Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 303, 2 December 1915 — Page 8

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CHICAGO, Dec. 2 Exporters bought December and May wheat daring almost the entire session today, and the former closed with a gain 3e, and May was up 3&3c. Cash sales of wheat at the seaboard as well as gulf ports amounted to 1,000,000 bushels today and there were 30,000 bushels at Chicago. Corn showed gains of l',424c and oats were up 1 lc. Sales of corn here were 95,000, and oats 155,000 bushels. The provisions market was higher all around, 4t45c for pork, 17 14 29c for lard and 15l7i for ribs.

GRAIN

CHICAGO CASH CHICAGO, Dec. 2 Wheat: No, 2 herd winter $1.08. Corn: No. 2 white 70, No. 2 yellow 7172, No. 4 white 645, No. 4 yellow, 64. Oats: No. 3 white 43. No. 4 white 40 41ty, standard 44344. TOLEDO GRAIN . TOLEDO, Dec. 2. Wheat Cash and December $1.18, May $1.22. Cloverseed: Cash and December $12.38. February $12.45. March $12.15. Alsike: Cash and December $10.20, February $10.40, March $10.50. Timothy: Cash and December $3.76, February $3.82, March $3.85. .

Live Stock

CHICAGO. UNION STOCK YARDS, 111., Dec. 2. Hog receipts 45000, market steady, 5c lower, mixed and butchers. $5.75 6.75, good heavies $5.80 6.25, rough heavies $5.80(6.15. light $5.406.40. pigs $4.05.50, bulk of sales $5.90 6.50. Cattle Receipts 6500, market steady beeves $4.5010.65, cows and heifers $3.008.25, etockers and feeders $6.50 8.40,, calves $9.00 & 10.50. Steep Receipts 12000, market steady, natives and westerns $3.25 6.40, lambs $6.50(5)9.00.

CINCINNATI CINCINNATI, Dec. 2. Hog receipts 6700, market steady, pigs and lights $4.00(6.15. Cattle Receipts 800, market steady, calves slow, $4.0010.50. Sheep Receipts 600, market steady, lambs $5.759.25. INDIANAPOLIS

INDIANAPOLIS. Dec. 2. Hogs-

market steady, best hogs $6.90. beav

tes $6.60-6.90, pigs 1.006.00, bulk of

sales $6.15 6.75. Cattle Receipts 1000, market steady choice heavy- steers $5.50(g9.00, heifers $4.50(38.00, cows $1.50 6.25, bulls $4.506.25, calves $4.00 10.00. Sheep and Lambs Receipts 5,000, market steady, prime sheep $2.00&5.50 lambs $5.009.00.

PITTSBURG PITTSBURG. Dec. 2. Cattle supply light, market steady, choice steers $8.909.00. prime steers $8.508.85, good

steers 57.858.70, tidy butchers $7.60 8.00, fair $6.507.00, common $5.00

rfi6.00, common to fat bulls $4.50 7.00, common to fat cows $3.00 6.00,

fresh cows and springers $3.50 8.50,

veal calves $10.50 11.00.

Sheep and lamb supply fair, prime

wethers $6.006.15, lambs ?6.009.25. Hogs Receipts 40 d d, market low

er, prime heavy $6.80, mediums $6.00 6.65, heavy yorkers $6.506.60, light

yorkers $5.766.00, pigs $5.505.65

roughs $5.50 6.00, stags $4.505.00,

heavy mixed $b.75.

PRODUCE

NEW YORK. NEW YORK, Dec. 2 Dressed poultry, dull, chickens 1618, fowls 12 17. Live poultry, fairly steady, chickens 1213. fowls 1213. Butter stronger, creamery firsts 2833. Eggs unsettled, 4852.

CHICAGO

CHICAGO, Dec. 2. Butter receipts 5,991 cases, firsts 26 30. Egg receipts

1,860 cases, firsts 2930. Live poul try, chickens 9 12, springers 13, roost

erB 9. Potatoes 30 cars, Wlsconsins

6065. NEW YORK EXCHANGE STOCK QUOTATIONS American Can, 60. Anaconda, 85. American Locomotive, 68. American Beet Sugar, 70. American Smelter, 97. U. S. Steel 84. Atchison, 105. Great Northern pfd., 125. Lehigh Valley. 80. N. Y. Central, 101. Northern Pacific, 115. Southern Pacific, 100. Union Pacific, 173.

CHICAGO FUTURES

Dec. May Dec. May Dec. May

WHEAT. Open. High. .. 106 109 ..109 112 CORN. .. 65 67 . . 70 71 OAT. ..42 44 .. 45 45

Low. Close 106 109 109 112 65 67 69 70 " 42 43 44 45

A nest of wasps will kill from 3,000 to 4,000 flies a day, but the one or two they may miss will breed about 23,456,789 more before the avengers can set back on the job next morning-'

(llCIOI)D MARKETS

GLEN MILLER PRICES HQQ8. Heavies ,$.25 Heavy mixed ..$6.00 Medlvms $6.00 Heavy yorkers Sn0 Light yorkers $5-25 Pigs ..$4.505.00 Stags $4.00 5.00 CATTLE. Butcher steers $5.50 6.00 Heifers $5.00 6.00 Cows $4.00 5.00 Bulls ..$4.505.00 Calves $9.00 SHEEP. Top lambs 7e Sheep $4.005.00 FEED QUOTATIONS Red clover seed, paying $9.00. Clover hay, new, $10.00. . - .. . Timothy hay, new, selling $15 16. Oats, paying, new. 30c to 32c Corn, paying, old. 6 Be. ... Corn, paying, new, 50c. Middlings, $28.00. Oil meal, $40.00. Bran, selling, $27.00. 8alt, $1.40 barrel. Tankage, $48.00 ton. COAL QUOTATIONS (Corrected by Hackman & Klefoth). Anthracite chestnut. $8.60; anthracite store or egg. $8.35; Pocohontas lump or egg, $5.75; mine run, $4-50; slack. $4.00; Winifred lump. $4.75; Campbell's lump. $4.75; Kanawha lump, $4.76; Indiana lump, $4.00; Hocking Valley lump, $4.50; Jewel, lump, $5.00; Yellow Jacket lump, $5.00; Tennessee lump. $5.25; coke all sizes, $7.00; nut and slack, $3; for carrying coal, 50c per ton. PRODUCE (Corrected Dally by Edward Cooper). Old chickens, dressed, paying 18c Country butter, paying 22c to 28c; selling, 30c to 33c. Eggs, paying 30c; selling, 36c. Country lard, paying 10c, selling 15c, 2 for 25c. Creamery butter, selling 37c. Potatoes, selling 90c per bushel. Young chickens, dressed, paying 20c, selling 25c. INDIANAPOLIS REPRESENTATIVE SALES HOGS

17 100 $5.50 34 115 5.50 2 116 5.76 17 206 6.70 72 229 ,6.75 79 232 6.75

STEERS

2 855 5.50

2 .... 730 5.76

4 920 7.50

19 i........ 1271 8".85

HEIFERS

2 425 5.00 2 700 5.50 2 905 7.00 5 822 7.50 COWS 4 670 3.00 3 813 3.65 1 1320 6.00 1 1280 6.25 BULLS 2 760 4.75 1 1190 5.25 1 ' 1570 6.25 CALVES 3 90 7.00 3 123 8.75 2 190 9.25 2 135 10.00

RED MEN PLAN BIG MEETING

Heap much big Injun; heap much music; heap much pale face at wigwam seventh run, thirteenth breadth. That translated into the speaking tonsue of the pale face means that Hokendauqua tribe. No. 196, I. O. R. M., and sister lodges, will hold their annual meeting at their lodge room at 7:30 o'clock Friday night. A parade in costume headed by a band, up and down Main street, will be a feature of the entertainment. Nearby tribe3 have announced that they will be represented and a large attendance is expected. The election of officers and the initiation In three degrees to twenty candidates will be

held. Members are expected to meet

at the wigwam at 7:30 o'clock.

WOODWARD ELECTS

Woodward lodge of Odd Fellows held

its annual meeting last night and elected the following officers for the en

suing year: D. H. Kuth, chaplain; Oscar Hasty, noble grand ; Milton Bishop, vice grand; John Lants, secretary;

George Carter, treasurer; J. F. Daven

port, trustee. One new application for membership was received.

$125,000 III NEW MONEY DROUGHT TO CITY FOR MERCHANTS

The Second National bank ' will place $125,000 new money Into circulation for the holiday trade. Some of the money has already been received and will be circulated within the next few days. J v--' :" Of this, amount, $60,000 Is in new gold coins of different denominations. The rest of It Is In silver and paper currency. Most of the money will be distributed among merchants.

CHILDREN AREPLACEO

Representing St. Ann's Orphanage, a Catholic institution at Terre Haute, Miss Meyer, an agent, is in Richmond securing homes for orphan girls. Several families are making.arrangements to adopt children of this institution. Edith Brommer, aged 9, was given a home with Father Frank A. Roell, pastor of St. Andrew's church, and Grace Ruckelshausen, aged S, was adopted by Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Prus. through the recommendations of Miss Meyer. Other children will like secure homes here.

SEVENTY ARRESTS

.There were seventy arrests made in Richmond last month, over half, thirty-six, being for public intoxication.'

FUND TRANSFER TO GYM BALKED

The Karlham College board yesterday took action on the following matters: ,-' -7 Marguerite . Thiebaud scholarship formally accepted by the board. This scholarship is given by Benjamin E. Thiebaud and wife of Connersville. in memory of their daughter. Marguerite, of the .arlham class of 1912, who died at Brya Mawr College in 1914. Its value is $300 per annum and the fund is perpetual. The holders of the scholarship must be a graduate of the Connersville High school. The board declined to transfer the Moses Fell Dunn fund from the endowment to the purpose of erecting a gymnasium building on the campus. The Board does not wish to invest these funds in a way that is not clearly provided for in the will of Miss Fell and

the contract between the College and

Moses F. Dunn. The board, however,

feels keenly the need of a new gymnasium building and pledges Its cooperation with the efforts of students

and others to bring about the erection

of such a building at the earliest prac

ticable date. Plans For a Budget. Plans were made for . preparing a

detailed budget for the college and with' that end in view the President was instructed to secure estimates

from every one of the departments of the college. The budget will be prepared by the finance committee of the Board of Trustees. The board ratified a tentative agreement which had been made between J. P. Hazard, Union Springs, N. Y. and Professor A. D. Hole, curator of the Joseph Moore Museum, providing for the deposit of a large collection of relics and antiques for a period of twenty years with the Joseph Moore Museum. The board approved of the action of the committee on buildings and grounds in installing an underground ditcl through the bottom of the small stream In the cow pasture and put itself on record as expressing the belief that no satisfactory settlement of this question can be made until the city authorities provide for sewage in some other way than dumping it on the Earlham grounds. The action of the board probably means that the college skating pond will have to be

abandoned -at least for the present until the city makes satisfactory arrangements with its sewage.

TEAGHER AT WERNLE

HANDS IN RESIGNATION

Mfaa rtnro Rickers. school teacher at

the Wemio nrnhans' home todav ten-

rienut her resignation to the board of

control to go into effect on January 1.

Her home is in Gallon; omo sne assigns need of rest and desire to re

cuperate as the reason for her resignation. The executive board of the institution will meet tomorrow evening, ft is ATnA.nt.Rd that the board will ac

cept the resignation. A special meet

ing of the entire board will be caned soon to call a successor.

JOHN WE1LAND DEAD , John Wetland .was killed at the muniMiui riMtri niant in Washington.

Ind.. Tuesday night, when the cylinder

bead of an engine blew on. a of steel struck him and the force of th ttunu steam and water jammed

bis body between a running belt and

the floor.' He was scaiaea w aeam. Waiinnri in n brother of Father Mat

thew Weiland. for three years assist

ant to Father Roell. pastor oi m. Andrew's church. Father Weiland left here three years ago to take a charge near Tell City. Ind. , -. EAGLE VOTERS PICK OFFICERS IN LONG CONTEST AT BOOTHS The election of officers of the Wayne Aerie, 666. Eagle's; developed a lively contest and more than 600 votes

were cast. The australian ballot system was used in voting, the polls being opened from 5 to 8 o'clock last

evening. The counting committee did not complete the results until 1 o'clock this morning.

Lewis Essenmaker was elected worthy chaplain. The offices of worthy president, worthy vice-president, secretary and treasurer were uncontested. The following is the list of officers for the ensuing year: Worthy president, Charles Ashenfelter;.. worthy vice-president, Frank Qulgley; worthy rhaniin Ttwis Essenmaker: treasurer.

Henry Schroeder; secretary, August

Johannlng; Inside-guard, u. . uoner, mitsidA cruard. William Nicholson;

trustees, William R. Bloom, Horace

Fornshell and Charles Ewbann; pnysiclans, Drs. J. J. Grosvenor and S. G. Smelser. OFFICERS ARE NAMED

Officers for the ensuing year were

elected last night by the Women s Catholic Order of Foresters, as follows: Mrs. Elizabeth x ngelbert, chief

ranger; Miss Rosamond tieroia. vice chief ranger; Mrs. Elizabeth Geier, recording secretary; Mrs. Martha Geler Torbeck. financial secretary; Mrs. Elizabeth Gosselin, treasurer; Mrs. Mary Huber, Mrs. Elizabeth Dunlng and Mrs. Elizabeth Westerndorf, trustees; Mrs. Rosella Shipman and Miss Anna Meyer, conductors; Mrs. Mary Hoffman and Mrs. Mary Geier, inside sentinels; Mrs. Elizabeth Meyer, Mrs. Agnes Meyerhoeser and Mrs. Mary Imhoff, sick committee; Mrs. Anna Wessel, Mrs. Anna Weiss and Mrs. Kate Kunk, for the good of the order; Miss Anna Meyer, Miss. Anna Pfeiffr and Mrs. Elizabeth Westerndorf, auditing committee; Rev. F. A. Roell, chaplain, and Dr. F. P. Buche, examiner.

PHYSICIANS ELECT

Dr: A. L Loop of Economy was named president and Dr. A. J. WhalIon was re-elected at the annual election of . officers of the Wayne County Medical society held yesterday afternoon. Other officers are Dr. R. D. Morrow, vice-president; Dr. L. M. Gentle, treasurer, and Dr. A. L. Bramkamp, censor. Dr. S. C. Markley was chosen delegate to the state convention which will meet in Indianapolis next year and Dr. J. E. King was named alternate. Three papers were read before the meeting. DEFORMED BABY DEAD.

HEALTH REPORT.

There were twenty-three cases of

contagious diseases in Richmond last

month. Seventeen were chlckenpox,

five scarlet fever, one diphtheria and

one measles.

New VORK, Dec. 2. Mary Margaret Roberts," the three-weeks-old baby that was born defective and whose ' case paralleled the Bollinger baby In Chicago, died today. The baby was born deformed and suffering from paralysis. INFORM ATHENS.

ROME, Deo. 2. A dispatch from Athens says that according to " the newspaper. Neon Asty, the Teutonic powers have informed Greece they will cease to regard Greek Macedonia as friendly territory If the demand of the Enter te Allies are met.

Secretary of Navy

And Wife at Game

CITY RANKS FOURTH IN 11(611 GRADUATES

Figures showing that 16.3 per cent is the ratio of high school graduates to the high school average daily attendance and Indicating the percentage of high school students to continue through the school term to graduation, have been compiled by Superintendent J. T. Giles of the city schools. Compared with other cities in the state, Richmond ranks fourth. Followlng Is the table showing all the clUes and the respective percentages: V Kokomo 18.2 Elwood h'j Anderson 17.3 Richmond 15.3 New Albany , 163 Jeffersonvllle 159 Terre Haute is.g Huntington 15,7 Laporte 15,4 Muncie " . 153 Lafayette : 153 Indianapolis 14.9 South Bend 148 Marion WW. 54$ . Vlncennes !!!!!!! 14.2 Hammond 14.1 . East Chicago i 14.0 Michigan ;.. 139 Ft. Wayne ....'.!!! 13 5 Gry n 6 Elkhart .. Ill Logansport ") n'3 Mlsbawka Evansvllle WW. no Peru. 108 LODGE 8END DELEGATES TO DISTRICT MEETING Ed A .Ranks and Charles Lyons will be delegates representing Cceur de Lion lodge. Knights of Pythias, at the district meet at Lynn, Friday. Iola lodge will select its delegates at a meeting tonight. Triumph lodge will also be represented. C. E. Shlveley of this city will be one of the principal speakers at the convention. PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY

TRY TO WRECK ARSENAL. , . BOCK ISLAND. Ill, Dec. 2. That several attempts have been made to destroy the great . United States military arsenal was revealed here today by the report sent to Washington by

Lieutenant Coloael George W. .Burr, commandant at the post, containing a statement of mysterious occurrences there.

New York has about 700.000 school children.

IEILItM(E UJT Our Entire Stock of Gas nanjjes

WE NEED ROOM And Are Going to Quit HandEsg GAS RANGES In order to move ' them quick they

all go at Factory Prices QUAD GAS RANGES are first class, guaranteed in every way satisfactory. All Ranges Connected FREE

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Cash or Easy Payments

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We have just received a shipment of some 50c Rugs. All sizes and qualities, which we will place on sale until Xmas. Start now and make your Xmas economical by buying a useful gift during this sale.

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27x54 Velvet Rugs sold at $1.50, Xmas special 98c $1.75 Palisade Velvet Rugs, in floral and Oriental patterns, Xmas special $1.25 Heavy Axminster Rugs sold at $2.00 Size 27x54, special $1.48 Large size Rugs, 36x72 in good quality Velvet, sold at $3.50, extra special for Holidays only $2.39 36x63 Axminster Rugs, worth $3.75, Xmas Special $2.39 $1.25 Axminster Mats, size 18x36. special 89c $2.50 Smith's Axminster Rugs, size 27x54, a large assortment to select from, Xmas special $1.89 36x72 Smith's Axminster Rugs sold at $5.00, extra heavy "weight special for Holidays only $3.29 $1.50 Jute Rugs, Reversible, size 30x 60, extra special only 98c $5.50 Best Quality Axminster Rugs, size 36x72 all new Spring patterns, special for Xmas $3.79

75c Cocoa Door Mats, heavy quality, extra special, only 59c q . $6.00 Genuine Wilton Velvet Rugs, n size 27x50, special $3.89 D 10 per cent to 20 per cent saved on n Room Size Rugs from now until D Christmas. $9.00 Wool Fibre Rugs, size 9x12; special $5.98

Bissel's Carpet Sweepers at special prices for Holiday Trade. Also Lace Curtains, Portiers and Couch Covers included in this sale. We carry a line of Rugs that we can guarantee Smith's Rugs $15.00 Heavy Tapestry, 9x12 Rugs, special,. $11.98. $1.25 Washable Rag Rugs, all colors, Xmas special 98c $22.50 Axminster Rugs, size 9x12, Special $16.98

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The Xmas Store"

The picture shows Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels

and Mrs. Daniels in their box at the Polo Grounds, New York, on Saturday, watching the Army-Navy football game.

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