Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 182, 17 June 1916 — Page 9
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1916
PAGK ELEVEN
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ALL GRAINS LOWER ? AS MARKET OPENS CHICAGA, June 17. All grainB ere practically lower today at the opening of the board, and trading in most Instances was remarkably light. , Weakness abroad led to scattered selling of wheat On the break there wa buying by local traders and a mall rally follower! July opened at it Bl corn was easier on scatierea seiung. July opened at 71, September at 70. Oats trailed with other grains. Cash houses did some buying, although the trade was light. July opened at 38, September at 38. Prices were lower ind trading was light. The grain market today was all lower and under considerable selling pressure. The decline was c to lc for wheat, c to c for corn, c to c for oats and 5c to 10c lower for pork, wid 7c to 10c higher for ribs. Cash sales here were 25,000 bushels wheat, 110,000 bushels corn and 160,000 bushsi oats. Western receipts of wheat the past week were 4,683,000 bushels, corn 2,554.000. and natn a'atmnnn bushels. GRAIN CHICAGO FUTURES Open. High. Low. Close WHEAT fuly 101 101 100 100 lept 103 103 102 102 CORN Tuly 71 71 71 71 Sept 70 70 70 70 OATS July ..... 38 38 384 SS',4 CHICAGO CASH CHICAGO. June 17. Corn: No. 2 white 73473. No. 2 yellow 75 76. Oats: No. 3 white 3838, No. 4 white 3738. standard 3940. TOLEDO GRAIN TOLEDO, June 17 Wheat: Cash 11.06. July $1.06, September $109. Joverseed $8.75, October $8.92, December $8.82. Alsike $9.50. Timothy: Cash $3.50; September, $3.40. CINCINNATI GRAIN CINCINNATI, June 17. Wheat: No. ! red winter, $1.08 1.10, No. 3 $1.02 11.06.. Corn: No. 2 white 7778, No. 2 fellow 7777. Oats: No. 2 mixed 3940. LIVE STOCK ; CHICAGO UNION STOCK YARDS, June 17. Hogs Receipts, 15,000; market, 10 to 15c lower. Mixed and butchers 9.409.95; good heavies $9.709.65; light $9.209.85; -pigs $8.109; bulk pt sales $9.659.S0. Cattle Receipts, 4,000; market, steady. Beeves $8.4011.40; cows and heifers $4.259.50; stockers and feeders $6.858.S0; calves $1011.75. Sheep Receipts, 3,000; market, steady. Natives and westerns $5 $7.85; lambs $8.2511.30. PITTSBURG PITTSBURG. June 17. Cattle supply light, market steady, prime steers U 0.65 11.00, good steers $10.00 10.60, tidy butchers $9.7510.50, fair 8.509.25, common $7.008.00, common to fat bulls $5.008.50, common '.o fat cows $4.00 S. 00, heifers $6.00 B.00, fresh cows and springers $40.00 80.00, veal calves $12.0012.50. Sheep and lamb supply light, prime wethers $7.407.65, spring lambs $7.00 12 00. Hogs: Receipts 1,000, market lower, prime heavy $10.l610.15, mediums $10.1010.15, heavy yorkers $10.1010.15, light yorkers $10.10 10.10, pigs $9.65 9.75, roughs $8.50 8.90, stags $6.757.00, heavy mixed $10.1010.15. INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS. June 17. Hogs: Receipts 8,000, market 15c lower, best $9.85, heavies $9.60(39.85, pigs $6.00 9.25, bulk of sales $9.609.75, Cattle: Receipts 200 -market weaK, choice heavy $9.0011.00, light $8.00 9.75, heifers $5.o0ft9.25, cows, ?o.50 8.25. bulls, $5.50 calves ?a.uu 11.25. Slxeep and lambs: Receipts 50, prime sheep $7.00, lambs $7.509.00. CINCINNATI CINCINNATI. June 17. Hogs: Re ceipts 3,300, market slow, packers and butchers $9.50 9.75, common to choice $7.2509.00. Cattle: Receipts 200, market slow. PRODUCE NEW YORK NEW YORK, June 17. Live poultry steady; chickens 24 32, fowls 21, Butter steady; creamery firsts 2S' ?9. Eggs, steady; firsts 2223. CINCINNATI PRODUCE Butter Creamery v.hole milk extra 13c, centralized extra 30c, do firsts 27c. do seconds 24c. dairy fancy 24c, packing stock No. 1, 22c; No. 2, 21c. Eggs: Prime firsts 22, firsts 21. ordinary firsts 20, seconds 19c, duck lc, goose 35c. Poultry: Broilers 1 to 1 lbs 27 28c, broilers over 1 lbs 29, roosters 12c. hens 4 lbs and over 18c. Strawberries: Home-grown $1.502 Iper 24-ouart crate; uanay s i.aucs z Wr 24-quart crate, Aroma $1.50S:2 24-quart crate. Potatoes: Home-grown $3.50s$.(5 barrel, Mississippi $1.251.60 per lamper, Wisconsin $1.20l.o per bushel. ' Tomatoes: ' Floridas sell at $2.25
2.75 per six-basket crate.
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RICHMOND MARKETS GLEN MILLER PRICES HOGS Hearieg $900 Heavy mixed $3 00 Mediums $8.75 Heavy yorkers . $8.75 P!gS .......................... $78 Stags ... . . ....... $4.50 6 CATTLE Butcher steers $7.GCS00 Heifers . $67 50 Cows ..$5.507 00 Calves $5 9 SHEEP Top lambs $3.00 Sheep '..$3.00 9.00 Clover hay, $12.00. Timothy hay, selling $17.0018.00. Oats, paying 35c. Corn, payinn 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 . KIefoth. Anthracite, chestnut. $8.50; anthracite, stove or egg, $8.15; Pocahontas, lump or egg, $5.00, mine run, $4.50; slack, $4.C0; Winifred lump. $4.50; Campbell's Jump. $4.t0; Kanawha lump, $4.50; Indiana lump, $4.00; Hccking Valley lump, $4.50; Jewel INDIANAPOLIS REPRESENTATIVE SALES HOGS 5 14 38 72 33 372 135 171 171 250 $ 8.75 9.25 9.60 9.60 9.85 NEW YORK EXCHANGE CLOSING QUOTATIONS American Can, 56. Anaconda 84. American Locomotive, 714American Beet Sugar, 90American Smelter, 96. m U. S. Steel, com., 85. U. S. Steel, pfd., 117. Atchison, 105. St. Paul. 98. Gt. Northern, pfd.. 121. N. Y. Central, 105. N. Pacific, 114. S. Pacific, 98. U. Pacific, 138. Pennsylvania, 57. Bethlehem Steel, 440. PRODUCE (Corrected Daily by Edward Cooper) Old chickens, dressed, paying 20 to 22c. Country butter, paying 20c to 22c; sellins 25c to 30c. Eggs, paying 18c, selling 23c. Country lard, paying 12c; selling 18c. Creamery butter, selling 33o. Potatoes, selling $1.50 per bushel. Young chickens, dressed, paying 25c; selling 28c. FEED QUOTATIONS lump, $4.75; Yellow Jacket lump $4.75; Tennessee lump, $5 00; coke all sizes, $7.00; nut and slack, $3.50; Jackson, $5.75; Kentucky lump, $4.75; Winfred washed pea, $4.25. ASTOR'S WIDOW TO WED AGAIN NEWr YORK. June 17. It was reported here today that. Mrs. Madeline Force Astor, widow of John Jacob Astor. who lost his life on the Titanic, had becme engaged to marry William K. Dick, vice president of the Manufacturers' Trust company of Brooklyn. Mr. Dick, who is twenty-eight years old, is a mililonaire. Mrs. Astor is twenty-two. The marriage will take place in Bar Harbor, Me., on Monday, it was positively stated. Mrs. Astor forfeits a great fortune. by marrying, for, according to the terms of Colonel Astor's will, she must give up a dowry of $5,000,C0 and the Astor residence on Fifth avenue, which, with its contents, is valued at $3,000,000, if she takes a second husband. Mrs. Astor is wealthy in her own right, for at the time of her first marriage, her husband gave her $1,000,000. SOCIALIST LEADER WILL TALK TONIGHT "The Blessings of War and the Horrors of Peace" is the title of a lecture which will be given at the corner of Ninth and Main streets by Walter J. Millard, Cincinnati, Saturdav night, July 1. He comes under the auspices of the Socialist party of America. He will also be a speaker at the Wayne county Socialist convention and picnic at Jackson park, July 2. Final arrangements were made for the picnic at the regular meeting of the party last night. The amusement nart of the program will be given under the auspices cf the Young People's Socialist association. I LEAVES BENCH VACANT ! WASHINGTON, June 17. Appointj ment of the associate justice of the j supreme court of the United States, ' to fill the vacancy caused when JusI tice Hushes resigned to accent th Re publican nomination for the presidency, probably will not be made before early Tall, it was""said at the department of justice today. The court now is in recess for the summer, as no reason exists for an early appoint-
Hughes Selects
Geo. Wickersham
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Charles Evans Hughes, has chosen as his political guide, philosopher and DESTROYER WRECKED LONDON, June 17. The British destroyer Eden has been sunk in the English channel in collison with another vessel, the admiralty announced today. Thirty-one members of the crew were saved and three officers are missing. THE PLEASING CHAP. "Why do you turn. oh. summer girl, The end of the novel to see?" "Why, don't you know," she ecntl said, "It's the last chap, pleases me?" Presiden 4t Fi?ESJDEHT W1LSOM
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4& f ,1 friend in his fight for the presidency, George W. Wickersham. Whether Mr. Wickersham will be Mr. Hughes's choice for chairman of the Republican National Committee is problematical. Mr. Wickersham was attorney general in the cabinet of William Howard Taft. He gained the title of "trust buster" by virtue of his onslaughts upon the towing trust, the cash register monopoly and the bath-tub combination. Friends summer school extension through a pilgrimage from the east is to take place at North A Street Friends meeting during the coming week. The pilgi image party is expected to include Dr. O. Edward Janney, Gladys Brooks, Mary Longshore, Edna L. Wilson and J. Barnard Walton. On the evening of the 20th at 7:30, there will be a social meeting at the meeting house On the twenty-first: Round tatle by Edna L. Wilson at 9 a. ai.; devotional meeting at 10; lecture by Dr. O. Edward Janney at 2; round table at 7:30. On the twenty-second: Devotional meeting at 9:30; round table at 10; round table at 2; lecture by Dr. O. Edward Janney at 7:30. No admission fee will be charged no collection taken at any of the lectures or sessions, and the public is invited to kkre the anticipated blessings that may accrue from these meetI nigs I i ings. 1
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PETROGRAD, June 17. Although Austro-Hungarian resistance has been HUGHES FLANS TO WIN OVER PR! WASHINGTON, June 17. Charles E. Hughes, Republican candidate for the presidency, today arranged a tempting menu for the political hungry Bull Moose. He niade the first move of what is believed, to he a sys tematic campaign to get the whole herd for November election. Conferences this afternoon will be held between Air. Hughes and General Leonard Wood, personal friend of Colonel Roosevelt and Representative Stevens, Progressive, of California. It is reported that General Wood was acting as a messenger for Colonel Roosevelt, and that plans were outlined that will tempt most of the Bull Moose into the Republican fold. General Wood, however, denied that his visit had any political significance. "I am here on a matter that is entirely personal," he said. Other Hughes conferences today were with Senator Woods, Republican, of California, Representative Maddin of Illinois, who invited Mr. Hughes to make an address in Chicago on July 4, and Representative Austin, Republican, of Tennessee. Mr. Hughes this afternoon was arranging for his first swing about the country in the interests of his campaign. He will leave Washington tonight or early tomorrow for New York, where he will hold a number of political conferences. GERMAN CRUISER DAMAGED IN DUEL LONDON, June 17. A Central News dispatch from The Hague says that the German cruiser Von Der Thann was badly damaged in the sea fight off Jutland and has just been towed into Wilhelmshaven for repairs. The Von Der Thann is an 18,800 ton ship mounting eleven and six inch guns. She was put In commission in 1907. GRAHAM NOMINATED BY LABOR COUNCIL Central Labor Council nominated the following officers at the regular meeting last night: Robert E. Graham, president; H. F. Hasecoster, vice-president; W. O. Showers, corresponding secretary; Elsworth Bass, assitant corresponding secretary; Lewis Stutt, financial secrei tary treasurer; C. A. Al?en, .statistic ian; O. V. Reese, Sergeant-at-Arms; , Lucius Harrison, Leslie Tucker, George Muey, trustees. These nominations will be voted upon at the meeting which will be held two wreeks from last night. TRAIN KITS SLIDE HARRISBURG, Pa., June 17. Passenger train No 18 on the Middle division of the Pennsylvania railroad, bound from Pittsburg to Philadelphia, ran into a slide of rock near Petersburg about 100 miles west of this city early today. The engine was partially overturned. No one was injured. ONE MAN KILLED. OAKLAND, Cal. June 17 One man was shot dead and fifteen others were injured today in a pitched battle on the water front between fifty employes of the Sunset Lumber company and one hundred strike sympathizers. s - .Vl.iV..-.;.
OGRESSiVES
stiffened In Galicia by the arrival of reinforcements of Germans, the Russians continue to make progress all along the line. The number of prisoners In the hands of the Russians is daily increasing by fresh batches of captives, while the booty is of such enormous Quantities that the Teutons have begun to feel its loss very keenly. Position Under Fire. Along the Strypa in mid-Galicia, bridgehead positions of the AustroGermans are under heavy fire. Further to the south in the south infantry actions of furious intensity are under way. Dispatches from the front dwell upon the increasing violence of the artillery dueling along the Dvina river, where the armies of Field Marshal von Hindenburg are facing the Russians. Whether or not Czernowitz, the capital of Bukewina, has fallen into the hands of the Russians, has not been officially announced, but unofficial dispatches from a number of sources all
state that the Russians either occupy the city or dominate it In such a way that they can enter any time they choose. Drive Keeps Power. There is no slackening in the power of the Russian drive. Southwest of the Volhynian fortress of Lusk, Russian troops are moving across the border into Galicia. This is the army which is offering the most serious menace to the Galician fortress of Lemberg. Siberian cossacks are taking a leading part in the fighting on this part of the front Many of them are new troops that were trained during the winter, but the war office makes special mention of the bravery they have shown since the offensive movement was begun. SINCERE PERFORMER. Is Dinks patriotic T Tremendously so. Why, he want to get out and start a war so that k can have the pleasure of fighting ft his country. I. gloBSfiday
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Tonight, if you will closely examine your teeth after brushing them, you will make a surprising discovery. Though you have been cleaning your teeth regularly, you will find an accumulation of tartar on the enamel and bits of food deposit hiding between the crevices. Your dentifrice has not beca REALLY CLEANINGI Loss of teeth is usually due to one of two conditions Pyorrhea or Decay both of which ordinarily develop only in the mouth where germ-ladea tartar is present. CLEAN your teeth REALLY CLEAN them! Senreco, a dental specialist's formula will do it. Senreco embodies specially prepared, soluble granules unusually effective in cleaning away food deposits. Moreover, it is particularly destructive to the germ of Pyorrhea.
ft
do to your dealer today and get a tube of Senreco keep your teeth REALLY CLEAN and protect your, self against Pyorrhea and decay. Send 4c to Senreco 304 Walnut SU, Cincinnati, Ohio, for trial package.
"PREPAREDNESS" See your dentiat twice yearly Uee Senreco twice daily T7i fooft patie that REALLY CLEANS
Take the Plunge
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Richmond Electric Co. 19 S. 7th St. Phone 2826 Free inspection of any battery at any time
City Statistics
Marriage Licenses. Raymond Tv . Myrick, 28, research chemist, city, and Marguerite Doan, 26, teacher, city. Warranty Deeds. Abner Crull to Thomas Butler, 4, C. W. Witts, Dublin; 1300. Sarah Borton to Ammozoiah Miller et al. 11 E. and Doughty's addition. Centerville: $1,400. Charles Smith to Charles Bertsch, 22-23, W. R, N. R. ll, Cambridge City; $60. William Wade to Geofge Harris. PL 4, C. Cowgill's addition, Fountain City; 5200. Augusta Nieman to Emma Chenoweth, 1 F. H. Glass, Richmond; . TWO STEAMERS SUNK COPENHAGEN, June 17. Two big German steamers were sunk in the Baltic on Friday by mines or submarines. CARD OF THANKS. We wish to thank all the neighbors and friends, the O. R. C. and all the railroad employes also the Rev. Davis and the singers for their kindness and sympathy shown us in the loss of our beloved husband and father. We also extend to you our thanks for the many floral offerings. Mrs. Jacob Meyers and childrea. 17-lt Cremation Children, $15 Cincinnati Cremation Co. Office, 30 Wiffgins Blk., Cincinnati, O. Booklet free. MODERN DENTISTRY Good teeth are an absolute necessity and we make their possession possible. All our work practically painless: Highest Grade Plates $5.00 to $8.00 Best Bridge Work $3.00 to $4.00 I Best Gold Filling $1.00 up , Best Silver Filling 50c upf We Extract Teeth Painlessly j New York Dental Parlor ! Over Union National Bank, Eighth' and Main streets. Elevator en-' trance on South Eighth St. Stair entrance on Main street. Immediate Shipment from Stock Structural Shapes, Cold Rolled Steel, Ears, Plates, Sheets, Nuts, Bolts, Rivets, Rails, Spikes, etc CO. indianapolis
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The sooner you learn what Willard Service means towards good starting and lighting, the better you'll be satisfied. Come on in, the water's fine.
