Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 163, 22 June 1915 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, JUNE 22, 1915

MARKET

EXPORT SALES CAUSE WHEAT PRICE DROP CHICAGO. Jun 22. The features of the wheat market today was the continued export and milling demand! for cash wheat, of which 335,000 bushels were sold - to milling and export interests. These sales caused a reaction from the bottom prices of 1 lc and the advances were well held with the possible exception of July, with shorts buying at the close. Resting spots for the day showed July lower and the deferred at4c higher. Corn closed irregular, the new buy months c higher and deferred months Vic lower. Oats were off Vc. Cash sales of corn were 270,000 and oats 260,000 bushels. Provisions 61osed irregular and without change. LIVE STOCK CHICAGO. UNION STOCK YARDS, 111., June 22. Hoes: Receipts 15,000, market weak, mixed and butchers $7.30 7.85, eood heavies $7.35 7.75, rough heavies $7.007.25. light $7.407.90, pigs $6.00 7.30, bulk of sales $7.45 7.80. Cattle: Receipts 3,000, market strone. beeves $7.259.50, cows and heifers $3.50 8.65, calves $8.5010.00 SheeD: Receipts 6,000, market steady, natives and westerns $4.00 6.30, lambs $7.509.50. CINCINNATI. CINCINNATI, O., June 22. Hogs: Receipts 3,200, market higher, packers and butchers $7.75 7.90, common to choice $5.50 7.00, pigs and lights $5.507.00, stags $4.6505.75. Cattle: Receipts 100, market steady, calves $5.259.75. Sheep: Receipts 14, market steady, lambs $6.2510.00. INDIANAPOLIS. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.. June 22. Hogs: Receipts 12.000, market steady, best hogs. $7.95, heavies $7.90, pigs $5.00 7.25, bulk of sales $7.90. Cattle: Receipts 550, market higher, choice heavy steers $8.259.20, light steers $8.009.10, heifers $5.50 9.25, cows $5.00 7.25, bulls $5.00 6.85, calves $5.009.00. Sheep and lambs: Receipts $3.60, market strong, prime sheep $2.00 $5.00, lambs $6.008.50, spring lambs $7.009.50. PITTSBURG PITTSBURG. Pa., June 22. Cattle: Supply light, market steady, choice steers $9.159.25, prime steers $8.85 9.00, tidy butchers $8.508.75, fair $7.758.10, common $6.607.35, common to fat bulls $5.507.30, common to fat cows $3.507.50, heifers, $7.00 8.00, veal calves $9.009.50. Sheep and lambs: Supply light, prime wethers steady, good $6.25 6.35, spring lambs $6.00 10.00. Hogs: Receipts 10 cars, market unsettled, prime heavy $7.958.00, mediums $8.108.15, heavy yorkers $8.10 8.15, light yorkers $8.108.15, pigs $7.507.75, roughs $6.006.60, -stags $5.005.25, heavy mixed $8.008.05. PRODUCE NEW YORK NEW YORK, June 22. Butter easy, creamery extras 2727, creamery firsts fir. Eggs, 2fic. CHICAGO. CHICAGO, June 22. Butter receipts 21,145 tubs, firsts 23 24. Eg receipts 20,719 cases. Live poultry 1717, chickens 24 25, springer 9, roosters 8 9. Potatoes 25, Wisconsin and Michigan 20 30. GRAIN CHICAGO CASH CHICAGO, June 22. Wheat: No. 2 red $1.18. Corn: No. 2, No. 2 white and No. 2 yellow 7374. Oats: No. 2 47, No. 2 white 4748, No. 3 white 46 47. No. 4 white 45, standard 46. TOLEDO. TOLEDO, June 22. Wheat: Cash $1.14, July $102, September $1.02. Cloverseed: October $8.52, December $8.50. Alslke: Prime cash $8.70. Timothy: Prime cash $7.30; October $3,35, September $3.45. NEW YORK EXCHANGE STOCK QUOTATIONS American Can 45 45 Amalgamated Copper ... 76 75 American Smelter 82V4 81 American eBet Sugar ... 51Vi 51 U. S. Steel 61 61 Atchison 1006 101 St. Paul 90 91 Great Northern pfd 118 119 Erie 26 27 Lehigh Valley 144 144 N. Y. Central 88 89 Northern Pacific 106 ?& 107 Pennsylvania 106 107 Reading 144 145 Southern Pacific 89 89 Union Pacific 128 128 LODGES DECORATE MASONIC TEMPLE For the first time since the dedication of the Masonic temple, there is a dark week. The third and fourth stories, dvoted entirely to lodge work, are being thoroughly house-cleaned without the interference of nightly lodge meetings. Walls in the hall ways are being re-decorated and paint and varnish used in various parts of the building. 'Old members of the Masonic lodge say It is the first week for twenty years when there was no gathering of some kind in the building.

RIGHM0NDJT.1 ARKETS GLEN MILLER PRICES HOGS. Heavies 17.00 Heavy mixed ?.26 Heavy yorkers ... 7.25 Pigs $6507.00 Sows $6.006.25 Stags $5.00 and $5.60 CATTLE. Best steers i . $7.50 Heifers $7.007.60

Good cows $5.006.60 Bulls $5.006.50 Canners .-$2.50 sad $3.50 Calves $8 for Saturday delivery SHEEP. Top Iambs 6c Spring lambs 7c FEED OUOTATIONS Clover hay, $16.00. Timothy hay, selling $21. Prairie hay, selling $15. Straw, paying $6. Oats, paying 42c. Corn, paying 70c. Red clov- - seed, paying $5.00. Bran, selling $28 ton. Salt. $1.40 barrel. Tankage. $48.00 ton. Oil meal, $38.00 ton. Middlings, $31 $1.60 per 100. PRODUCE (Corrected dally by Edward Cooper.') Chickens dressed, paying 18c. selling. 25c. Country butter, paring 18c to 25c; selling, 25c to 33c. Eggs, paying 16c, selling 20c. Country lard paying 10c; selling 15c. Creamery butter, selling 33c. Potatoes, selling 70c per bushel. Representative Sates At Indianapolis Hogs-

Av. Price 96 $7.00 162 7.90 217 7.90 269 7.90 910 7.75 1050 8.25 1318 9.00 1316 9.20 445 4.50 5.30 7.40 779 9.10 726 4.00 733 5.00 1085 6,00 1076 6.35 1166 6.90 570 4.75 990 . . 6.00 1720 6.75 1390 7.00 215 7.00 160 8.25 210 9.00 177 9.25

87 . 183 24 . 3 . 3 15 25 2 2 . 17 3 3 2 3 3 1 1 1 1 Steers. Heifers.jows. Bulls. Calves. 2 2 3 4 CHICAGO FUTURES BY CORRELL & THOMPSON, Brokers, I. O. O. F. Bldg. Phone 1446. WHEAT. Open. High. Low. Close WHEAT. July 100 102 100 101 Sept ..... 98 100 98 97 Dec 102 102 101 102 CORN. July 72 73 72 72 Sept 71 72 71 J 72 Dec 62 63 62 63 OATS. July 48 43 42 53 Sept 38 38 37 38 PORK. July $16.75 $16.80 $16.65 $16.77 Sept $17.20 $17.25 $17.10 $17.22 RIOTERS OF GEORGIA STRANGLE AND BURN EXECUTIVE'S EFFIGY ATLANTA, Ga., June 22. With the country residence of Governor Slaton strongly guarded by the Georgia militia and many special officers scattered over the principal streets of the city, Atlanta is comparatively quiet today, tollowing a night of som9 turbulence. Martial law, which was declared last night within a radius of half a mile around the governor's home, was continued in force today. Plain clothes men mingled with pedestrians on the streets and kept the crowds moving, making arrests whenever there was the slightest objection to obeying the order to move on. Reports from many parts of the state today indicate Widespread feeling against the governor for his action in commuting the sentence of Leo M. Frank. MASONS TRAVEL IN SPECIAL CAR A special car will leave Richmond at 6:10 o'clock tomorrow evening for Cambridge City where Masons will hold a county meeting. Webb and Richmond lodges will be represented' by fifty or more members each. The Cambridge City meeting is to bring together Masons from 'all parts of the county to partake of all phases of fraternal life, an initiation preceeding a business meeting and a smoker and j social hour completing the evening. FRIEND EDITOR SPEAKS IN EAST S. Edgar Nicholson, editor of "The American Friend" is attending the New England Yearly Meeting of Friends which is being held this week in Providence, Rhode Island. He will speak at the meeting in the interests of the magazine and also urged a large number of members to attend the Men's Conference to be held in Richmond from October 20 to the 22nd. Mr. Nicholson will return from the east on Sunday.

Nurses

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The picture shows the nurses composing the so-called Chicago ambulance, which sailed on the Dutch liner Niew Amsterdam from New York to Rotterdam. They will be assigned to various American Red Cross hospitals after they arrive in the war zone. In the insert is shown Dr. George S. Davis, in charge of the physicians, and Superintendent Isabel Patten of the nurses. ' .

DOES GENERAL MENACE LIFE New Superintendent of Mails Asks Question After Years of Close Observation. Women, Residents of City, Prove Largest Users of Windows. Is the general delivery service in post' offices a menace to society? This is a question which Superintendent of Mails Wilson has asked. Mr. Wilson, after twenty-one years with the post office, has made a study of conditions surrounding the delivery of mail through this department. The general delivery was started before carrier delivery was thought of and although every other department in the-postal -service has 1 -been im proved, general delivery remains the same. Persons are able to get mail under fictitious names or by written orders. In Richmond, not half of the mail delivered under general delivery is given to transients, theatricaP people agents and others who go from city to city. It is for such people that the general delivery is now being maintained. Women Visit Window. As a matter of fact, the majority of the patrons are permanent residents here. Of the local patronage of the general delivery, the majority are women. Married . women, young girls whose parents are too strict to permit their correspondence, crooks who float from place to place, men who will not per mit certain correspondents .to learn their real addresses, wealthy and pov CAMBRIDGE ORATOR ASSAILS WAR MAD KAISER AND LORDS CAMBRIDGE, Mass., June 22. Watson Washburn, of New York, cast neutrality tolthe winds in his class day oration, and in a ringing address assailed the, kaiser and "his mad career of murdejij, regardless of all the laws of nations and humanity." "What can be the motive?" he asked.. "Does Germany think her unlawful warfare more valuable than our neutrality,? If so, we know what to expect. The German war lords let no idle scruples stand in the way of success. With them the end justifies the means even such means as the murder of neutrals and non-combatants. Perhaps they mistake our patience for cowardice. They expect to sell the lives of our countrymen for gold." ACCUSE PREACHER OF STEALING AUTO CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind., June 22. Aramed with a warrant charging the Rev. B. F. Clifton with the theft of an auto from Thomas Marwood, officers today found Clifton suffering from a nervous collapse at his father's home near Florea. Clifton a few days ago was arrested on a charge of stealing auto tanks from a Veedersburg firm. He-gave bond for $300 and announced the indefinite postponement of his marriage to.. Miss Olcie Hesler of Kingman. The new charge alleges he took Marwood's car at the time of the Boh Jones revival. The car was afterwards found at the home of Clifton's brother.. ATLANTA GROWS CALM ATLANTA, Ga., June 22. The excitement from the action of Governor Slaton commuting the sentence of Leo Frank has subsided today nd the streets are free from crowds although extra police are still on duty, there is little for them to do and it is expected they will be called in. this afternoon. . Nearly all of those arrested on charge of obstructing the streets have been released.

Sail For Battlefields

DELIVERY OF SOCIETY? erty stricken, from good families and families of poor standing, represent those who can be seen at various times of the day asking for mail. "There Is no excuse for such circumstances among residents of Richmond," said Mr. Wilson. "Our carriers cover every place, . country and city. Up to two years ago it was. much woree. At that time an order was issued against minor children receiving mail there without the knowledge of parents." Rules Are Liberal. Under the liberal rules of the gener al delivery, it is almost impossible to stop such practices without arbitrary rulings by the postmaster here. In the last few years it has become the custom among some of the patrons, usually those of good standing in the community to maintain a bdx. Some of the boxes kept for secret correspondence, are not opened more than once a week. In many cases, letters from only one persenr-are addressed to the box number. These patrons, both men and women, know they are safe as the post office is not permitted to divulge inside information. Unless the post office authorities have the cases brought under their direct personal observation, by some incident or transaction which takes place they probably continue indefinitely.

Her Three Children

After instituting proceedings to have her husband's decree of divorce so modified that she may see her children, Mrs. Marie Alice Faden Stark of New York, bared the misery of her life- since here children were taken from her eight years ago by a court decree, and given to her husband's family. In her plea to the court Mrs. Stark said: "If I could but see them and spaak to them; they know that they mean more to me than anything in lif e yea, more than life Itself. The doctors say I will die, if-1 do "not control myself. I am on the verge of anervous breakdown. Well, I'd gladly die to feel the hands of my babies on my shoulders aeain. Life doesn't mean much to me without them."

LONE COUNCILMAN ATTENDS HEARING Although Mayor Robbins described the hearing before the state utilities commission of the city's condemnation proceedings for the acquisition of the electric plant of the Richmond Light, Heat & Power company as a "life and death fight" on the part of the city "to safeguard its best interests," and pleaded with council for an impressive representation of its membership at the hearing, now in progress at Indianapolis, he himself failed to make much of an impression on council. A motion was passed providing that a committee of three council members should attend the hearing before the commission, but Mr. Russell probably will be the only member of that body who will make the trip. Mr. Russell joined with the mayor in urging that several of his fellow members accompany him. SETS DAMAGE SUIT J The trial of the $10,000 damage suit of Iva L. Danner against the T. H. I. and E. Traction company has been set for Monday and Judge Fox has order ed a special jury venire of twenty men. The case will take four or five days to try. Many of the regular petit jurors for the April court term have asked that they be excused for a short time to attend to farm duties or take vacations.

BENEVOLENT GROUP

PLANS ANNIVERSARY ii Members of St. . John's Benevolent society are making plans to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary on Sunday, August 22, with an appropriate program, which will be given aC St. John's Lutheran church. Rev. A. J. Feeger, pastor, has been requested to deliver the jubilee sermon. There probably will be special music and a statistical report of the activities of the society during the last year will be given. On the Saturday previous to the anniversary day. the members of the society will hold a picnic in Beallview park. All members of the congregation of St. John's church have been invited. . The society was organized and is maintained in the interests of benevolences. Included in the use of its funds is the support of widows' and children of deceased members. CONTROL ANGER JOLIET WARDEN ASKS CONVICTS JOLIET, 111., June 22. The honor system, which was builded by Warden Edmund M. Allen, assisted by his wife, Mrs. Odette Allen, "angel of the prison," was still in effect today in the Illinois penitentiary, in spite of the brutal murder of Mrs. Allen early Sunday morning, by one of the trusty con victs, who had access to the warden's private apartments in the prison building. Warden Allen, bowed with grief over the tragic death of his wife, declared today that his faith in his fellowmen had not been utterly shaken, and he sent a message to his "boys" asking them to help make his burden easier by deporting themselves as the men he believed them to be. CITY SHOWS POORLY IN FIGHT ON PLAGUE That the citizens of Richmond are not dissipated and have unusually strong power of resistance, was the opinion of Secretary Melpolder today alter going over the report of the state board of healtn for May. "Richmond and Wayne county did not make as good showing in tuberculosis as I expected," Mr. Melpolder said. "The pneumonia statistics were excellent. Next to tuberculosis, I consider pneumonia to be the best evidence of power of resistance. "Infant mortality statistics for Richmond are good compared with other first class cities of the state for the' last month. This is another evidence1 of healthy conditions and good power of resistance of the parents. "Richmond's tuberculosis mortality for May was the highest of any third class cities." LEMBERG CAPTURED SAYS BERLIN RUMOR LONDON. June 22. A dispatch! rrom Copenhagen says it is persistently reported in ' Berlin that Lemberg has fallen. ITALY TO DECLARE WAR ON GERMANY AMSTERDAM. June 22. A private dispatch from Berlin states that a declaration of war against Germany by Italy is imminent. If Italy declares war against the Germans she will probbly send an army into France. , Melancholy Women. Women should understand that melancholy, commonly called the "Blues," is in nine times out of ten a pure symptom of some organic de-' rangement which should have attention. For nearly forty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from the roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for such conditions, as proved by many testimonials' which we are constantly publishing from women who have been restored i to health by its use. Adv. has. E. Werklng Architect and Building Superintendent. Room 2. Palladium Bldg.

Midsummer Millinery 1 Now Calls For Attention

We want especially that you come and see the new Ostrich Bands, Pom Poms. Koke Bands. White Wings. White Sport Hats, Hemps, Etc Everything new, stylish and at prices that will convince you Millinery Here is Actually sold for less than other shops. COMPLETE NEW LINE of PANAMAS All sizes; all shapes; very cheap. UNTRIMMED HATS at very special prices Klute Millinery Co. 18 North 8th Street.

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LABORS OVERTir.'E VIEWING PROPERTY , VALUED TOO HIGH

Members of the board. of review worked an hour overtime last night making personal inspections of properties which owners say are assessed too high. A number of the complaints were take up today for readjustment. The board will make other similar trips between receiving complaints and adjusting - corporation assessments. The amount ct increase for Boston corporation is to be determined within two or three days. After going down South Fourteenth street where there is a general complaint of excessive assessments, and viewing property on South Nineteenth, Twentieth and Twenty-first street and on Main street between Ninth an4 Tenth, the board decided to get tb assessment for every property in these districts for this year and the previous assessments and make comparisons before taking action. . The assessment of William Dudley Foulke's South Eighteenth street property was fixed at $3,680 for the grounds and $10,000 for the residence and other improvements. Assess Louck Heme. The property of Ebon Louck at Twentieth and Main streets was made $3,600 for the lot and $8,500 for the residence, higher than it has been in previous years. Alton T. Hale, on the east side of South Nineteenth street? was assessed at $600 for the lot and $1,800 for the improvements. A complaint was made on the assessment of E. and C. Schroeder, 612 South J street in which they live. Mrs. Schroeder declared the house is sixty years old and is assessed higher year, one year the addition being made because of a sewer, which has sinoa proved too near the street level and is a damage. The assessment was taken under consideration, although the increase is slight. Mrs. J. B. Dougan, owner of property on Main street, near Fourteenth, was assessed $14,000 for the houses and $4,020 for the lots. This includes parts of four lots. Stags are raised in China for their horns, which are cut oft when soft and used in the manufacture of native medicines. MOTHER CRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, A OwtaiaBaltef fa Feverish ems, CMalipa,tiB, , II o mm m f k, rm v mh'I,,,, m4 m i m W IF - - - . Dwnwiv mwiMl iiUUm., . THE HOGGSON , BUILDING METHOD 4 A Single Contract and a guaranteed limit of cost for a complete building operation. WHtoJbr Mttkmd Book HOGGSON BROTHERS o, ' 7 Eart 44th St.. New York NEW YORK BOSTON NEW HAVE! CHICACO ATLANTA PHOTOS 722 MAIN 5T RtCHMONa INDi We Are ready to loan In an; amount from $5 to $100 on Household Goods. Pianos. Teams. Fixtures. Etc, without removal, for on ricnth to one yeir in monthly, weekl- or quartsrly payments. We Pay Off Loans With Other CompaniesHome Loan Co. 220 Colonial Bid?. Phone 1509. Richmond Indiana. m

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! Buy ! COOPER'S Blend jCoffee