers $8.00 8.25, good steers $7.608.00,, tidy butchers $7.50, fair S7.007.50,. common $6.006.75, common to fat bulls $w00S'7.50, common to fat cows $4.00 6.50, heifers $7.007.50, veal calves $10.0010.50. ' Sheep and lambs: Supply light, prime ethers $8.008.80, good $7.75 &8.15. Hogs: Receipts light, market fair, prime heavy $7.157.20, mediums $7.457.50, heavy yorkers $7.457.50, light yorkers $7.25 7.35, pigs $7.00 7.20, roughs $6 0u6.25, stags $5.00 5.50, mixed $j.307.35. INDIANAPOLIS. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., March 16. Hogs: Receipts 7,000, market 10c lower, best hogs $6.807.20, heavies $6.907.25, pigs $6.757.25, bulk of sales $6.btu V.io. Cattle: Receipts 700, market steady, choice heavy steers $7.80 8.50, light steers $7.50(?i8.00, heifers $6.25 7.25, cows $5.506.50, bulls $6.006.50, calves $6.009.50. Sheep and lambs: Receipts none, market steady, prime sheep $5.00 G.00, lambs $8.509.50. PRODUCE CHICAGO. CHICAGO, March 16. Butter Receipts 8,966; firsts 23V325. Eggs: Receipts 19,363 cases; firsts 17i,417. - Live Poultry: Chickens springers lGls, roosters 11. Potatoes: Receipts 25 cars; Wiscousins 3240, Michigan 3237. WHEAT ii 5i li U NEW YORK NEW YORK, March 16. Dressed poultry: chickens 1217, fowl 13 18 cents. Live Poultry: Chickens 15 16, fowls 18T9. Butter, steady; creamery firsts 28. Eggs: Steady, white fancy 24. Prevent Diphtheria. A sore throat ie a good breeding place lor Diphtheria germs. Protect your children by never neglecting a Sore Throat. You can wisely depend upon TONS1LINE. (iive Tonsiline upon the first appearance of Sore Throat don't give Diphtheria a chance in that throat in its weakened condition. When TONSILINE is swallowed it comes directly in contact with the diseased surface and induces a healthy condition of the membranes then the system can better defend the throat it attacked by uipnuieria germs. Keep TONSILINE in the house where you can get it quick when oeeded. 25c.. 50c. and $1.00.

NEW YORK EXCHANGE STOCK QUOTATIONS . BY. COKRELL A THOMPSON, ' Brokers, I. O. O. F. Bldg. Phone 1446.

American Can ....... Amalgamated Copper American Smelter . , . Beet Sugar U, S. Steel , 64 644 40 45 62 96 86 54 64 40 46 62 . 95 86 116 22 134 83 103 106 143 83 119 Utah Copper Atchison . . . St. Paul .... Ot. Northern pfd . . . . . Erie Lehigh Valley ........ N. Y. Central ...... Northern Pacific . . . Pennsylvania . . . . . Reading ............. Southern Pacific Union Pacific.,. ..116 ,,,27 ,.134 ...83 ...102 ...105 ...144 ... 84 ...120 6RAIN ' CHICAGO CASH CHICAGO. March 16. Wheat: No. 3 radS1.64, No. 2 hard $1.65. Corn: No. 4 white 71, No. 4 yellow 7172. - Oots: No. 2 6959. TOLEDO. TOLEDO, March 16. Wheat: Cash $1.69. Cloverseed: Cash and March $8.70. Alsike: Cash and March $8.65. Timothy: Prime and March $3.10. CHICAGO FUTURES BY CORRELL d THOMPSON, Brokers, I. O. O. F. Bldg. Phone 1446. WHEAT Open. Clou May ..: ..160 157 July ..125 123 CORN May 75 74 July 77 76 OATS May 60 59 July 55 "54 MES8 PORK. May $17.90 $17.80 July ... $18.37 $18.20 RICHMOND MARKETS GLEN MILLER PRICES HOGS. Heavies $6.50 Heavy mixed $6.50 Heavy yorkers $6.75 Light yorkers $6.75 Pigs $6.50 Sows! . . ., $5.00 and $5.50 Dff You want something good for hay fever and catarrh, cold in head, sneezing, hacking cough, deafness, headache, ringing ears, dry nose, bronchitis and inflammations of the skin and tissue, drop into any drug store and get a 25 or 50 cent sanitary tube of LONDON'S Original and Genuine Catarrhal Jelly Or If you are tkeptical and wlsli to try the merits ot Kondon'e before you buy. write us quick for a free trial sample and booklet. You will never regret getting in touch with this good old remedy. has been doing good for nearly twenty-five years. 35.000 druggists sell and guarantee It to please or will refund your money. Could anything be fairer? Write us now before you forget it. Don't take a substitute. KONDON MFQ. CO. Phones 1283

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S. S. KRESGE & CO., , Bought of

Terms Cash.

VISDT KRESGE'S FRUIT DEPARTMENT. It tVloans Low Pricos on Your Wocoositicc.

Stags . . . . . . .... .. .. . 5.00 and $6.60 CATTLE., Best steers . . . . f T.OO Good cows $5.00 and Sf .00 Bolls ............ $4.60 and $5.00 Canners .......... ... $2.60 and $3.50 Calves.... $8.00. for Saturday delivery SHEEP. Top Iambs .'. . . . .. 7c

GRAIN MARKET (Corrected dally by Richmond Roller MtUa. Phone IClt.) Bran per ton, $30; wheat, paying 11.50, oats paying- 50c, corn paying 72c, rye paying 85c, middlings per ton $32. , PRODUCE (Corrected dally by Edward Cooper.) Chickens . dressed, paying 18c, selling, 25c. Country butter, paying 18c to 25c; selling 25c to 35c. Eggs,, paying 15c; selling 20c. D Q -

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TRIMMED HATS, in small and large shapes. All the new shades . . .

AHaptscial Line

OPENINC SPECIAL Trimmed Hats of silk and silk and braid

combinations, o 5 and 1 Bushel or 51 - H.V. 200 Bu. Potatoes

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Country lrt Prlng 11c: selling lie Creamery batter, selling SSo. . ... Potatoes, selling 60c bushel. FEED QUOTATIONS Clover hay, $14.00. Timothy hay, paying $18. j .' 1 ' Prairie hay, $14.00. Rye straw, paying $7. y!N " Wheat straw, paying Oats straw, paying $7. , JIJ!! Oats, paying 82c. V' lY , New corn, paying 75c Red clover seed, paying $7.60. Red clover, selling $9.0009.60.. Timothy seed, paying $3.25 bushel .Timothy eeed selling $4.00 busbeL Bran slllln, $28 ton. . . Middlings, selling $80 ton. Salt. $1.40 barrel. Clover bay, $14. - 3i Tankage, $48.00 ton. Cotton seed meal, $33 ton. ' '; rOil meal, $42 ton.

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.... An Opening Display of Correct Millinery is very iilteresting. Daily arrivals of the later spring styles frave further

strengthened our excellent showing of the desirable styles in both trimmed and un trimmed Hats at remarkably low prices.

"f ChUdreri;s ; 1 at only . .

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5 Bushels for 50c. Richmond, 195

McLeland

HORSE MARKETiW Prices corrected by Jones and -Mingo Telephone 148. Draft mares. 1400 to 1G00 lbs. $171 to $260. .- ,V- . - Draft Geldings, 1400 to 1600 lbs, $171 to $200. Farm chunks. 1200 to 1400 lbs. $15t to $200. - i Express chunks. 1050 to 1200 lbs, $126 to $1.76. Drivers. $75 to $150. . ; .- I-Lk Plugs. $40 to $100. H COAL PRICES r (Quotations corrected 'dally by Hacto . man. Klefeth A Co. - -. Anthracite nut. $8.60;' Anthracite No. 4 and egg. $8.86; Pocahontas lump or egg. 86.75; Pocahontas mine rua $4.50; Pocahontas slack, $4.00; Jack son lump or egg. $5.75; Winifred, $4.IS; Jewel. $5.26; Tennessee. $5.60; Hocking Valley. $4.50; Indiana, $3.75; coke. $7; Winifred Washed pea. $4.00; nut and slack. $3.00. '

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$148 to $5.48

9c to S 1 ,98 $1.19 Ind., 3, 16, 1915 Ft. Wayne Ave;

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sb asasPBBiBaBSBiBsr iihsmi Z.?!2llmt "i'cal autherttlss mmut WJiif.0 th CX f Unit .AUaratlva In thia and all lad Sroa? and bronchial affactiona maV b? dJJ S'ul .Jh ,act wth " contain! wilmUS.'"1- to "Uy m.ii,prd u l thia remady In of tubarculoaia many of which appear to hava yieldlif that It fa worth a trial, unleaa oma othar traatmant already la aucceedina;. It eont.ina no vpiataa. arcotlca or hablt-formlna; 3rua: "lke " protnlaea concernlna- it IL moT ,t!t reputable phyaiclaoa f ive promise, with! their preacrip" Fiona, but we know of many cam In which IT HAS HELPED i. 5r drut has It or can rt It or you can aend direct. Loolc Your Best Your photograph Is your representative and it should show you at your best. .. I can help you look most attractive and give you portraits that will show you and yottr children in your most charming poses which are always obtained in your owii parlor. See some of these artistic productions when my representative calls LEWIS, Home Portrait Artist CITY AnvpRTmrucuT DEPARTMENT OP PUBLIC WORKS UivrwJS OF THE BOARD. Richmond. Ind.. March is. TO WHOM IT MAY rovrirnv. notice is hereby given by the boarrf or puoiic works or the city of Rich mond, Indiana, that on the 15th day o aiarco, iio, tney unanimously adopt ed Imorovement Reaelution n am iair For the Improvement of South wcs seventn street, from Main street td the National road, bv cnnatriirtinv J roadway of one of the modern citjl pavements, to-witi Cqncrete, brick asphalt, creosoted wooden lock. toj seiner witn tne necessary curbing. Improvement Resolution No. 462, 1915 For the improvement of the sIIpv h tween North. E and F -streets, from North Twenty-third to North Twenty fourth streets, by constructing a sewei in said alley from the present sewei in North Twentv-third street- thon east to said Twenty-fourth, street; also; constructing a cement roadway in said alley the full width thereof between the points named. . Improvement Resolution No. 463, 1915 For the improvement, of South Fiftt street, rrom Main to South A stree: by paving the roadway with one of tb modern city pavements, to-wit: Brick concrete, asphalt, creosoted . wooden block. .. . , j . . .. The Board of Public .Works or sail city ' has fixed Thursday. April i 1915, as a date. "upon, which remon strances may be filed or presented b persons intereetci in. or affected by Eaid nronoKfd imnrnvfmnt nr ifhi or them as above described, and orj said day. at 9 o'clock a. m.. said Board win meet at its omce lor tne purpos of hearine and considering anv rpmnn strances which may have been filed oi Dresented. and for the mir-nosp nf tak Ing final action thereon. Such actloij snail oe nnai ana conclusive upon ai persons. ALFRED BAVIS. CHAS. E. MARLATT, JOHN McMINN. 16-23 Board of Public Works. CITY ADVERTISEMENT. Department of Public Works OFFICE OF THE BOARD. Richmond. Ind., March 15. 1915. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: Notice is hereby given by the borq or public works of the citr of Rich mond. Indiana, that on the 15th day ol March, 1915, they unanimously adopted Declaratory Resolution No. 106, 1915J To acquire grounds for the construe! tion and maintenance of a sewer and a sewage disposal plant, for the benefit of the city of. Richmond, in Waynd county, Indiana, by the condemnation and appropriation of sufficient lots and lands for such purpose, specifically del scribed as follows, to-wit: Being part of the north half of Sec tion 6, Township 13, north. Range 1 west, and beginning on the west line of the land owned by the Earlham Cemetery association, one hundred and fifty feet south of the south line! or tne prolongation westward or south! West A street In the city of Richmond J running thence east two hundred and fifty feet; thence southwardly ttarert hundred and fifty feet; thence west to the said west line of land owned bv the Earlham Cemetery association: thence northward along the said lind to the place of beginning, containing two acres, more or less, with the right of egress and- regress together witb the right to cross the adjacent land for the purpose of constructing anl maintaining the sewer and disposal plant. Excepting so much of the above de scribed strip of land as has alreadv been dedicated to the public use. all as shown by a plat of such proposed con demnation now on file in the office oi the Department or Public Works oil said city. The property which may be! Injuriously or beneficially affected bv the said condemnation, is the land owned by the Earlham Cemetery as sociation. proposed to be appropriated and adjacent thereto. - ; All as shown . by a plat of such terri tory now on file in the office of the Department of Public Works of saidt city or Richmond.: The board, or public works ot saidf city has fixed Monday. April .5. 1915 as a date upon which remonstrances may be filed or presented by persona interested in, or affected by. said pro! posed condemnation as above describ ed. and on said day, at 9 o'clock a. m said board will meet at its office fori the purpose ot hearing and consider ing any remonstrances which may have been filed or presented, and ton the purpose ot taking final action thereon. Such action shall be final and conclusive upon all persons. ALFRED BAVIS, CHARLES E. MARLATT, ' ' JOHN McMINN. 1C-23 Board of Public Works.'