Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 222, 4 August 1916 — Page 9
PAGE NINE
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. FRIDAY, AUG. 4, 1916
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WHEAT STARTS HIGH ON CROP REPORTS CHICAGO, Aug. 4. Receipts of more bad sews from Canada and higher cables started wheat off with a bound again today, and prices were V.ic to 2 c higher than yesterday's close. There was some buying on private cables, and the early range was c. There was less pressure from the longs, and many who sold out yesterday are re-instating their line. News was distinctively bullish as news from Canada was bad, and Winnipeg opened 2c to 3c higher. Private reports showed more rain than was publicly reported, and the result was that many eager buyers of corn turned sellers alter the opening. Commission houses started buying oats at the start, and their orders were filled by some of the big grain firms, with a reaction in price that later rallied. Provisions were slightly off with offerings light. Wheat closed around the best prices of the day and showed net gains of 4 4c. There was a big cash business, Omaha reporting 2,000,000 bushels the last, few days, with 20,000 bushels to day at the highest price of the crop The seaboard reported 750,000 as sold for export, with 500,000 bushels of It American. At Chicago the sales were: Wheat, 80,000; corn 180,000; ats 140,bushels. Corn close c to lc higher and oats were up lc. GRAIN CHICAGO FUTURES Open. High. Low. Close WHEAT Sept 132 134 130 134H Dec 136 138 134 1384 CORN Sept 75 80 79 80 Dec 68 69 68 68 OATS Sept 42 43 42 43 Dec 45 46 45 46 CHICAGO CASH CHICAGO. Aug. 4. Wheat: No. 2 red 1.37$, No. 2 hard winter $1.32. Corn: No. 2 yellow 83. No. 4 yellow 82. Oats. No. 3 white 4343y2, No. white 42 43, standard 43. TOLEDO GRAIN TOLEDO, Aug. 4. Wheat: Cash $1.41, September $1.43. Cloverteed: Cash $9.30, October $9.40. Alsike: Cash $9.30. Timothy: Cash $3. September $2.57, October $2.50. CINCINNATI GRAIN CINCINNATI. Aug. 4. Wheat: No. 2 red winter $1.341.36; No. 3, $1.30 (f l.34. Sales 19 cars. Corn: No. 2 white S3&S4; No. 2 yellow S4 81. Oats: No. 3 mixed 4039. LIVE STOCK CHICAGO UNION STOCK YARDS, 111., Aug. 4. Hoes: Receipts 15,000, market 10c higher, mixed and butchers $9.05 10.00, good heavies $9.30'9.9o, rough heavies $8. 90 9.20, light $9.3010.00, pks $9.5C9.S"0, bulk of sales $9.50 9.90. Cattle: Receipts 1,500, market steady, beeves $6.8510.15, cows and heifers $4.00fdS.S5, stockers and feeders $3.25(37.30. calves $10.25012.25. Sheep: Receipts 9,000, market steady, natives and westerns $3.75 8.40, lambs $3.25(311.50. INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS. Ind., Aug. 4. Hogs: Receipts 13,000. market 10c higher, best hogs $9.90, heavies $9.85, piss $7.009.65, bulk of sales $9.85. Cattle: Receipts 650, market steady, choice heavy steers $8.759.90, light steers $6.2(78.75, heifers $4.7508.75, cows $5.25-57.25. bulls $5.00 9.00, calves $5.0011.75. Sheep and lambs: Receipts 750, market steady, prime sheep $6.50, lambs $6.0010.00. PITTSBURG ' PITTSBURG, Pa., Aug. 4. Cattle: Supply light, market steady, choice steers $9.2509.60, prime steers $9.50, rood steers $S.50ix9.00, tidy butchers $S.00(TiS.r.0, fair $7.25577.50, common $6.00fiT7.00, common to fat bulls $4.50 S7.75. common to fat cows $4.00(0:7.50, heifers $5,005? 8.50, fresh cows and springers $40.0053 S0.00, veal calves $12.50(013.00. Sheep and I;r.-.!! Supply 15. prime wethers JS.Oo:; s.25. lambs $7.50 11.25. Hogs: Receipts 15 double decks, market steady, prime heavy $10.05, mediums $10.15, heavy yorkers $10.15, light yorkers $10.15, pigs Slo.0010.10, roughs $8.50518.55. stags $7.00$J7.25, heavy mixed $10.05. CINCINNATI CINCINNATI. O.. Aug. 4 Hogs: Receipts 3,900. market slow, packers and butchers $9.70, common to choice $6.508.75, pigs and light $6.509.80. . Cattle: Receipts 800, market slow, heifers $5.0007.50. Sheep: Receipts 700, market steady, lambs active. PRODUCE NEW YORK NEW YORK, Aug. 4. Live poultry Irregular; chickens 2123. fowls 20. Cutter steady; creamery firsts 28 30. Eggs 26 27. CHICAGO CHICAGO, Aug. 4. Butter: Receipts 8,607; firsts 26026. 'Eggs: Receipts 7.767 cases; firsts 23023. Live poultry: Chickens 17017, springers 18 0 20, roosters 13. Potatoees: Receipts 10 cars; Wisconsins, 80083., 1 Japan owns 4,000 islands.
anJforeion
CINCINNATI PRODUCE Butter: Creamery whole milk extra 32c, centralized extra 25; do firsts 26; do seconds 23; dairy fancy 23c. Eggs: Prime firsts, 24; nrsts 22; ordinary firsts 20; seconds, 18; duck. 21. Poultry:' Broilers 1 lbs. 18020, broilers over 1 lbs. 22, roosters 12, hens, 4 lbs. and over 17; under 4 lbs. 17 cents. Potatoes: Eastern Cobblers $2,250 2.50 bbl.; Triumphs, $2.4002.60; home grown, $2.50 0 2.65. $1.25 01.50 per hamper. Tomatoes: Texas 6ell ' at . 50065c per 4-basket crate. Home grown, 50$1.00 a bushel. Apples: New Early Harvest sell at $2.7503.00 per brl., Red Astrakhan at $101.25 per hamper and Transparent at $1.2501.50 per hamper. Cantaloupes: California and Arizona standard crate $2.2502.50; Indiana $1.0002.00. Onions: Crystal White sell at $20 2.25 per crate and Louisville at $3.75 04.00 per brL Lemons: California $6.5007.50; Messina $6.0006.50, limes $3.00 0 3.25 box. Peaches Elberta $2.2502.50 and Georgia Bell $1.5001.75 per crate. NEW YORK EXCHANGE CLOSING QUOTATIONS American Can, 54. Anaconda, 78. American Locomotive, 68. American Beet Sugar, 86. American Smelter, 93. U. S. Steel, com., 86. U. S. Steel, pfd., 118. Atchison, 101. St. Paul, 94. Gt. Northern, pfd., 116. Lehigh Valley, 77. N. Y. Central, 103. N. Pacific, 110. S. Pacific, 97. U. Pacific, 138. Pennsylvania, 55. Bethlehem Steel, 420. RICHMOND MARKETS GLEN MILLER PRICES HOGS Heavies $9.50 Heavy mixed $9.50 Mediums $9.75 Heavy Yorkers $9 25 Pigs $708 Stags $4.5006 CATTLC Butcher steers $7.0007.50 Heifers $607.50 Cows $506 Calves $5.0010.0C SHEEP Spring Iambs $3.00 Sheep $5010 FEED QUOTATIONS Clover hay, $8. New hay, $10.00012.00. Oat3, paying, 35c. Corn, payin. 75c. Middlings, $28. Oil meal, $2 a cwt. Bran, selling. $26.00. Salt, $1.50 bbl. Tankage, $48.00 ton. PRODUCE (Corrected Dally by Edward Cooper) Old chickens, dressed, paying 20 to 22c. Country butter, paying 20c to 25c, selling 25c to 30c. Eggs, paying 21c, selling 2Sc. Country lard, paying 13c, selling ISc Creamery butter, selling 35c. New Potatoes, selling $1.40 bushel. Spring chickens, dressed, paying 30c; selling, 35c. COAL QUOTATIONS (Corrected by Hackman & Klefoth). Anthracite, chestnut, $8.65, anthracite, stove or egg. $8.40; Pocahontas, lump or egg, $5.00, mine run. $4.50; slack. $4.C0; Winifred lump. $4.50; Campbell's lump, $4.t0; Kanawha lump, ,$4.50; Indiana lump, $4.00; Hocking Valley lump, $4.50; Jewel lump, $4.75; Yellow Jacket lump $4.75; Tennessee luin, $5. 00; coke all sizes, $7.00; nut and slack, $3.50; Jackson, $5.75; Kentucky lump, $4,75; Winfred washed yea, $4.25. INDIANAPOLIS-REPRESENTATIVE SALES HOGS 7 262 10 112 43 .. 175 STEERS 2 190 4. 1010 9 1060 4 1245 HEIFERS 5 586 2 565 2 910 COWS 2 685 1 1150 BULLS 2 825 1 1100 1 1440 CALVES 2 320 3 166 3 123 $8.75 9.60 10.00 6.00 7.00 8.50 9.25 5.50 7.50 8.00 4.25 7.25 5.25 6.25 6.75 5.00 10.75 11.55 WANT FORT ENLARGED INDIANAPOLIS. Ind., Aug. 4. Hoping to have Ft. Benjamin Harrison, five miles east of here, made a brigade army post, a party of Indianarolls business men have gone to Washington for a conference with Secretary of War Baker. Their argument will be that after the trouble on the Mexican border has subsided there will be a redisposition of troops and that Ft. Harrison is such an accessible post that it should be given a brigade instead of a regiment. Asbestos fiber now brings $500 a ton in United States markets.
SOUTH WS ASK BETTER ROADS UNDER THREE MILE STATUTE
Two petitions asking for road and street improvements in the south part of town and in the south part of Wayne township will be presented to the county commissioners some time next week. The petitions were circulated by the South Side Improvement association and bear the signanatures of almost every land owner along the lines of Improvement. The improvements would be made under the three mile road law and the expense would largely have to be borne by the entire township. Will Reller is representing the petitioners. The petitions ask for concrete pavements and state that the improvements are necessary because of the heavy hauling which the factories in the south end of town have to do and which are greatly inconvenienced during the winter months by the soft and muddy streets. The first petition asks that the paving start at Baylies' corner on the E. L. Commons road coming in the road south of Reeveston, then' down South E street to Ninth, down Ninth to the SCHOOL HACK
COST $2,200 LA
School hacks cost Wayne township $2,700 last year. Because hacks were used, four schools were disbanded. The cost of the hacks was about the same as the cost of the teachers' pay for these schools, but the money required for fuel and for the upkeep of the buildings was saved. These facts are brought out in the annual report which Township Trustee Edgerton is preparing.' Six hacks were operated last year and the same number will be used this year. "If it were possible for the township to buy a couple of motor trucks, money could be saved," Mr. Edgerton said today. It would be possible to haul more children and to haul them WHEAT AVERAGES HIGH MILTON. Ind., Aug. 4. An average I wheat yield of twenty-nine bushels per acre on eighteen acres of unfertilized land was threshed on the farm of Walter Burgess, near Doddridge chapel. SHAWKEY MAKES GOOD AS YANKEE .? HA WXr y .r (?) NT. FtlfT SK, Connie Mack must be bemoaning the loss of "Bob" Shawkey. Since he traded this pitcher to the Yankees, Shawkey has been playing the best game of his career, winning 12 out of 19 games thus far for his new teammates. f BRIEFS Drink Bulgarian buttermilk. You get it at Price's. 4-lt It's the flavor that wins the favor at Price's. 4-lt Hot weather Is hard on people troubled with their stomach and bowels. Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea is just what you need regulates the bowels, tones and cleanses the stomach. Take it and be cool and happy. Clem Thistlethwaite. Adv. Cold drinks for hot people, at Price's. 4-lt CARD OF THANKS. We desire to thank our friends and neighbors for the kindness shown us during the sickness and death of our beloved son, also for the beautiful floral offerings. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce JCenney and children. Frappes for lunch, at Price's, coolest spot in town." "The 4-lt WANTED At once 12 men to work at E. G. Hill Co., greenhouses. 3-2t Prices for Quality. Ten different flavors of creams and ices. 4-lt Take a box of Whitman's chocolates with you on your vacation. You get them at Price's. 4-lt
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overhead C. & O. bridge. The total distance is a little more than two miles. The other road starts at South H and Ninth streets, runs one block west to Eighth street, down Eighth through Beallview to Q street and thence down the Boston pike to the township line.
EAGLES WILL ATTEND PICNIC. It is expected that at least 100 members of the Wayne Aerie of Eagles will attend the Eagles picnic, given by the Ft. Wayne lodge on August 13. Invitation to attend the outing has been accepted by the local order. , DELIVER SCHOOL SUPPLIES Supplies to be used in the city schools during the coming fall and winter terms have been delivered at the office of city superintendent, J. T. Giles employes of . the city school system are now engaged is distributing the supplies among the different schools. S further distances. In this way, other schools could be discounted." , The trustee explained that in many places, the children were riding to school where it would be much better for them to walk, but the patrons demand hack service and the only thing that can be done is to grant their desires in accordance to the state law. FUEL FIRM DEMANDS DAMAGES OF CITY EATON. O., Aug. 4 Claim for damages amounting to $1,836.76 has been filed with the city council by the Jantha Light and Fuel company. The claim is based upon the fact that the company was compelled to lower its main line when the city began paving Barron street. RE.VIVES STUDY COURSE EATON. O., Aug. 4. For the purpose of completeing a revision of the course of study in the elementary grades of the county, a meeting of district school superintendents will be held Friday in the office of County Superintendent Fogarty. Germany's normal meat supply is 60 per cent. pork. THE STORY OF RUNKA! How His Sister Secretly Cured Him Here Is the Prescription Which ReLeased Him From the Clutches of the Demon Drink. You Can Prepare It at Home and Use It Without the Knowledge of Anyone. For fifteen years I was a slave to alcohol. Every penny I could get my hands on was spent over the bar. I earned a good salary, and at first I was able to disguise my condition, but finally my employer began to grumble. I fought and prayed against it, still I sank lower and lower until I lost my position. Then my friends turned me down one after another, until I was left a wreck and alone. Whiskey was the cause of it all. I was kicked around from one place to another. Drunk practically all the time. All I wanted or cared for was wjiiskey, and I had reached that point where I would not stop drinking of my own accord. A friend of former days wrote my sister, whose home was in Germany, telling her of my pitiful condition. She consulted a famous chemist. He gave her the prescription, a secret formula, and told her if she could arrange to put it in my coffee or tea it would destroy the appetite for alcohol in any form. She took the first steamer for New York and when she found me I did not recognize her, and she hardly knew me. She immediately began to give me the remedy without my knowledge. In a few days after she arrived I noticed that whiskey did not .taste the same. I tried other saloons with the same result. After a month I could not drink a drop, and in a short time my health began to improve, my brain to clear up. All the desire had left me. The chains of alcohol slavery had been broken. I was a new man. I secured a splendid position and have never taken a drink since. The craving has never returned. After eight years my sister told me how she worked it and gave me the formula. She was afraid to tell me the secret before, for fear I might go back. It is a simple, inexpensive, home remedy, which can be had at any first-class drug store, and I advise every one who has a relative or friend addicted to the liquor habit in any form to try it. It's harmless and marvelously effective. Here is the prescription. Ask Clem Thistlethwaite or any druggist for powdered Tescum. Dissolve one powder in Coffee, Tea, Water or any other liquid; give one powder twice a day. Each powder makes a dose. Do not let the individual know Tescum is being administered. It is tasteless and cannot be detected by any one. In a short time all desire for drink should disappear. I feel so grateful for what it did for me that I am glad to tell the whole world about it. I feel sure that after you have tried it you will thank me for publishing it. H. J. BROWN, Beckman Bldg., Cleveland, Ohio.
RVCE
REPRESENTATIVE FOR LARGE DISTRICT
Marvin Jones, Galveston, who defeated Representative John H. Stephens in the Democratic primaries, for representative from the Thirteenth Congressional District of Texas, will represent the largest legislative district in the world. The nomination is equivalent to an election in this district, which embraces 48 counties, a territory as large as all the New England States. PROSECUTION TO FOLLOW MEASURING OF BABIES Criminal action against the women who make a practice of "measuring" babies and claiming to have supernatural healing power will be taken as soon as Secretary Melpolder of the Social Service Bureau returns from his vacation, Prosecutor Reller said today. WILLIAMS AT INDIANAPOLIS. County Superintendent of Schools Williams is in Indianapolis today attending to business preparatory to the opening of the county schools in September. PAYS INHERITANCE TAX. Ina Hodgin, sole heir of the estate of Anna E. Shoot paid inheritance tax amounting to $30.93 to the county treasurer yesterday. lot the Truck n rrac
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For Custom Grinding or He-cleaning Seed Wheat Don't forget that we have an entire new plant
Sir33 South 6th St.
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HURRY MOTORIZATION.
Looking toward rushing the motorization of the fire department to completion, the board of works today ordered City Clerk Bescher to ask the American La France people who obtained contracts for furnishing the chassis how soon they would be able to mount the bodies which are to be shipped to their factory. ORDER POLES REMOVED. Because the street car company poles at intersections of Fifth and Sixth streets with Main street interfere with the installation of the new ornamental lighting system, the board of works today ordered the poles removed. Tt Kb new kind
(a cigarette that satis fies, and yet :is mM) ccannot be had . in nj cigaretteexcgptChesterfielcIs, regardless of price. .Because no other -cigarette -maker -can copy the Chesterfield 'blend!
and $et they're MILD y I I If lr The Turkish Tobaccos In Che3VVi terfields are the finest quality from the most famous Turkish tobacco districts: SMYRNA for its sweetness; XANTHI for its fragrance; SAMSOUN for its richneso; CAVALLA for its aroma.
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HOG CHOLERA DEPOT MAY OPEN IN CITY
Possibility exists that a station for the purpose of bringing about the control and eventual eradication of hog cholera from the states will be established in Richmond. This has been announced by the United States department of agriculture, which is establishing four other such stations in the estate. STOLLE FINED TEN DOLLARS Anton Stolle today pleaded guilty to the charge of selling lard to the Richmond Baking company weighing less than it was represented to weigh. A fine of $10 and costs was imposed by Mayor Robblns. The charge was filed by Inspector McKlnley. of enjoyment EUY is delivering us n Per Bushel n t? o ILLfu Phone 1679
