Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 140, 29 April 1916 — Page 9

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, APRIL 29, 1916

PAGE NINE

3Local and nreicm

TRADE III WHEAT SHOWS SOME CHANGE

CHICAGO, April 23. A general rush to bay seat -wheat prices sharply op ward at the opening of the board today. May started at $1.13, c higher than ' yesterday's close. , Corn opened rather: unsteady at prices about equal to the previous close. May opened at 76 to 75c and July at 76Tic. Oats were steady. May opened at 44c, , slightly above.sthe' previous close. ' - . , " Provisions were higher and trading .fair.

GRAIN

market steady prime heavy $ 10.15

10.20. : mediums $10.1510.20, ; light yorkers $.9509.75, piga $9.0009.25, roughs $8.759.15, stags $7.007.25,

heavy mixed $10.1510.20.

Union Pacific, 133.'. Pennsylvania, 56! Bethlehem Steel, . 445.

CHICAGO FUTURES

WHEAT - Open. High. May .....113 114 '4, July ....115 115 CORN May ..... 76 76 June ..... 75 77 OATS May ..... 44 44 JuJy ..... 434 43

Low. Close 113 113 115 115 76 76 76 77 44 44 43 43

CHICAGO CASH. CHICAGO, III, April' 29. VTieat: No. 2 Red $1.19; No. 2 hard winter $1.14. Corn: No. 2 yellow 784 78; No. 4 yellow 75. Oata: No. 3 white 4344; No. 4 white 43; standard 45 J4. TOLEDO GRAIN TOLEDO, O., .April 29. Wheat: Cash. May, $1.23; July $1.23; October, $1.23. Cloverseed: Cash $8.30; October $8.45. Alslke: "Cash $8.70. Timothy; Cash, $3.10.

CHICAGO

UNION STOCK YARDS April 29.

Hogs: Receipts 8,000. market 5 givc

hlerher. mixed and butchers S9.50&

10.05. enetd heavlfis S9.7O01O.O5. rough

heavies $9.40 9.65, light $9.4510.10. pigs $8.25 8.35, bulk of sales $9.85 10.00. ' Cattle: Receipts 100, market steady, beeves $7.5010.00, cows and heifers $3.9009.25, stockers and feedecs $6.60 Q8.50, calves $7.509.00. Sheep: Receipts 1,000, market strong, natives and westerns $6.15 9.25, lambs $8.5011.6o. CINCINNATI

CINCINNATI, O., April 29. Hogs: Receipts 3,000, market slow, packers and butchers $9.559.85. common to choice $7.50(59.25. Cattle: Receipts 200, market slow. Sheep: Receipts 100, market steady, lambs steady.

INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., April 29. Hogs: Receipts 2,500, market 5c higher, best hogs $9.90, heavies $9.85, jpigs $6.009.00, bulk of sales $9.85. Cattle:, Receipts 50, market steady, choice heavy steers $8.509.60, light strees $6.759.00, heifers $6.009.00,

cows $5.258.00, bulls $5.507.75,

calves $4.00-38.50.

Sheep and lambs: Receipts light, market steady, prime sheep. $8.00,

lambs $6.0011.00.

LIVE STOCK

PRODUCE

RICOIiD L1A0KETS

GLEN MILLER PRICES HOGS Heavies ....."..W. $9.50 Heavy mixed $9.50

Mediums : $9.50 Heavy yorhers : $9.50 Light yorkers 8J25 Pigs $7.00

Stags ; $37 CATTLE

Butcher steers ;...........$7.008.00

Heifers $6.007.00 Cows . ........... . . . . . . . . .$4.506.00 Calves ,...$8.00

SHEEP Top Iambs $10.00 Shep ........... ... . . ... . .$5.006.00 PRODUCE CCorrected Dally by Edward Cooper) Old chickens, dressed, paying 20 to 22c. Country butter, paying 22c to 28c; selling, 30c to 38c. Eggs, paying 17ci selling, 20c. Country lard, paying 10c selling 15c. Creamery butter, selling 42c Potatoes, selling $1.45 per bushel. Young chickens, dressed, paying 22c, selling. 28c

BLADES PARENTS FOR f.!0ST TRUANTS

$15.00 17.00.

NEW YORK NEW YORK, April 29. Live poultry, irregular. Chickens 3738; fowls 19. Butter, good demand; creamery firsts 32 33. Eggs 2123.

PITTSBURG PITTSBURG. Pa., April 29. Cattle:. Supply light, market steady, prime steers $9.50, good steers $8.80-95. tidy butchers $8.909.00, fair $7.75 8.25, common $6.507.50, common to fat bulls $5.00S 8.00, common to fat cows $4.fl0(g7.75, heifers $6.008.50, fresh cows and springers $40.00 80.00, veal calves -$9.50610.00. Sheep and lambs: Supply light, prime wethers $7.808.00, good $7,405? 7.75, lambs $6.50Ca 10.00. Hogs: Receipts 8 double decks,

NEW YORK EXCHANGE CLOSING QUOTATIONS American Can., 56. Anaconda, 85. American Locomotive, 73. American Beet Sugar, 69. American Smelter, 974. U. S. Steel, com., 83. U. S. Steel, pfd., 116. Atchison, 101. St. Paul. 93. Great Northern, pfd., HOaLehigh Valley. 77. N. Y. Central, 103. No. Pacific, 111. So. Pacific, 96.

FEED QUOTATIONS

Clover hay, $12.00. Timothy hay, oellin Oats, paying 40c

Corn, paying 65c Middlings, $28.00. Oil meal. $38.50. Bran, selling, $27.00. Salt, $1.40 a barrel. Tankage. $48.00 ton. COAL QUOTATIONS (Corrected by Hackman & Klefoth). Anthracite chestnut. $8.60;' anthracite stove' or egg. $8.35 ; Pocahontas lump or egg, $5.75; mine run, $4.50; elack. $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: tut and slack. $3; for carrying coal, 50c per ton.

' "If the parents would co-operate a little better with the teachers Instead of trying to work against them, there wouldn't be so much truancy in the county as there Is," said George Bishop, county truant officer. - He said that In nine cases out " of ten. truancy is the result of the parents actions instead of the children. Parents, he said, - hate to see their children in trouble and consequently they "stand up" for them

which results in making the teachers

helpless in remedying the truancy sit

uation. '

PILOT WANTS

Continued From Page One.

(changes will be completed by the first1 , of June, he 'said, when the factory will

be removed here front Peru. '

Attempts to reach agreements rela

tive to the location of the railroad switch between the property of the refrigerator company and the Reliance foundry, modifications in the abstracts and minor details of credit,, took up

the time of the session this morning. Those present at" the meeting which resulted in closing the option with the

Rumely company In the purchase of

all the property by the Commercial t Club were John Parkhurst, A. H. Cole!

and Joseph Shirk, representing the Peru concern; Jahn 31. Lontz and Harry Lontz, representing the F. & N. Lawnmower company; Ed Jones and Fred Helt brink. Reliance Foundry; George Miller and Frank Chambers, Miller Brothers Hardware company; Edgar Hiatt, Dickinson Trust company, agent for Rumely company; E. M. Haas, secretary of the Commercial Club, and Wilfred Jessup, Alonzo Gardner and Henry U. Johnson, attorneys, representing the local interest. Secretary Haas, of the Commercial

club said today that " the ' property along the river which iad to be purchased by the club to close the option has been placed in the hands of the Dickinson Trust company,, as trustee.

It is understood that, arrangements have been made to dispose of the property. - . V ' ' The local companies represented in the deal intend to move into the new buildings thia summer,

INDIANAPOLIS REPRESENTATIVE SALES

tempted to purchase the plant of Jhe

Clendenin Tannery company, which

adjoins the Pilot plant, but declared

inai me price as&ed lor tnis prop

erty was prohibitive.

An effort was also made by the

mot company, Mr. Seidel said, to purchase the building which had been

.used as a paint shop by the Rumely

company. The United Refrigerator

company, which recently secured this

building, refused to dispose of it.

however. -

The Pilot company also . made an

effort to secure another building of the Rumely plant, what is known as the tractor building, purchased recently by John' M. Lontz. This plant could not be secured. The Pilot com-

pany was informed that the F. & N. I Lawnmower company will establish a

foundry in the tractor property. Other buildings of the Rumely plant which were purchased by the Miller Brothers Hardware company are not desired by the Pilot company. It is said none of these buildings would meet the purposes of the Pilot company. "We will have to do something to relieve the congestion at our plant, but I do not know what - we can do. Apparently we cannot expand where we are now located," said Mr. Seidel. "In the meantime we are not seeking any more business. We have withdrawn all our advertising. We cannot handle all the business we now have."

BRIEFS

Talk of the town Fish Fry at Utopia Bar Saturday

night ; John J. Daubt, Prop.

No. 12 N. 6th st.

FOR SALE Mill C.& W.Kramer Co.

28-2t

wood. 22-7t

HOGS

56 , 11 . 8 , 105 54 , 76 .

102 121 326 178 204 202

$8.25 9.00 9.25 9.85 9.85 9.90

NEW OWNERS

NORDEM CAPTURED.

j YMUIDEN. Holland, April 29. The (Jermans have captured the Norwegian steamehip Nordem and taken i her into Cuxshaven. The Nordem a

ship of 776 tons, hailed from Christiana.

Continued From Page Onel north of F street and west of the railroad switch; Reliance Foundry, $20,000, all property east of railroad

switch and north of P street; Commercial Club, four acres situated along the river bottom between the Doran and

the. Main street bridges, $2,250.

John Parkhurst, factory manager for the refrigerator plant, announced this morning that work on altering the

buildings to be occupied by that com

pany will be started next week. The (

NOTICE EAGLES Funeral services Sunday night over the remains of Bro. Henry" Leonard at 7:30 p. m. Chas Ashenf elter, W. P. August Johanning, Sec. FOR YOUR CHILD'S COUGH. If your child has a cold, nose runs or coughs much get a small bottle of Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey. Its a pleasant Pine-Tar-Honey syrup, just what children like and just the medicine to soothe the cough and check the cold.

After taking, children stop fretting,

sleep good and are soon entirely well.

Insist on Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey. 25c, at your druggist. Adv.

Him

IB

flyrwcjYTTi

you naturally consider quality and price the first of these has its limitations, the second hasn't.

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I 'bestof)c III IIP!. ffifl3' :

NOTICE DRUIDS You are requested to be at

the hall Sunday evening, April 30, 1916,' 7 o'clock to attend the funeral of Brother Henry Lennard. Everett Bradfield,N. A. William R. Bloom, Sec. 29-lt

has reached the highest limit of Quality it is as good a paint as can be made nothing could be done to Increase its value from the standpoint of durability. . As ' to price, it represents the height of economy from the fact that it represents the maximum in covering capacity and protection to the surface to which it is applied. Kindly give us a chance to tell you what we know about Capital City Paint.

n nTLTT

5 MAIM

CARD OF THANKS. We wish to thank our many friends for kindness and sympathy shown us in the loss of our kind father.

Mrs. Chris Hofheinz and Children,

u

REMEMBER THIS

Continues AH Next Week

Sale M

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Rackets Balls Nets Etc. Amateur or Professional Rackets Restrung

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Columbia's Only 19 16 Desi g n s Up to Date Frames, Seats, Bars, Tires at Special Prices

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IMIOTFOIR.!

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The Greatest Lay-Out of Fisherman's Needings ever Displayed in Richmond

Boys! We've Got Some Display Complete Outfits BEST TO THE CHEAPEST

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Exclusive Agency World Famed

McGregor

Glubs

BALLS AH the Popular Models

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