Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 81, 14 February 1916 — Page 8

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, FEB. 14, 1916.

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Mark

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WHEAT TRADE SMALL OU CHICAGO MARKET

CHICAGO, Feb. 14. Wheat prices were c to lie lower at the start today on heaving selling by local commission houses. Trade was not large and the market was nervous, values declining on small offers. Corn -was unchanged In price at the outset, but large receipts led to general selling early, and prices went down. Trade was comparatively small. Oats were unchanged to He lower at the opening, but broke sharply on scattered selling when the prices in other grains declined. Provisions were lower.

GRAIN

CHICAGO CASH CHICAGO, Feb. 14. Wheat: No. 2 red $1.28, No. 2 hard winter $1.27 1.294. Corn: No. 4 white 7071. No. 4 yellow 7071. Oats: No. 3 white 46 140)47. No. 4 white 454G, standard, 4849. .

TOLEDO GRAIN TOLEDO, Feb. 14. Wheat: Cash $1.32, May $1.34. July $1.25. Cloverseed: Cash and February $13.05, Mar., $12.52. Alsike: Cash $10.20, February $10.30, March $10.45. Timothy: Cash $3.85, March 3 87.

LIVE STOCK

INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS. Ind., Feb. 14. Hogs: Receipts 3,500, market steady, best hogs $855, heavies $8.40, heavies $8.40&8.65. pigs $6.00&7.75, bulk of sales $8.40(38.45. . Cattle: Receipts 800, market steady, choice heavy steers $7.259.00, light Bteers $5.50Ya 8.00, heifers $4.508.00, cows' $4.50ii 6.75, bulls $4.756.75, calves $5.00 li:25. Sheep and lambs: Receipts 50, market steady, prime sheep . $7.00, lumbs $5.00 11.00.

; CINCINNATI CINCINNATI, O.. Feb. 14. Hogs: Receipts 5,300, market active, packers and butchers $8.2008.50, common to choice $5.50S.0O, pigs lights $5.50 8.15, stags $4.00 5.50. Cattle: Receipts 2,200, market steady, steers $4.70()8.00, heifers $4.75 67 7.75. cows $3.251i6.25, calves steady, 4.5Crt'10.20. Sheep: Receipts 100, market strong $3.0007.00, lambs $8.70 10.50.

CHICAGO UNION STOCK YARDS, 111.. Feb. 14. Hogs: Receipts 75,000, market fclow 5 10c lower, mixed and butchers $7.9038.35. good heavies $7.908.35, rough heavies $7.90 8.05, light $7.75 C48.35, pigs $6.257.40, bulk of sales $8.05 8.30. Cattle: Receipts 14,000, market strong, 10c higher, beeves $6.309.65, cows and heifers $3.608.00, stockers and feeders $6.40 7.30, calves $8.50 11.50. heep: Receipts 18,000, market steady, 10c lower, natives and westerns $7.60Q8.35, lambs $8.7511.35.

PITTSBURG PITTSBURG, Pa., Feb. 14. Cattle: Supply 85 cars, market steady, choice steers $8.50 8.75, prime steers $8.25 8.60. good steers $7.858.20, tidy butchers $7.508.00, fair $6.507.25, common $3.506.60, common to fat bulls $4.507.00, common to fat cows $3.00 6.50, heifers $6.50 7.50, fresh cows and springers $40.0085.00. Sheep and lambs: Supply light, market higher, prime wethers $8.40 8.60. good $7.75 8.25, lambs $7.50 11.75. Hogs: Receipts 50 double decks, market slow, prime heavy 18.63, mediums $8.65, heavy yorkers $8.65, light yorkers $8.258.40, pigs $7.758.00. roushs $7.507.65, etags $5.756.25, heavy mixed $S.65.

PRODUCE

NEW YORK .MOW YORK, Fob. 14. Live poultry unsettled. Itutter firm, creamery first JtJii 321i. Eggs, steady, 3031.

t CHICAGO CHICAGO. Feb. 14. Butter receipts 7,684 tubs, firsts 2fi,.28;27. Egg receipts 3,054 cases, firsts 23224. Live poultry: Chickens 15. springers 17. roosters 11V. Potatoes. 77 cars, 95 CD $1.05.

CHICAGO FUTURES

? WHEAT Open. HighMay 128ii 128tt July 121 121 CORN May 77 77 July 77 77 OATS May 48 48 July 45 45

Low. Clos. 126 127 120 120 76 ,' 77 .76 "77 47 I 48 45 . 45

NEW YORK EXCHANGE CLOSING QUOTATIONS American Can, 61. , Anaconda, 90. . ' I' . American eBet Sugar, 69. ' . .American Smelter, 101. ' U. S. Steel, com., 83. U. S. Stell. pfd., 117. . ' Atchison, 103. r St. Paul, 95. Gt. Northern, pfd., $121. ' Lehigh Valley, Y7. - N. Y. Central, 105. N. Pacific, 113. S. Pacific, 99.. U. Pacific, 134. Pennsylvania, 67. Bethlehem Steel, 468.

RICHMOND MARKETS

GLEN MILLER PRICES HOGS Heavies $800 Heavy mixed $8.00 Mediums $8.00 Heavy yorkers i $8.00 Light yorkers ." $7.50 Pigs $5.506.00 Stags :4 505.00 CATTLE Butcher steers $7.0007.50 Heifers .6.007.00 Cows $4.505.50 Calves 4T9.0010.00 SHEEP Top lambs ; $9 00 Sheep j.$4.005.00 FEED QUOTATIONS ' Red clov-, seed, paying $9.50. Clover hay, $12.00. Timothy tay, selling $1SJ00 17.00. Oats, paying 40c. Corn, paying 65c. Middlings. $28 00. Oil meal, '41.00. Bran, selling. 527.00. Salt, $1.40 barrel. Tankage. $48.00 ton. PRODUCE (Corrected Daily by Edward Cooper). Old chickens, dressed, paying 20c. Country butter, .paying Uc to 28c: selling. 30c to 35c. Eggs, paying 22c; selling, 30. Country lard, paying 10c, selling :.ic. 2 for 25c. ! Creamery butter, selling 38o. Potatoes, selling $1.50 per bushel. Young chickens, dressed, paying 20c, selling 25c COAL QUOTATIONS (Corrected by Hackman. & Klefoth). Anthracite chestnut. 5J8.60; anthracite 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, $4.06; Hocking Valley lump, $4.50; Jewel, lump, $5.00; Yellow Jacket lump, $5.00; Tennessee lump, 5.2o: coke all sizes, $7.00; cut and slack, $3; for carrying coal. 50c per ton. INDIANAPOLIS REPRESENTATIVE SALES HOGS 35 93 $7.50 12 .i 104 7.50 16 230 7.90 5 436 8.00 50 166 8.40 23 203 8.40 20 166 8.45 65 186 8.45 167 ...v. 212 ' 8.45 60 -.. 201 8.50

TRUCK DRIVER HELD

, J. L. Thomas, who operates the auto truckbetween Liberty and Richmond, has been arrested on charges of violation of the state road ordinance which prohibits heavy traffic on roads that are in soft condition from thaws. Thomas' trial, the outcome of which is being keenly watched by local truckmen, is being held in the Union county court today. With the exception of the Liberty, Lynn and Hagerstown trucks all bus lines were in operation today. Drivers reported the roads in fair condition. -

ROAD BOOSTER WES TO CITY FOR LECTURE

Word has been received that Jesse Taylor, editor of "Better Roads" and director general of the National Highway association, and president of the Ohio division, National Highways association, and one of the most enthusiastic and best informed men in the United States on road building, will be in Richmond Wednesday evening, February 16, and will address a meeting at the Commercial club rooms at 7:30 o'clock. Mr. Taylor will speak on the subject of the importance of national road building. Members of the National Old Trails roads association, of the Richmond Commercial club, of the Wayne County Automobile club, of the Citizens' Bridge committee, and the committee representing the various women's organizations of the city, are -all invited to assist in giving Mr. Taylor a hearty reception. . A delegation from Richmond will join with parties from Dayton, EatOn, Cambridge City, 1 Knightstown and Greenfield to attend a meeting in Indianapolis tomorrow of the representatives of the Pike's Peak Ocean-to-Ocean highway, for the purpose of inducing them to locate their route from Indianapolis east via. Richmond and Dayton, over the National Old Trail road. They will make a report at a meeting to be held in this city Wednesday night. "

City Statistics

Deaths and Funerals. JOHNSTON David B. Johnston, 79, died at noon Sunday morning after a lingering illness. He was a native of Scotland, and came to this country in 1856. He was a veteran of the Civil war. Besides his widow, Mrs. Ellen Johnston, four daughters, Mrs. Frank Hatfield of Brandt, O., Mrs. Edward Weidner, and Misses Edith and Eva Johnston of this city survive. Funeral will be held from the home Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock, Rev. Rae assisted by H. S. Weed, officiating. Burial will be in Earlham cemetery. Friends may call Monday evening. FOSTER David A. Foster, 82, died earlv this morning at the home of his

daughter, Mrs. Reese Mitchell, Charles

avenue, runerai arrangemeuta uave not been announced. FLORY Bessie Flory, aged 9 years, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Flory of Eaton, O., died this morning at 9 o'clock at the Reid Memorial hospital. The child was operated on for appendicitis four weeks ago but contracted pneumonia, which caused her death. She is the niece of Mr. and Mrs. James Eby, south of the city.

Venezuela is promoting sisal , growing.

Says Body Is a Poison Factory

Urges everyone to drink glass of hot water before breakfast. Just as coal, when it burns, leaves behind a certain amount of incombustible material in the form of ashes, so the food and drink taken day after day leaves in the alimentary canal a certain amount of indigestible material, which if not completely eliminated from the system each day, becomes food for the millions of bacteria which infest the bowels. From this mass of left-over waste, toxins and ptomaine-like poisons are formed and sucked into the blood. Men and women who can't get feeling right must begin to take inside baths. Before eating breakfast each morning drink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it to wash out of the thirty feet of bowels the previous day's accumulation of poisons and toxins and to keep the entire alimentary canal clean, pure and fresh. Those who are subject to sick headache, colds, biliousness, constipation, others who wake up with bad? taste, foul breath, backache, rheumatic stiffness, or have a sour, gasy stomach after meals, .are urged to get a quarter pound of limestone phosphate from the drug store, and begin practicing internal sanitation. This 1 will cost very little, but is sufficient" to make anyone an enthusiast on the subject. ' Remember- inside- bathing is more important than outside bathing, lo

calise the skin pores do not absorb impurities' Into the - blood, 'causing poor health, while the bow j1 pores do. Just. as. soap and . hot water cleanses, sweetens and freshens the skin, so hot water ; and limestone phosphate act on the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. Adv.

WHITEWATER OFFERS CANDIDATES SUPPER

Two Meccas this week for the candidates for places on the various party tickets in Wayne county will be Bethel and Whitewater. On. the evening of Feb. 17 there will be a 'possum feast at Bethel and there will be a Washington's birthday supper served at Whitewater on the evening of Feb. 22. All candidates, and everyone else who intends to attend these two events from Richmond, are asked to register their names at the Auto Hack station, Palladium building, North Ninth street not later than tomorrow so that arrangements can be made to provide trucks to take the crowd to the two towns. It is the plan for the trucks to leave Richmond each of the evenings about 6:30 o'clock. . , '

NEW JURY SELECTED

The following jury has been drawn up by County Clerk - Kelly and has been notified to be ready for summons. , Tiis jury" will probably hear the case against Lee Nichols, the alleged "harem" proprietor: Joses Burris, Abington; Walter Farlow, Boston; Joseph Parrish, New' Garden; Harman Austefrman, Boston; Thoflie Druley, Boston; Harry Towns jnd, Perry; E. M. Fender,-Center; Albert A1-. bertson, Clay; Theodore Lamb, Greene; John Bunnell, Jefferson; Bert Hiatt, Jackson; E. R. Stover, Wayne. , -

India in 1914 produced 555,672 tons of manganese.

ASK FOR and GET HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Cheep substitutes cost YOU same price.

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goodies that just

m-e-l-t in your mouth light, fluffy, tender cakes, biscuits and doughnuts that just keep you hanging 'round the pantry all made with Calumet the safest, purest, most economical Baking Powder. Try it drive away bake-day failures." Raceired 'Highest Award t!cw Cm! Bk Fru Cm SUf in ttmad Cam.

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MEW

Travels fast, and it certainly was good news for every man, woman and child in this locality when we announced our greatest of all merchandise sales THE GREAT

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Which is now on in full blast at the Mfflfilrffl--SftD)'iPB North Eighth and E Streets Great crowds packed our entire store all day Saturday and thousands of the greatest merchandise values ever offered to a buying public were carried away by the arm load. Everyone attending the sale had that spirit of buying and the few who were doubtful soon fell in line as the big Blue and White Bankrupt Sale signs quickly convinced them that the bargains they were after could be found in our great bankrupt stock they did not hesitate another second and all bought the biggest values they had ever seen in less than no time. Now it's up to you, we have satisfied thousands during the opening days of this great sale. Come let us supply with your merchandise needs, at a saving of less than 50c on the dollar.

These Prices Demand Quick Buying 300 yards of 60c and ,75c white table linens 72 inches wide; bankrupt sale 29c price Over 450 yards of 75c Colored Cambrics large assortment; bankrupt sale price, yard Z $7.50 strictly all wool Blank ets, large size, in plaids and checks; bankrupt sale price ! 200 yards of all wool Cloakings and Dress Goods, values up to $3 yard ; Qs

fm bankrupt sale yd

Lot of $1.00 Colored Velvets, 19 inches wide, while they last; bankrupt 33 C sale price, yd

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OTHERS IFA.EH.IEO

Last week we cleaned SUCCESSFULLY 5 jobs on which other cleaners failed. It pays to give your work to people with experience. Ten years in the cleaning, pressing and dyeing. Give us a trial and be convinced.

Men's Suits $1.00 Trousers . . SOc I Long Coats . $1.00 Overcoats . $1.00 1 Ladies' Suits . $1.00 1 Skirts . . 5Qc

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"KLEENS KLOSE KLEEN 99

1013!4 Main "'St. Works 328 S. 11th Street.

Phone 1195. Ford Service.

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50c and 60c heavy brocaded Draperies, 54 to 68 inches wide, in green, tan and maroon; bankrupt sale QQ price 75c large Feather Pillows, covered with fancy heavy ticking jbankrupt suleJQp price, each ........ 50c and " 75c Childrens' heavy Crib Blankets, in blue andtpink ; bank- Qli rupt sale price eJtJV 243 pairs of Men's $1.50 to $2.00 Pants, sizes 32 to 46; bankrupt sale QQs price .;............ Over 1400 Men's $1.00 to $2:00 fine Dress Shirts, with French or stiff cuffs, sizes 14 to 19; bankrupt sale prices, . . -JQ 98c down to $2.50 large size Wool "Nap Blankets, in dark grey and checks; bankrupt JQ sale price........ 12

BanbmpH SALE Bargains 464 Men's All Wool Flannel Shirts in light, medium and heavy weights, $1.00 to $3.50 values; Bankrupt Sale prices 69c Odd lot of Men's All Wool Underwear, $1.25 to $1.75 values, Bankrupt Qr Sale price Men's 50c light blue Chambray Work Shirts, all sizes, Bankrupt Sale 29C $1.50 to $4.00 Fine Cotton Filled Comforts, light and heavy ones; Bank- QQf rupt Sale, $1.98 to 'ov'

35c ''Guernsey' Bankrupt Sale price ... . . . :

Teapots, 19c

Over 100 dozen of Ladies' Kimono Aprons, made of heavy percale and gingham in 20 different styles, 50c to 75c quality ; Bank- QQs rupt Sale price Men's Dress Shoes at big reductions; also Work Shoes, Arctics and Rubbers

Only a few Angora Wool Scarfs left. Values up to $2j00 ; while they T QQ

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50c Heavy Flannel Petticoats 'for women - in " light and dark colors; Bankrupt sale price. -L

Come This Week For Bargains

650 rolls of 10c Crepe Toilet Paper, 1,000 sheets to roll;Bankrupt Sale price, Ottf

15c fine muslin Pillow Cases, size 42x36, over 400 of them; Bankrupt 'JXp Sale price Men's Black Work Overalls, sizes 34 to 44, 50c quality, Bankrupt Sale ' "IQ, price Boys' red and grey SOc Jersey Sweaters, sizes 22 to 34, Bankrupt Sale Ifln price l.71 Ladies'' $1.00 White Wash Waists, all sizes, excellent make; Bankrupt J.Qp Sale price ....... .'. 15c Newest Peerless Pat

terns, while they last, Hp Bankrupt Sale price . ' Over 75 Ladies' All Wool Sweaters, left to close out at once, $3 to $7.50 former $1-48 Lot of 10c Bleached and Unbleached Muslins, 36 in. wide, best qualities; p Bankrupt sale yd . . . 22 Dozens of 20c and 25c Turkish Towels, large sizes, heavy quality; bankrupt sale 19-lf price X2L 25c Fancy Tea Aprons, made of embroidery and lawn; bankrupt Hp sale price .1200 yards of 15c, 18c and 35c Curtain Scrims and Marquisettes; bank- Hip rupt sale prices 17c to 2

THE STANDARD MERCHANDISE CO.

Eighth and N. E Sts. Richmond, Indiana

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