Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 65, 26 January 1916 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
THE RICHMOND. PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, JAN.- 26, 1916. PROTECTIVE LEAGUE 1 ITS Indoor Sports ocm am loreign PREPARES FuOGRAtl
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WHEAT IS HIGHER AS MARKET OPENS
: CHICAGO. Jan. 2. With wheat c to c higher at the start today the market was. fairly active and somewhat nervous. Trading was alow. Cables from Liverpool were higher. Corn was c higher and firm, without much selling pressure. ..1 ' . Unfavorable weather and the report from Braslll stating that the crop of corn there was in danger of damage by locusts were the main factors. Oats were unchanged and steady, there being practically no trading.
July May July
79 80 79 79
OATS. 53 64 . 53 49 604 n
53 49
GRAIN
CHICAGO CASH CHICAGO, Jam 26. Wheat: No. 2 red $1.39. Oats: No. 4 T374. No. 4 yellow 7375. Oats: No. 2 white 61, No. 3 white 51652, No. white 61, standard. 53. . TOLEDO GRAIN T6LEDO, O., Jan. 26. Wheat: Cash $1.38, May $1.42. Cloverseed: Cash $12, March $11.75. Alsike: Cash $10.80, February $10.35, March $10.40. Timothy; February and March $3.80
Live Stock
NEW YORK EXCHANGE Z STOCK QUOTATIONS American Can, 61. Anaconda, 86. American Locomotive, 63. American Beet Sugar, 65. ' American Smelter, 101.' U. S. Steel, 83. Atchison. 105. St. Paul, 95. Gt. Northern pfd., 121. Lehigh valley, 76.- I N. Y. Central, 106. N. Paclfiic, 113. ,. S. Pacific, 100. . UVaPcific, 134., -VC ;.. .,--'- v.'. . RICHMOND MARKETS : GLEN MILLER PRICES
CINCINNATI CINCINNATI, O.. Jan. 26. Hogs: Receipts 5,500, market active, packers and butchers $7.457.70, common to choice $5.507.15. Cattle: Receipts" 400.' market dull, steers strong 4.00 10.50. Sheep: Receipts 100, market steady.
INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Jan. 26. .Hogs: ' Receipts 12,000, market 5c lower, best hogs $7.75, heavies $7.60 7.75, pits $4.00(g)6.50, bulk of sales $7.607.70. Cattle: Receipts 1,200, market weak, choice heavy steers $7.259.00, light steers $5.50(38.00, heifers $4.50 7.50. cowb $4.256.50, bulls $4.75 7.00, calves $4.00010.50. Sheep and lambs: Receipts 200, market stead, prime sheep $6.50, lambs $6.00 10.50.
, HOGS.
Heavies -. ..S7.00
Heavy .mixed $6.75 Mediums ". $6.75 Heavy Yorkers $6.75 Light Yorkers :...$6.25
Pigs $4.505.00 Stags $4.50 5.00 CATTLE. Butcher steers $7.007.50 Heifers $5.00,7.50 Cows $4.605.60 Calves $10.00 8HEEP.
Top lambs $8 00 !
Sheep $4.008&.uv FEED OUOTATIONS Red clov- seed, paying $9 50. Clover hay, $12.00. Timothy tay, selling $15.0017.00. Oats, paying 38c to 40c. Corn, paying 60c. Middlings, $28.00. Oil meal. $40.00. Sran, selling. 527.00 8alt. $1.40 barrel. Tankage. $48.00 ton.
ii i hi 1 1 11 11 ui if i it stAs ' i m -r r n da :s sot s i o y i j , i i
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The program baa been arranged for
the twenty-first annual meeting ot the German Baptist Trl-County Mutual
Protective association which will be held In the court bouse here Thursday,
Jan. 27-
The program will be followed as It
Its given below
President's annual address. Reading of the minutes. , Report of the secretary. Report of the treasurer. Report of the auditing committee. Report of the State Mutual associa
tion by T. A. Sbafer. delegate.
Election of otncers. Report of committee on resolutions. Adjournment. The association Is ' represented by
Wayne. Union and Fayette counties. The president or the organization Peter Plant of Connernvtlle, and the
secretary Is Frank E. Hay of Hagerr-town.
Lancashire fEnrlandl cotton vnrk.
ers are to receive a S per cent, bonus.
GRAY VOTES FOR BILL
CHICAGO. UNION STOCK YARDS, 111.. Jan. 26. Hogs: Receipts 73,000, market 1015c weaker, mixed and butchers $7.15 7.65. good heavies $7.257.65, rough heavies $6.957.20, light $7.05 7.55, pigs $6.25 6.75, bulk of sales $7.30 7.50. Cattle: Receipts 15,000, market strong, beeves $5.409.75, cows and heifers $3.658.50, stockers and feeders $6.508.25, calves $9.2511.00. I Sheep: Receipts 18,000, market weak, natives and westerns $00 8.25. lambs $7.50 10.75.
PITTSBURG PITTSBURG, Pa., Jan. 26. Cattle: Supply light, market steady, choice steers $8.40 8.65, prime steers $8.20 8.40, good steers $7.758.15, tidy butchers ,$7.508.00, fair $6.757.25, common $5.50 6.50, common to fat bulls $4.507.00, common to fat cows $3.00 6.50, heifers $6.507.00, fresh cows and springers $40.0085.00, veal calves $11.5011.76. Sheep and lambs: Supply light,
prime wethers $8.258.50, lambs $7.00
11.00.
Hogs: Receipts 25 double decks,
market slow, prime heavy $7.80, mediums $7.75 7.80, heavy yorkers $7.75, light yorkers $7.407.40, pigs $6.75
7.00, roughs $6.506.75, stags $5.50,
heavy mixed $7.757.80.
PRODUCE
NEW YORK NEW YORK, Jan. 26 Live poultry unsettled. Butter steady, creamery firsts 2731Va. Eggs irregular, 35 36.
II U U U UU U U U U U O
Oh That Mortifying Growth of Hair! IT is the Craedy ia hundred of worn en's lives. But it tmm mblitkedl A few minutes after you apply X. Buia Depilatory- Powder your skta is oft, smooth and frttefkeir. Society women and stage beauties of Paris have been using it tor three quarters of a century. Safe to use on any part of body on faee er neck, under arsas, etc Dees not erow bir but removes it. Approved y physicians aad dermatologists. Gat a bottle to try today. 50e and $1 sizes. Mads by Hall A Ruekel, New York. X.BAZIN Depilatory Powder - For SmU B CLEM THISTLETHWAITE
PRODUCE (Corrected Daily by Edward Cooper). Old chickens, dressed, paying 18o.
Countrv buttor, paying 82c to 28c; selling. 30c to 35c. Eggs, paying 30c; selling, 38c. Country lard, raring 10c. selling :5c. 2 for Creamery ber. peilins 38c. Potatoes, selling $1.50 per bushel. Young chickens, dressed, paying 20c. spllinp 25c. COAL QUOTATIONS (Corrected by Hackman & Klefoth). Anthracite chestnut. $8.60: anthra' cite stove 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, $4.75: Indiana lump. $4.00; Hocking Valley lump. $4.50; Jewel lump. $5.00; Yellow Jacket lump. $5.00; Tennessee lump. C5.25; coke all sizes, $7.00; cut and slack. $3; for car rylng coal, 50c per ton.
Representative Finly Gray yesterday was one of the members of the Indiana delegation- in the house who voted for the Shackleford good roads measure. ' The bill provides that the government shall expend $25,000,000 yearly to the states to aid in the good roads construction providing the states shall match the government's contribution in each case, dollar for dollar,
CONFESSED LOOTER BLAMES BEVERAGES
COMPLETE EVIDENCE IN TRIAL OF KNAPP
INDIANAPOLIS REPRESENTATIVE SALES
HOGS
10 10 3 84 62 44 37 3 2 30 2 1
4 5 1 2 2 2 1 1 1
STEERS
HEIFERS
93 $6.25 103 6.50 333 7.00 179 7.60 233 7.65 274 7.70 251 7.75 493 5.25 715 5.50 1040 6.85
1035 7.50
1160 7.65
710 5.50 590 6.00 710 6.75 1110 7.25
Testimony in the Knapp manslaughter case will be completed this afternoon and Prosecutor Reller "will begin the argument tomorrow morning. After two days and a half of state's evidence and a half day spent in the examination of the evidence for the defense, the - last witness was heard
this afternoon and thee jury, can expect the case Thursday evening. The revolver that Knapp used has not been" found and it is not known whether or not Knapp will take the
stand in his own defense. If he takes the stand late this afternoon, Prosecutor Reller said that he would ask him in cross examination regarding the revolver and for what reason he threw It away after shooting (Williams.
The crop of cereals grown in the northern hemisphere in 1915 exceeds the average crop of the last five years by more than 73,000,000,000 pounds.
Lester Wilkins Sliver, confessed looter of the till of the Richard Williams grocery, 222 South Eleventh street, and jewelry robber at the residence of Edwin Cook, 333 South Thir
teenth street, arrested in Dayton a few hours after leaving Richmond, was returned to this city by Officer Wenger last evening to answer a charge of grand larceny. Sliver, who is the brother of a Dayton police sergeant, claims he was intoxicated when he committed the crimes with which he is charged. So far as known Sliver has previously borne a good reputation. He- was drunk when arrested at a Dayton restaurant, where he had just sold for $2 a watch stolen from the Cook home. Another watch, a bracelet and .a Jock et he had also taken from the same residence were recovered. Six dollars of the $25 stolen by him from the Williams grocery was found in his possession. Silver was employed - In
Richmond for some time at ' a wholesale liquor house. '
SIN BRINGS INEVITABLE REGRET
"Secret sin undermines the very foundation of our lives it undermines our honor and our nation," said Evangelist William J. Sayers at the East Main Street Friends church last night. "A danger to the man and the community at large. If you can't win your own self-respect you can't win the respect of any one else. "We cannot find ourselves wholly until we find Jesus Christ precious to our souls. "No sin is safe from detection. No sin is lost. When we sit in the shadows our sins will unroll before us. We can't escape ourselves. We can't do wrong and not suffer for it. "Sin is the biggest calamity of life. We think sometimes it is loss of money or position but it is sin. God Is faithful and just and has power to forgive all sin and to give us a chance to., make good and to restore the wasted years. "Are you making the most of the best that is in you? When sin has been removed there is a place for the filling of God. Sin is not removed till we say, "Oh. Lord. Make me pure and do it now."
"After we leave this world what then? Some people can stand the spot light but not the search light."
FALLS ON PAVEMENT.
LADIES
WINTER
AT GIVE AWAY PRICES Plushes, Silk Corduroys, Novelties, $3.98, 37.53, $10.00,
$10.00.
COATS
None over
HIRSCH'S
Cash Price Credit Store.
15-17 North Ninth St.
Condition of Wallace Murray, 7-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Claude Murray of Hagerstown. who was painfully though not seriously Injured in a fall on the pavement in front of the Porter grocery at Hagerstown last week, is reported as satisfactory by attendants of Reid Memorial hospital, to which the boy was removed following the accident. His recovery is assured.
LICtHENFELS
New Hafts All the latest and moat popular styles now in stock. See our special at Lichtenfels IN THE WESTCOTT.
Are You Diamond Wi s e? We mean by that: Do you know, where you can get the lowest diamond prices; where you can find the largest variety; where you can get the best quality; where satisfaction will be guaranteed to you on every purchase; where you will see tho finest diamonds In this vi '.nity; where you will always get Just what you are told you are getting, and be sure of courteous, fair treatment? If you will invettigate you wLl find this to be the cass at the store of O. E. DICKINSON Special Agent Seth Thomas Clocks, Hamilton Watches. ' "The best place to shop after all."
COWS
CULLS
850 750 1205 1370 750 900
3.75 4.25 5.50 6.50 4.75 5.25
CHICAGO CHICAGO, Jan. 26. Butter receipts 6,917 tubs, firsts 25 27. Egg receipts 4,807 cases, firsts 2727- Live poul
try, chickens 12 15, springers 15, '
roosters 11. Potatoes, 33 cars, Wlsconeins 92$1. CHICAGO FUTURES WHlLAT. Onen. High. Low. Close May 136 138 136 136H July 126 128 126'4 126 Vi CORN. May 79Vi 79 79
ELDERLY WOMEN SAFEGUARDED Tell Others How They Were Carried Safely Through Change of Life.
Durand, Wis. "I am the mother of fourteen children and I owe my life to
Lydia E. Pinkham a Vegetable Compound. When I was 45 and had the Change of. Life, eriend recommended it and it gave me such relief from my bad feelings that I took several bottles. I am now well and healthy and recom
mend your Compound to other ladies." Mrs. Mary. Ridgway, Durand, Wis.
A Massachusetts Woman Writes: Blackstone, Mass. "My troubles were from my age, and I felt awfully sick for. three years. I had hot flashes often and frequently suffered front pains. v I took Lydia E. Pinkham t Vegetable Compound and nowam well." Mrs. Pierre Cournoyer, Box 23 J. Blackstone, Mass. Such warning symptoms as sense of suffocation,hot flashes, headaches, backachas,dread of impending evil, timidity, sounds in the ears, palpitation of the
neart, sparks before the eyes, irregularities, constipation, variable appetite, weakness and dizziness, should be heeded '
by middle-aged women. Lydie E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has carried many women safely through this crisis.
REED'S
REED'S
nly 3 uUDore Pays off Creed's January Be sure to take advantage of the very liberal discounts offered on all Furniture, Rugs, Etc., this week. . The sale
positively ends Saturday night. We will hold your purchases for later delivery if desired. Our "Home leaMttiir
3-ROOM'$
When you want an outfit come to the store that makes a specialty of assembling outfits, and get BETTER GOODS AT LOWER PRICES.
SA
1 1 Easy VM ments.
GENUINE Brass Beds Must Be Sold Now
ill
Furnished - 0 wEU ' Furnished Y Complete SvQ -Compkte ) t iMK , FX V
i ir -w - , r - llOtli & Malnl
$20.00 Brass Beds, now $15.98 $25.00 Brass Beds, now $19.98 - $27.50 Brass Beds, now
$21.98 $30.00 Brass Beds, now $23.98 $32.50 Brass Beds, now $25.98
ALL OAK, MAHOGANY AND CIRCASSIAN WALNUT A BEDS, REDUCED Sw
Irani
Dressers and Chiffonier $12.50 Dressers, now $ 9.75 $16.00 Dressers, now . . . .$12.75
$17.50 Dressers, now . . . .$13.98 $18.50 Dressers, now .. . .$14.80 $22.50 Dressers, now -. . . .$17.95 $14.50 Chiffoniers .. ....$11.60 $16.50 Chiffoniers .. . . . .$13.20 $17.25 Chiffoniers $13.80 All Chiffoniers 20 Per Cent Off
LIBRARY TABLES Every table in the house at greatly Reduced PricesChoose this week from our immense stock-any style you may want All regular stock, not bought for "sale purposes.
$10.50 Library Tables Reed's Sale Price.... $12.00 Library Tables Reed's Sale Price....
$14.50 Library Tables Reed's Sale Price... $15.00 Library Tables Reed's Sale Price... $16.50 Library "fables Reed's Sale Price... $23.00 Library Tables Reed's Sale Price... $27.50 Library Tables Reed's Sale Price...
$8.40
$9.55 $11.60 $11.98 $13.20 $18.40 S21.98
Where Patrons Are
Pleased"
llOtti & M alnf
