Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 179, 14 June 1916 — Page 9

THE-RICmiONB-PALIJLDIUM:ANI SUNlxmEGRAM.WEDNESDAY, JUNE 14, 1916

PAGE NINE! Wocalaiullor Syracuse Picked as Winner- of Regatta LIMA FACTORY oreign LOOKS FOR SITE T7 A ""tr -At Si - V-' - . . - - -'f - - I- - - :v-jvv:-:vv"-v.V(,-.vi-.-cv :-: --.)! s. fcvi

Ma

FRICES OF GRAMS MAKE LOW OAHGE

CHICAGO, June 14. Unresponsive cables made for a lower range In wheat today and prices continued to decline In the first half tour. Afterward commission bouses became fair buyers, and the offerings were absorbed, ' .,JIy SS?11?1 at Sepember at $1.0. The large cash sales of yesterday and rain in the middle west made corn prices factlonally higher. July opened at 7V,ic September at He lower. ., Oats were fractionally lower. July opened.at 39c September at 38 c. Provisions were steady at the previous close. :- " Wheat closed irregular and unsettied today and showed declines of lc to lc for the day. When the selling was inaugurated earlier in the session wheat came out in large quantities and selling continued right up to the close. There was a halt In the decline and reaction of from c to c Corn was tmchanged to He to c higher, and eats were He to lc higher to unchanged to He lower. Hog products were unsettled and lower. GRAIN CHICAGO FUTURES Open. High. Low. Close WHEAT. July .....106-; 104 102 H 102 Sept. 106H 106- 104 104 CORN July ..... 71 71 71 71 Sept. ..... 71 71 70 70 , : OATS July v.... 39 - 89 : 39 39 Sept. ,..... 38 38 38 38 CHICAGO CASH CHICAGO, June 14. Wheat: No. 2 red $1.031.04. No. 3 hard win ter 3103. Corn: No. 2 white 75. No. 2 yellow 77. No. 3 white 39 40. No. 4 white 8839, standard 40 4lc. CINCINNATI GRAIN CINCINNATI, June 14. Wheat: No. 2 red winter, $1.081.10, No. 3, $1.04 Ql.07. Corn: No. 2 white 7677, No. 2 yellow 7677. Oats: No. 2 mixed 3940. TOLEDO GRAIN TOLEDO. June 14. Wheat: Cash $1.084. July $1.08. Cloversee(J: Cash $8.75. October, $8.92. Alslke $9.50. Timothy: Cash" $3.50, September $3.40. LIVE STOCK CHICAGO UNION STOCK YARDS. 111.. June 14. Hogs Receipts. 26,000; market, 10c higher. Mixed and butchers, $9.30 90; good heavies $9.659.90; rough heavies $9.309.80; light $9 $9.80; pigs $8.108.90; bulk of sales. $9.60(g9.85. Cattle Receipts, 18.000; market, steady to 15 lower. Beeves $8.15 $11.40; cowa and heifers $4.259.40; stockers and feeders $6.758.65; calves $9.50 11.25. Sheep Receipts, 16.000; market, 10c lower. Natives and westerns $5 7.90; lambs $10.4011.35. INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS. June 14. Hogs: Receipts . 7,000, market 25c higher, best hogs $10.00, heavies $9.7510.00. plgs$6.009.25, bulk of sales $9.75 9.90, market steady, choice heavy steers. $9.00 11.00. light steers, $8.00 (9.75. .heifers. $5.508.25, cows $5.50 8.50, bulls, $5.50 8.25, calves, $5.00 (p 10.75. Sheep and lambs: Receipts 300, market steady, prime sheep $7.00, iamos, $7.50 -9.00. PITTSBURG PITTSBURG, June 14. Cattle sup ply ugnt, marxet steady, prime steers $10.6511.00, good steers $10.00 10.65. (idy butchers $9.?S19.SG, fair $8:E09.25, com men $7.0O8.68. com: Cioa tq.fat pulls f 5.008.00, conamea iq hi cows 4.uBttf8.tJt), neiters, $6;oo 9.60. fresh cows and springers, $40.00 esO.00. veal. calves, $12.031$:50. Sheea and lamb supply (ight, prime wethers $7.40&76a, spring Iambs $7.ooia.ep. Hogs: Receipts 6, market higher, prime heavy $9.85, mediums $9.85, 'heavy yorkers $9.65. light porkers a. bo, pigs B9.eacr9.vu, reugns la.oo S"8p, stags $6.75(57.00, heavy mixed $9.85. PRODUCE NEW YORK NEW YORK. June 14. -Live Pout try firm, thickens 2230, fowls 22fl S3, butter, firm; creamery 'extras 28H 0P23; eggs ZZZ3H. CHICAGO CHICAGO, June 14. Butter: eReceipts. 13,641 tubs; firsts 27027U. Eggs: Receipts 20,000. cases; firsts 18 20. . Live poultry: Chickens 17, springers 18 19, roosters 11. Pota toes: Receipts, 32 cars r "Wisconsins $11.15. i i.' - ; CINCINNATI PRODUCE Butter Creamery whole milk extra 33c, centralized extra 30c, do firsts 27c. do seconds 24c; dairy fancy 24c, packing stock No. 1, 22c; No. 2, 21c. Eggs: Prime firsts 21 . firsts 21, ordinary firsts 20, seconds . 18c, duck 20c. goose 35c. Poultry: Broilers 1 to 14 lbs 280 .Oc, hens 4 lbs and over 17c. Birawoemes: Home-grown ji.bo5J2 per 241quart crate; Gandy's $1.50 2

per 24-quart crate,' Aroma $ 1.502 24-quart. crate. Potatoes: Home-grown $3.5033.75 barrel. Mississippi 11.25 &1.60 per hamper.' Wisconsin 11.20 Q 1.25 per bushelr Tomatoes: Florida sell at $2.75 3 per six-basket crate.

RICHMOND MARKETS GLEN MILLER PRICES HOGS Heavies $3.00 Heavy mixed ........... .. 39.00 Mediums $8.75 Heavy yorkers ............... . $8.75 Pig $78 Stags ...................... $4.606 CATTLE Butcher steers ........... .$7.C038 00 Heifers $67.50 Cows $5.50 7.00 Calves $59 . sheeptop lambs $9.00 Sheep ... .$5.009.00 PRODUCE (Corrected Daily by Edward Cooper) Old chickens, dressed, paying 20 to 22c. ' ..' . Country butter, paying 20c to 22c; selling 25c to 30c Eggs, paying 18c, selling 23c. Country lard, paying 12c; selling 18c. Creamery butter, selling 35o. Pqtatoes, selling $1.50 per bushel Toung chickens, dressed, paying 25c; selling 28c. FEED QUOTATIONS Clover hay, $12.00. Timotby.hay, selling $17.0018.00. Oats, paying 36c. Corn, payinc 65c. - Middlings, $27.50. Oil meal. $38.50. - Bran, selling. $26.00. Salt. $1.50 ton. Tankage. $48.00. ton. COAL QUOTATIONS (Corrected by Hackman & Klefoth). Anthracite, chestnut, $8.50; anthra cite, stove or egg. $8.15; Pocahontas, lump or egg, $5.00, mine run, 84.50; slack, $4. CO; Winifred lump. $4.50; Campbell's lump. $4X0; ' Kanawha lump, $4.50; Indiana lump. $4.00; Hocking Valley lump, $4.50; Jewel lump. $4.75; Yellow Jacket lumn $4.75; Tennessee lump, $5.00; coke all sues, $7.00; nut and slack, $3.50; Jackson, $5.75; Kentucky lump. $4.75; Winfred washed pea, $4.25. INDIANAPOLIS REPRE SENTATIVE SALES HOGS 7 13 215 140 162 208 256 $ 9.00 '9.50 '.9.75 9.85 10.00 $ 8.50 8.65 9.50 10.75 11.10 $ 7.50 8.00 8.25 8.75 36 65 25 20 2 2 18 15 6 2 7 4 7 STEERS 687 880 765 1384 1334 HEIFERS 753 620 745 752 701 9.00 $ 4.50 6.50 7.00 8.00 8.75 $6.00 6.50 7.50 8.10 8.25 $ 7.00 10.75 11.00 11.25 11.50 COWS 2 2 2 2 1 2 2 10 2 2 700 975 1065 1263 1320 520 ' 730 1150 1480 1620 BULLS 'CALVES 100 140 169 155 165 NEW YORK EXCHANGE CLOSING QUOTATIONS Anaconda, 85American Can, 58. American Locomotive. 72. American Beet Sugar, 93. American Smelter, 97. U. S. Steel, com., 86. U. S. Steel, pfd., 117. Atchison, 106. St. Paul. 100. Gt. Northern. pfd.j 121. Lehigh Valley 107. N. Pacific, 115. - ' S. Pacific, 99. U. Pacific, 138. Pennsylvania, 68. Bethlehem Steel, 444. SUPPLY GARS LEAVE YARDS The annual supply train over the southern division of the G. R. & I. railroad left Richmond this morning to distribute supplies along the line. Those who will receive suDDlies are station agents, freight agents, section bosses, telegraph operators and others. The supplies include evervthine from stationery to track tools. The train consisted of two oil cars, two cars to carry track and other tools, a car of stationery for stationmasters, and two cars on which to place scraps picked up along the line. The. train will be" three days cover ing the route from Richmond to Grand Rapids. Trainmaster R. E. Casey. Division Operator, J. P; Betts and Division En gineer R. G. Jones are with the train. There are 4.200 soeciea of Dlant used for commercial purposes. Of these 420 are used for perfumes. The manufacture of street navlnz bricks from blast furnace slag is being developed in England. -

jf?: .: -l J i If J? f v A J Tt S ' ' - r. A "' , l I f - , v . v

V r

El f

li K

til "

k u !lere 1? the :hM,ky 8ypcu university crew which Is looked upon as the favorite In the Poughkeepsle Intercollegiate regatta to be rowed on the Hudson Saturday. Left to right, the oarsmen are Sprague, bov; Captain Glass. 2; Wallis, 3; Osman, 4; Hopkins, 5; Warden, 6: Whiteside, stroke and Jayne, coxswain. -

In Fashion s Realm

f F"" I I 1 IIIIIIIIIIISIHrilWlimwtflllHSBMIBWIIIIIBBI SIIW-miMlllMlimSIIIMH - I i 1 1 ill I ii (y - v II ; ; ff e- " A 1 L ee I

Flounce upon flounce of soft colored satin lining goes far to

affair. Elaborate pearl bead festoons, and embroidery afford rich

ininming. xne Doaice is extremely simple, the only relief from the folds of tulle being the wide band of pearl embroidery.

HONQRA

TO I B

JO

"Preparedness which is needed in America", by which the United States must stand, is a preparedness of school, library and laboratory: a preparedness of earnest toil and sound ideals," declared Dr. Frederic L. Paxson, professor of American History in the University of Wisconsins in his address at the Earlhanv college commencement this morning. "What we need is an American publice opinion which knows its own mind, a means of accurately and adequately expressing that opinion, and a form of government sufficiently strong to keep the machine in motion in the intervals between issues. "Our government is like an old pioneer's wagon, durable, steady, strong; able to withstand the knocks of the road, but neither beautiful nor speedy. No one can maintain that our American government is efficient." Dr. Paxson review the history of Indiana. "There are" few communities in our nation in which life has preserved the original characteristics of American life, and is at the present . as truly typical, in both its good and evil, as the state of Indiana," said Dr. Paxson. . ' Following the address, the class of 1916 was represented by President R. L. Kelly, and the degrees were conferred. In introducing the class, Dr. Kelly praised their ability and merit. "In quantetative terms Earlham's contribution to the world is not extensive, it's value is rather qualitative," he said. "It takes a sublime faith, in the face of the present stress of civilization, to think that forty-seven young men and young women from a little Quaker college form a significant contribution to the world's progress, but we have sublime faith in quality, and the power of a little leaven to leaven the whole lump." In addition to the conferring of forty-seven bachelors degrees on the members . of the senior class, an honorary degree of Master of Arts ' was bestowed on Mrs. Josiah Evans Cowles of Los Angeles, a student at Earlbam college in 1875-1876, and the recently elected president of the National Federation of Women's clubs. "We confer this degree upon a woman of national eminence," said President Kelly. "She has distinguished and honored herself and her Alma

-i " ' - " "

v.-.-JY.V..: .V V. ...v. ..W: . . v ..v '-fc-'.-. .V.W.V -.W.-.-. -. .V. ."J lriL,- IU)MV

rrtirfrrnir. m - tulle falling over a. rlainfv fleli make this dance

BY DEGREE GIVEN

S AH COWLES Mater, as a leader in the emancipation of her sex, as a reformer in the field of child labor, and as the official commander of two and one-half million American women who are seeking" the most true and the most beautiful." The commencement exercises were held on the Chase outdoor stage, and were attended by the parents and friends of the graduates. Special music was furnished by the -college orchestra,, under the direction of Miss Carolyn Hutton. The invocation was pronounced by Rev. E. E. Davis, of Richmond. HUGHES ACCEPTABLE TO GERMAN PRESS AMSTERDAM, June 14. The German press is well satisfied with the result of the selection of Charles E. Hughes as a Republican candidate. The press emphasizes the fact that Mr. Hughes to defeat President Wilson must have the German-American vote and states they will not fail to assist if the Republican candidate gives a guarantee of strict neutrality. About fifteen thousand tons of paper and . paper board are manufactured every day in the United States. Three men require six months to make, a cashmere shawl, which is worked from ten goats' fleeces.

A

wrffaYawCtem- Better thanlmported.

Sold by Arlington Hotel Cigar Stand, Wettcott Hotel Cigar Stand, ft H. Ftltman, Enale A Eaton, Quiatey Orua Ctorce. ' " -

N v.

irmrafsjnniiiiT - OVER ST, LOUIS, June 14. Democracy's clans gathered in the old Mound City today. For the first time in many years a Democratic national convention resolved itself into a general ratification meeting. The only cloud in the horizon was one affecting certain sections of the platform. And ASK JOHNSTON TO LEND HELP; BEAUTIFY YARD Dr. Walter C. Woodward, professoi' of history at Earlham college, has withdrawn from the faculty, following his appointment as general secretary of the five years meeting of the Friends church in America. Dr. Woodward has been on leave of absence during the past year, as director of the Indiana centennial commission. His place on the faculty will be filled, as it has been during the past year, by Earle L. Shoupe, M. A., bf. Yale university:- ; w j j n Alexander C". Pu'rdy, Ph. D of Haft ford Theological seminary, will become head of the department of Biblical literature. . During the extended leave of absence of Miss Elizabeth Conrad, Miss Elgia Wettwer of the University of Wisconsin, has been appointed, acting head of the department of French and instructor in vocal' music. Philip W. Furnas of the class of 1913, will become instructor of freshman rhetoric. It was announced at Earlham college this morning that Donald Bond Johnston of the class of 1912, now a landscape architect of New York city, has donated his services in making plans for the beautification of the Earlham campus. To carry out his plans a gift of shrubs and plants has been made 'by the firms of C. M. Hobbs & Sons of Bridgeport, Ind., the Peterson Nursery of Chicago, and the E. G. Hill company of Richmond. REPORTS ARMY BILL. WASHINGTON, June 14 Chairman Hay of the House military affairs committee this afternoon announced that the committee would make a favorable report on the $157,000,000 army bill and that efforts would be made to take the measure up in the House by Tuesday. It is the largest army bill ever recommended. HILLING WANTS SON'S FREEDOM Elizabeth Candler, probation officer, said today that "she is determined that John Hilling. 11, son of Ed. Hilling. shall not be released from White's in- j stitute, despite the attempt being j made by his father to bring this about. ! Young Hilling was taken to White's ! Institute as an incorrigible boy and ! gave the police and the juvenile court officials more trouble than any boy in the city, Mrs. Candler said. Several days ago Ed. Hilling, the father, employed an attorney to secure names on a petition to have the boy released. The petition was presented to Judge Fox, but as judge of the juvenile court, he became more determined in his intention to keep young Hilling at the institution. "As soon as the petition was presented," Mrs. Candler said, "we informed the superintendent at the institute not to allow the boy to leave with his father under any circumstances. Ed. Hilling said today that he is determined to secure, the release of his son, and is planning to present a petition to Governor Ralston.

RULES P

2

N S TELEPHONE

,v H

Is

ARTY'S ACTIONS

the leaders insisted that this cloud m no way. forecasted a storm. The attendance is the smallest in many years. Railroad agents say this. The Democratic officials point with pride to this effect. They insist that the Democratic office-holders are prevented from coming by the knowledge that the American - people doesnt want them on the scene. And the rank and file of democracy is so busy, the leaders sayj taking care of the business resulting from the great wave of prosperity now sweeping across the country that it has no time for such an unimportant matter as a Democratic national convention. President Wilson himself was in control of the convention. Direct telephone wires connected the Coliseum with the White House. Here In St. Louis the real work of directing things was being done by Secretary of War Baker, Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels and Secretary of Agriculture David Houston. Baker was the real "live wire." To him had been entrusted the President's views on what the platform should contain, and also the order that the old ticket of Wilson and Marshall should be named. Y. M. I. TO MEET. Business of importance ' is scheduled to come up at the regular bimonthly, meeting of the Y. M. I. tonight. The delinquent dues by-law which was passed at the last meeting will be put in effect this evening. USE COOPER'S BLEND Coffee e COOPER'S GROCERY COME IN AND SEE My line of Summer Woolens for your Approval Dry Cleaning and , Hand Pressing. CARL C. YOUNG TAILOR Room 1. Palladium Bldg. PHONE 2675. Work Called for and Delivered.

Gaar Nurseries

YOUR HOME

Now is the time to cometo the Gaar Nurseries to get anything in trees, shrubs, hardy plants, -vines, Etc. Finest you ever saw. Cambridge City, Wayne County, Ind. ' Richmond Representative J. E. Thatcher. ' 128 S. Ninth St.

HYPNOTISM is a good thing but it is not necessary to appreciate glasses fitted by EDglUOS, Optometrist 10 North Ninth St. Phone 2765

J. &L Primm. vice president and general manager of the Power Manufacturing; company of Lima, O., manufacturers of oil engines, was in the city a few hours today for the purpose of inspecting buildings in the Rumely plant group with a view of seeking a' location for his concern. J. H. Mills, chairman of the industrial expansion committee of the Commercial club, escorted Mr. Primm. "Our foundry was destroyed by fire recently and we have decided not to rebuild it because our plant is cot large enough to handle our business," said Mr. Primm. - I "Pennsylvania railroad officials in formed me that we might secure a satisfactory location in Richmond. We must have not only a foundry but a building for our assembling department. We have been employing 150 men, mostly skilled mechanics. ; "Most of our business is with the southwest where there are irrigation projects. We have been swamped with orders lately and we must have a plant large enough to care for all our business."

New York state has 251 savings and loan associations. Pennsylvania yearly nrodueea 500.1 000 bushels of buckwheat. 1 39 Years igo Today The first form of the American flag, 13 stars, 13 stripes, was adopted by congress. PREPAREDNESS It is the vital question of i the time. Everyone is interested in the subject bf ; Preparedness. Are you prepared against sickness, debt, old age, want, poverty. A bank account is the answer. o on savings. Start Today i. NURSERY. Go Right Througli the entire equipment of an auto as the articles occur to you. Then come here and see them all and a lot more besides.. You'll find here, everything for the car from the lamps in front to the license tag in the back. If it's for an auto it's here. Central Auto Station 1115 Main. Phone 3121,

Bank