Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 135, 19 April 1915 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, APRIL 19, 1915

Stock Quotations and Market News Leaaed Wire Report. Edited by A. D. Cobb, Agricultural Expert.

WHEAT CLOSES HIGH ON CHICAGO MARKET CHICAGO, April 19. Wheat was stronger and higher, the gains amounting to 1 to 3c, showing sharp .price recessions from the beet levels of the day. Many of the longs -with profits sold their wheat and got their money. Corn gained to c, while oats were to e lower. Special room was chartered for 270,000 bushels of corn at lc to go to Buffalo. Sales of grain to go to store at Chicago were 150,000 bushels of wheat and 150,000 bushels of corn, all contract grain. Cash sales of grain at Chicago were 95,000 bushels of corn and 200,000 bushels of oats. Provisions were up. The visible supply of wheat decreased 4,449,000 for the week; corn decreased 8,352,000 bushels and oats 4,459,000 bushels. CHICAGO. UNION STOCK YARDS, III., April 19. Hogs: Receipts 21,000, market strong, 10c higher, mixed and butch ers $7.30 7.60, good heavies $7.20 7.60, rough heavies $7.007.25, light $7.557.80, pigs $5.85 6.90, bulk of sales $7.40 7.60. Cattle: Receipts 17,000, market steady, 10c higher, beeves $6.258.65, cows and heifers $3.108.35, calves $5.758.50. Sheep: Receipts 10,000, market steady to strong, natives and westerns $7.5008.65, lambs $8.2510.65. CINCINNATI. CINCINNATI. O.. April 19. Hogs: Receipts 5,100, market steady, packers and butchers $7.808.00, common to choice $5.757.25, pigs and lights $5.75 7.90, stags $4.50 5.85. Cattle: Receipts 1,000, market strong, steers $5.50 7.85, heifers $5.25 8.25, cows $3.506.50, calves strong, $5.008.75. Sheep: Receipts 300, market steady, lambs steady, PITTSBURG PITTSBURG, Pa., April 19. Cattle: Supply 65 cars, market lower, choice steers $8.008.25, prime steers $8.00 8.25, good steers $7.50 7.85, tidy butchers $7.507.85, fair $7.007.50, common $6.00 6.75, common to fat bulls $5.007.00, common to fat cows $.4006.50, heifers $6.907.25, veal calves $8.509.00. Sheep and lambs: Supply 22 double decks, prime wethers $7.107.30, lambs $6.509.50, spring lambs $12.00 15.00. Hogs: Receipts 45 double decks, market higher, prime heavy $8.00, mediums $8.158.20, heavy yorkers $8.158.20, light yorkers $8.158.20, pigs $8.158.20, roughs $6.506.75, stags $5.50 5.75, heavy mixed $8 8.10. INDIANAPOLIS. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., April 19. Hogs: Receipts $5,500, market 5c higher, best hogs $7.757.95, pigs $7.257.75, bulk of sales $7.907.95.. Cattle: Receipts 1,000, market steady, 50c higher, choice heavy steers $7.808.25, light steers $7.50 8.00, heifers $7.008.00, cows $5.50 6.50, bulls $5.756.50, calves $4.00 8.50. Sheep and lambs: Receipts 100, market steady, prime sheep $6.25 7.00, lambs $9.0010.00. CHICAGO CASH CHICAGO, April 19. Wheat: No. 2 red $1.62 1.63V. Corn: No. 2 white 7879,' No. 2 yellow 78V2"9 ,No. 4 white 77V. No. 4 yellow 76 77V. Oats: No. 2 white 58 59, No. 3 white 5758, No. 4 white 56 57, No. 4 white 5859. TOLEDO. TOLEDO, Apirl 19. Wheat: Cash $1.62. May $1.62, July $1.37, September $1.22. Cioverseed: Cash $8.30, October $8.30. i,4 V V V Alslke: Cash $8.50. Timothy: Prime cash and April $3.05 KILLED IN POLAND. HEGEWISCH, 111., April 19. Joseph Abitk, a groceryman, went to Poland last month to protect his property. Today his wife was notified that he was killed by a shell during an engagement. ALMOST CRAZY WITH ITCHING AND BURNING Seattle, Wash., Jan. 26, 1915. "My face and body were a solid mass of little sores which itched and burned me so badly that I almost went crazy. They started in the form of little pimples which opened and formed sores. I could not sleep at night, and at work if I became overheated it would itch something terrible. I used all kinds of soaps, salves and prescriptions that did me no good. I had this skin trouble for a year or more before I used Resinol. As soon as I started using Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap the itching and burning stopped at once, and in five weeks my face and body were as clear and soft as could be. I used only two jars of Resinol Ointment and three cakes of Resinol Soap. "A friend of mine had a bad case of skin trouble. His face was broken out so badly he was ashamed to go out on the street. I told him to use Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap, and in four weeks he was all well and one could not tell he ever had a pimple or sore on his face." (Signed) August E. Mills, 2306 Elliott Ave. Every druggist sells Resinol Ointment and Resinol Scjk. For trial free, write to Dept. 16-R, wssinol, Baltimore, Mr. Adv. A

LIVE STOCK

GRAIN

Bulletins on

CHICAGO Receipts Hogs, 21,000; cattle 17,000 ; sheep, 10,000. Market Hogs, strong, 10c higher; cattle, steady, 10c higher; sheep, strong. INDIANAPOLIS Receipts Hogs, 5500; cattle, 1,000; sheep, 100. Market Hogs, 5c higher; cattle, steady, 50c higher; sheep, steady. . ,' PITTSBURG Receipts Hogs, 45 double deck cars; cattle 65 cars; sheep, 27 double deck cars. Market Hogs, higher; cattle, lower; sheep, strong. CINCINNATI Receipts Hogs, 5,100; cattle, 1,000; sheep 300. Market Hogs, steady; cattle, strong; sheep steady.

PRODUCE NEW YORK NEW YORK, April 19 Dressed poultry, quiet; chickens 14 27, fowls 12 18 cents. Live poultry, steady; chickens 45 48, fowls 1617. Butter, steady; creamery firsts 29 Eggs, firmer; 2324. CHICAGO. CHICAGO, April 19. Buttery Receipts 12,481 tubs; firsts 2627. Eggs: Receipts 29,373 cases; firsts 19!19. Live Poultry: Chickens 14, springers 12, roosters 11. Potatoes: Receipts 50 cars; Wisconsins 4047. NEW YORK EXCHANGE STOCK QUOTATIONS American Can 38 36 Amalgamated Copper ... 75 74 American Smelter 73 72 American Beet Sugar ... 48 47 U. S. Steel 60 67 Atchison 103 103 St. Paul 96 96 Great Northern pfd .121 121 Erie 29 28 Lehigh Valley 145 141 N. Y. Central 90 90 Northern Pacific 109 110 Pennsylvania 110" 110 Reading 153 154 Southern Pacific 93 93 Union Pacific 132 132 CHICAGO FUTURES BY CORRELL & THOMPSON, Brokers, I. O. O. F. Bldg. Phone 1446. WHEAT. Open. High. May 164 164 July 137 137 Sept 120 123 CORN. Low. 161 137 120 77 79 80 57 56 $17.60 $18.10 Close 163 137 122 77 79 80 57 56 $17.70 $18.25 May July Sept. May July May July . 77 78 . 80 81 . 81 81 OATS. . 58 58 . 58 58 MESS POM $17.62 $17.80 $18.10 $18.30 RICHMOND MARKETS GLEN MILLER PRICES HOGS. Heavies $7.00 Heavy mixed $7.00 Heavy yorkers $7.50 Light yorkers $7.50 Pigs $7.00 Sows $5.50 to $6.00 Stags $5.00 and $5.50 CATTLE. Best steers $7.06 Good cows $5.00 and $5.50 Bulls $4.50 and $5.00 Canners $2.50 nd $3.50 Calves $7.00 for Saturday delivery SHEEP. Top lambs 7c FEED QUOTATIONS Clover hay, $i4.00. Timothy hay, paying $19. Prairie hay. $14.00. Straw, $6.00. Oats, paying 55c. Corn, paying 75. Red clover seed, paying $6.50. Red clover, selling $9.009.50. Timothy seed, paying $3.25 bushel Timothy seed selling $3.75 bushel. Bran, selling, $29 ton. Middlings, selling $30 ton. Salt. $1.40 barrel. Tankage, $48.00 ton. Cotton seed meal. S33 ton. Oil meal, $40.00 ton. GRAIN MARKET (Corrected dally by Richmond Roller Mills. Phone 2C19 ) Bran per ton. $30: wheat, paying $1.50, oats paying 50c, corn paying 70c, rye paying 85c, middlings per ton $32. PRODUCE (l-'onected daily by Edward Cooper.) Chickens dressed, paying 18c, selling, 25c. Country butter, paring 18c to 25c; 6eliicg 25c to 35c. Eggs, paying 17c, selling 20c. Ccurtry lard paying lie: selling lhc Creamery butter, selling 38c. Potatoes, selling 60c bushel. COAL PRICES Corrected Daily by Hackman & Klefoth. Anthracite, nut,$8.10; Anthracite, No. 4 or egg, $7.85; Pocahontas, lump or egg. $4.75 ; Pocahontas, mine run, $4.25; Pocahontas, nut, $4.50; Pocahontas, slack, $4; Jackson lumb. $7.75; Winifred lump, $4.50; Campbell Creek, lump, $4.50; Jewel lump, $4.75; Yellow Jacket lump, $4.25; Tennessee lump, $5 ; coke, all sizes. $6.50, nut and slack, $3.00. Carrying, 50 cents a ton; long chute, 25 cents a ton extra.

Live Stock

Representative Sales At Indianapolis HOGS. Av. Price 5 ...190 $6.00 9 312 6.95 5 . 92 7.50 89 177 7.90 47 228 7.90 83 154 7.95 69 199 7.95 23 .......... v. 136 8.00 CATTLE. Steers. 2 1055 6.50 5 , 942 7.00 4 . 840 7.25 20 1030 7.90 21 1296 8.00 Heifers. 2 820 6.50 2 900 6.25 4 932 7.25 12 538 8.15 Cows. 1 660 3.25 1 860 3.75 1 1130 4.75 2 1173 6.00 2 960 6.35 4 1190 6.60 Bulls. 1 510 4.50 1 790 5.50 1 1070 6.50 -Calves. 2 100 5.00 2 80 6.00 2 170 7.00 2 180 . 8.00 2 ..' 180 8.50 PASTORS ENTERTAIN HONEYWELL'S PARTY AT NOON LUNCHEON Rev. C. Huber presided as chairman at the luncheon for the Honeywell evangelist party which was attended by approximately thirty-five persons. Speeches of welcome were made by Rev. Conrad Huber, Rev. H. S. James, S. E. Nicholson and Dr. Stevenson. Responses were made by each member of the Honeywell party." Rev. I. E. Honeywell made a five minute address, giving a synopsis of a book written by Dr. A. J. Gordon entitled, "How Christ Came to Church." He emphasized its especial practibility for the work ol ministers. At the conclusion of the luncheon and speeches, the entertainment and reception committee held a meeting to complete arrangements for tonights service at the Coliseum. W. R. Motley was chosen to lead in the scripture lesson and Rev. Milo Hinckle will deliver the opening prayer. Only the actual expenses of the Honeywell party in coming to Richmond will be deducted from the contribution taken tonight and the re mainder will be placed in the fund of the Charity bureau. Mr. Honeywell devoted this afternoon to resting because of a strenuous day, yesterday and the remainder of the party visited personal friends in the city. EARLHAM GETS FOURTH PLACE IN ORATORICAL Earlham placed fourth in the oratorical contest last Saturday night which was held at the First Presbyterian church under the auspices of the Indianapolis Intercollegiate Prohibition association. Roy H. Ellingham of Taylor university, won first place with the oration, "The Demand of the Age." Fred T. Hollowell was the Earlham orator. In the final rating of the judges it was shown that Hollowell had received two firsts and one second on delivery, but fell low on thought and composition, ranking with two sixths and a fifth. The winning oration was one which made a strong appeal for the abolition of the liquor traffic in the world. Reference was made to the advanced stand taken on this question in Europe during the present crisis there. Arthur F. Clements of Wabash was awarded second place with the oration, "Our National .Menace." The other places are as follows: Don Sessions of De Pauw, third; Elmer Jones of Valparaiso, fith; Oscar Hagemeier of Butler, sixth. The winner of the contest was awarded the $50 prize given by the state association, and will represent the Indiana colleges in the interstate contest. The judges of delivery were Prof. C. A. Carter of Miami university; Sumner Hayes, Portland, Ind., and E. G. Borton, national secretary of the I. P. A., Chicago. . ' The judges of manuscript were E. H. Davis,- registrar, Purdue university; James Rohback, dean of the Indiana law school; Prof. E. G. Bates, department t political science, Indiana university.

PERFECT STATE NEEDS EFFORTS OF BOTH SEXES Mrs. Culla Vayhinger, State W. C. T. U. President, Shows Necessity for Harmony in life's Activity.

"Home ' is women's sphere but no home Is perfect that is wife-governed," declared Mrs. Culla J. Vayhinger, state W. C. T. U. president, of , Upland in her addresses in this city. ; Mrs." Vayhinger pleased good audiences with a speech which was out of the ordinary in its treatment. A large audience greeted her at the Reid Memorial church yesterday afternoon. Last night at Milton where she spoke, three state representatives were present and the church was crowded. In substance Mrs. Vfyhinger's speech of yesterday afternoon follows: Finds Spring of Youth. "With the discovery of the new hemisphere came the tradition that a spring gurgled in the southland where the aged could recover their lost faculties where the sick could rid themselves of their illness. "Ponce deLeon failed in his search for this fountain of youth. "The old world was sick and full of disease. England, Germany and France had been ravaged by war and ruled by incompetents. The causes which later led to the reformation were deepseared and many. The rumblings of the earthquake which severed the church and the state and awoke the common people to their right were already being heard. The cries of the defenseless had gone up to the ear of God. Race Blooms Afresh. "Ponce de Leon opened up to the diseased world, not a fountain of physical youth, but a fountain in which the life of the race might bloom afresh, having been freed from the withering influences of unjust and bloody monarchs and imperious leaders of the church. "This new, God-given hemisphere has been the battlefield on which has been fought out and settled the greatest questions pertaining to the human race. Our forefathers braved the danger of sea and an unknown . land to gain religious liberty and bequeathed to their decendants the right of every man to worship God according to the dictates of his conscience. "The cause of the American revolution was not, as we have been led to believe, in childhood, the high price of taxed tea or the cost of stamped paper, or the cost of maintaining the English soldiers ' quartered on the American colonists but was expressed by the boys of Boston when they complained to an English officer that "you soldiers have broken our ice." A question of yours and mine, my rights and your tyranny. Doubt Arouses Anger. Nothing stirs the patriotic blood of America like an attempt to deny the right of self-government, which means in this country government by representatives which you have had a full share in choosing. "If the end of suffrage is the enactment of good laws, a few men may reach the end more certainly than all men and yet we recognize that behind the result of the election and more important than that is the grand principle, implanted by God, so sacred that even the Savior himself would not violate It even to save men from eternal torment and that is the right of the church. "Women have seen this right wrested from King George by the men of this nation at the cost of a bloody safrifice only to be deprived of it by the same men. The blood of our fathers courses through our veins today and impells us to demand our Godgiven right. "Home is woman's sphere but no home is perfect which is wife governed. No home is perfect which is mangoverned. No church is perfect and accomplishes its mission if composed wholly of men or women, but it must have both, working in harmony to do the work. Why draw the line and say woman's help is necessary in these lines but her assistance is not need in affairs of state, when the state is the unit made up of homes each of which is a fractional part of the state." JURORS SELECTED IN DAMAGE SUIT A jury was selected at noon today to hear the suit of Zachariah Ulrich against the T. H., I. and E. Traction company. Ulrich said he was 70 years old and his injuries received when he was hit by a city street car when crossing E street, near the Pennsylvania depot, are of a serious nature, because of nis age. He declared the car gave no warning of its approach, although it approached rapidly on E street. PAINT YOUR BARN WITH ROGERS BARN PAINT FOUR COLORS RED 85c a gallon GRAY $1.20 a gallon BIG FOUR YELLOW at $1.35 a gallon White $1.25 a gallon 5c Less Per Gallon in 5 gal. lots A. G. LUKEN & CO. 630 MAIN STREET Phone 1213. CarlF.Weisbrod Piano Tuning and Repairing. Phone 2095.

NEW PARIS CITIZENS VOTE SCHOOL UNION

NEW PARIS. O., April 19. Residents of New Paris and the surropnding township voted Saturday for school centralization and for the issuance of $55,000 in bonds for the erection of a modern school building at the edge of the corporation line. The township school board will meet Tuesday evening to make plans for erecting the building for use at the opening of the next school year. Two cites have already been mentioned, both of them being close to the present New Paris building. ;' ; The corporation returned majorities of 160 and 156 respectively, for the centralization move and the bond issue. The majorities returned in the township, outside the corporation, were 89 and 81, respectively. - - BOARD'S VOTE ON PAVEMENT STIRS BOBBINS Mayor Plans Second Resolution for Paving of Sheridan Street Killed by McMinn and Marlatt. After having rescinded the resolution for the paving of Sheridan street the board of public works today reconsidered its action and voted to refer the matter to council. Mayor Robbins gave the board to understand that he thoroughly disapproved of its action in rescinding the improvement proceedings. The board also referred the resolution for the paving of South West Third street, from Main to National road, to council. At the meeting of the board of public works today it was again demonstrated that two of the three members, John McMinn and Charles Marlatt, are thoroughly out of sympathy with Mayor Robbins' permanent street improvement program. City Engineer Charles reported that twenty-six of the fifty resident property owners on Sheridan street had remonstrated against the resolution for placing a concrete pavement on that street. - Such being the case it was optional with the board to refer the proposed improvement to council, but President Bavis suggested that action be postponed pending the decision of the circuit court on the remonstrance against the paving of North A street. Mr. Marlatt at first indSrsed this suggestion but when Mr. McMinn expressed the opinion that the resolution should be rescinded, Mr. Marlatt made a motion to that effect, both voting for it. Mayor Promises Another. Mayor Robbins was Instrumental in having the resolution drawn for the paving of Sheridan street, one of the worst streets in the city, and when Informed of the action the board had taken he showed plainly that he was angry. "We will have another resolution for the paving of that street introduced," he snapped. Having been successfully remonstrated against, the resolution for ttfe paving of Southwest Seventh Btreet from Main street to the National road AMUSEMENTS RC V7 D I THEATRE laf Rl W Main and 9th TONIGHT. Two Reels "UNDER THE TABLE" One Reel "THE STORY THE OLD CLOCK TOLD." C1URRETTE TONIGHT. Two Reel Reliance Drama "STATION CONTENT" Princess Comedy "JUST KIDS" ARCAD PHOTO-PLAYS Tonight Four Reel Program Edna Mayo and Bryant Washburn Are Presented in "THE LITTLE STRAW WIFE" Big 3-Act Photoplay With a Punch in Every Scene. Helen Holmes In Another Hazard. "THE GIRL AT LONE POINT" Matinee, 5c. Night, 10c. GEN NET T Tonight THAT ROARING COMEDY "The Chorus Girl" ALL SEATS 10 CENTS MATINEE TUESDAY. HERBERT GREENE LIVERY & TRANSFER CO. Up-to-date Coaches For weddings and funerals; also make cab and baggage calls. MOVING VANS For moving Furniture and Pianos. 17 So. 10th St Phone 2650

was rescinded. A resolution was then introduced for the construction of cement walks on the same two blocks of this street '- When the assessment roll for the widening or Northwest Seventh street from Main street to Peacock road came up for consideration, Mrs. Eliza D. Mendenhall, who owns property facing the West Seventh street park, urged that the row of fine forest trees on her property be spared. This she said would not interfere with the widening of the street, but unless the sidewalk was built to circle . about them they would be doomed.! She offered to deed land to the city for the purpose of placing sidewalks some distance from the trees.

JOHN CUDAIIY SICK CHICAGO. April 19. John Cudahy. prominent member of the Chicago board "of trade, banker and member of the Cudahy family of packers, is seriously ill at his home here today. Dr. Quine said that his illness dated from his return from his ranch in California two weesk ago. Complications resulting from an operation for appendicitis four years ago are said to have caused his present illness.

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AMUSEMENTS

Shows Start 1:45 p. m. and 6:45 p. m. 5c Lasl Time TONIGHT-5C

The Paramount Picture Corporation present "THE BARGAIN99 In 4 Big Reels By THOMAS H. INCE. A Great Story of the West. Don't miss this if you like a good Western Drama.

The Performances for "The Bargain" start as follows: Afternoon Shows 1:45, 2:45, 3:45, 4:45. Evenings 6:45, 7:45, 8:45, 9:45.

CMENG

Big Six Reel 66

ADMISSION 10 CENTS.

ALWAYS AT YOUR SERVICE I have moved my residence to the first floor of No. 126 South 8th street, Richmond, Ind., in order to be able to give still closer attention to my business. Those of my clients, to whom second-story .offices are an inconvenience, I can see at home. All classes of Insurance and Bonds written, including the now famous "Workmen's Compensation.' All kinds of Notary Public Work," Mortgages, Deeds, Transfers. Affidavits, Mortgage-Exemptions, etc. given careful and prompt attention. We also take complete charge of the business or financial affairs of anyone, individual or corporation, that prefers not to deal with a multitude of agents, including Rentals, and settle monthly.. Minimum charges. Ladies and men, whose holdings are considerable, wiU appreciate the convenience of a saving in cost as well as in annoying detail work. Strictest privacy guaranteed.

Richmond Inursance Agency

By HANS N. KOLL, Mgr. 126 SOUTH 8TH ST. Telephone 1620.

SCHEDULE OF TESTS FOR BIBLE STUDENTS

The ' schedule for the examination of the members of the Y. M. C. A. Bible classes has been completed by J. J. Somerville, under whom they will be held, and are arranged as follows: , Tuesday, April 20. 7 p. m.. Room 20, high school building. Examination on "Travels of Paul," to be taken by Iroquois classes one, two and three. Thesame evening one class will take an examination at the Y. M. C. A. building on "Jesus, the Head Coach." Thursday, April 22, 7 p. m.. Room 20. high school building, two courses, first. "What Manner of Man is This?" by Cherokee and Ionia classes, and "Men of the Bible" by Spartan classes one and two. ' Saturday, April 24. 10:15 a. m Room 55, high school building. Examination on "Men Who Dared," by Pawnee and Mohowk classes. Gold produced in the United States to the first of this year is estimated by the geological survey at $3,549,799,400 in value and the silver at $1,709.517.600. The Patented Prevent Slipping ions V of walking on Springs 3 THEATRE & The Home of the Paramount Pictures TOMORROW AND WEDNESDAY Feature. 99 716 MAIN 8T.

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