Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 269, 28 September 1916 — Page 9
THE RICHMOND PALUUMUM "AND SUN-TELEGRAM. THURSDAY, SEPT. 28, 1916
PAGE NINE
ocal and foreign
WHEAT PRICES OFF BECAUSE OF CABLE
CHICAGO, Illinois, September 28. Wheat prices were off one half to one cent today ou selling induced by lower cables and Argentine's news.
Corn was strong to one fourth cen
higher. Scattered shorts bought September with advance to ninety cents, followed by scattered selling which carried it off one half cent. Trade in oats was light and prices one eighth to one fourth cent over Yesterday's close. It was a big market in wheat and .bulls forced prices sharply higher. At the opening prices were off about 1 cent but thereafter the market contlnud upward and at the finish prices were as high as 2 cents higher than the day before. Corn was strong. Closing prices were 1 to cents to 1 cent higher. OaU were M to cents higher.
GRAIN
1 Chicago Futures WHEAT Open. High. Low. Closet Sept .... 152 155 152 155 Dec 1524 155 151 154 CORN Sept 88 90 88 89 Dec 73 73 73. 73 OATS Sept 45. 46 45 46 Dec 48 48 48 48 Toledo Grain TOLEDO. Sept 28. Wheat: cash, 157; December, 161. Cloverseed: cash, 942. Alsike: cash, $10.05. Timothy: cash, $2.30. Chicago Cash CHICAGO, Sept. 28. Wheat: No. 2 red, 156 157; No. 2, hard winter, 159 0166. , Corn: No. 2 white, 89; No. 2 yellow, 8889; No. 4 white, 8182 No. 4 yellow, 84. Oats: No. 2 white, 48; No. 3, white, 46; No. 4 white 4547; standard, 4747. Cincinnati Grain CINCINNATI. Sept. 28. Wheat: No. 2 red winter, $1.5501.57; No. 3, $1.47 01.54. Sales. 1 car. Corn: No. 2 white, 8990c; No. 2 yellow. 88 89c. Oats: No. 3 mixed; 4647.
LIVE STOCK
Chicago UNION STOCK YARDS, Sept. 28. Hogs Receipts, 16,000; market, 5c. lower; mixed and butchers. $9.6010.80; god heavies, $9.90010.75; rough heavies. $9.6009.85; light, $9.70010.80 pigs, $7.5509.25; bulk of sales, $10.05 010.70. . Cattle Receipts, 7,000; market, steady; beeves, $6011.25; cows and heifers, $3.7509.50; stockers and feeders. $5.2507.50; calves, $11012.75. Sheep Receipts. 15,000; market, weak; natives and westerns, $3,750 8.60; lambs, $7.85010.50.
Indianapolis INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 28. HogsReceipts, 7,500; market, 25c lower; best hogs, $11.00; heavies. $10.25011; pig3, $609.50; bulk of sales, $10,250 80. - Cattle Receipts, 1,200; market, steady; choice heavy steers, $8,750 10.50; light steers, $6.2509.50; heifers $508.25; cows, $507.00; bulls, $4.50 6.50; calves, $4012. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 300; market, strong; prime sheep, $7.00; lambs, $609.75.
T
ittsburg
PITTSBURG, Sept. 28. Cattle sup-
Ply, light; market, slow; prime steers, $9.25040; good steers, $8.25075; tidy butchers, $7.7508.00; fair, $6.5007.25; common, $506.50; common to fat bulls, $4.5007.25; common to fat cows $306.75; heifers, $508; fresh cows and springers, $40080; veal calves, $12013. Sheep and lamb supply, fair; prime wethers, $708.10; good, $7.2508.00; spring lambs, $6.50010.50. Hogs Receipts, 12 dd.; market, lower; prime heavy, $10.75085; mediums, $10.75085; heavy yorkers, $10.75085; light yorkers, $9.750990; pigs $9(?(50; roughs, $9.50010; stags. $8 0 25; heavy mixed, $10.75085.
BRIEFS
LOST Pockctbook, black, 3 one-dollar bills and small change. Return to Palladium. Reward. 16-tf
Fried oyster lunch Saturday afternoon and evening. Patterson's, 14 South 9th St. Ev. thur.fri-tf NOTICE is hereby given that I will not stand responsible for any debts that may be incurred by my wife, Lizzie M. Arnold, Richmond, Ind., September 28, 1916. I. B. Arnold. ' 2S-lt
CARD OF THANKS. We wish to express our heartfelt appreciation to all our neighbors and friends, also to the several fraternal orders for their loyalty to fraternal duties, and beautiful floral offerings sent during the recent illness and death of our father. Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Moss, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. E. Potter. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davis. 2S-lt
Cincinnati CINCINNATI, Sept. 28. Hogs Receipts, 3,000; market, slow; packers and butchers, $10.60085; common to choice, $7.5009.75; pigs and lights, $5 9.75; stags, $7.5008.75. Cattle Receipts, 1,400; market dull. Sheep Receipts, 1,400; market, steady; lambs, slow.
PRODUCE
New York NEW YORK, Sept 28. Live poulary, irregular and weak; chickens, normal; fowls, normal. Butter, good demand; creamery firsts, 34 0 36. Eggs, Irregular, 32 35.
Cincinnati Produce CINCINNATI. Sept. 28. Butter: creamery whole milk extras, 37c; centralized extra, 34c, do firsts, 31c, do seconds, 28c; dairy fancy 28c. Eggs: Prime firsts, 31; firsts 29; ordinary, 28. Poultry: Broilers under 2 lbs., 20, fryers over 2 lbs., 18, roosters, 13. Potatoes: Eastern Cobblers, $3.75 4.00 bbl.; home grown, $3.7504.00. Lemons: California, $5.7507.00; Messina $6.6007; limes $303.75 box. Peaches: New Tork Elberta, $2 bu., Michigan, $1.7501.85 bu.
Chicago CHICAGO, Sept. 28. Butter: Receipts, 7214 tubs; firsts, 31032. Eggs: Receipts, 6286 cases; firsts, 2930. Live poultry: Chickens, 1417; springers, 19; roosters, 13. Potatoes: Receipts, 45 cars, Minnesotas, Dakotas and Ohios, $1.1001.15. New Tork Exchange Closing 9 Quotations American Can, 66. Anaconda, 98. American Locomotive, 78. American Beet Sugar. 96. American Smelter, 113. U. S. Steel, Com., 118. U. S. Steel, Pfd., 121. Atchison, 106. St. Paul, 96. Great Northern, Pfd., 119. Lehigh Valley, 82. N. Y. Central, 109. No. Pacific. 113. So. Pacific, 102. Union Pacific, 115. Pennsylvania, 58. Bethlehem Steel, 560.
RICHMOND MARKETS
Glen Miller Prices ' 1 Hogs. Heavies, 225 to 250 lbs 10.50 Heavy yorkers, 250 to 300 lbs., $10.00 Light yorkers, 150 to 180 lbs $8.5009.00 Medium. ISO to 225 lbs $1050 Pigs $7.0008.00 Clags $1.5007.50 Cattle. Butcher steers, 1,000 to 1,500 lbs $7.0008.00 Butcher cows $5.00 0 6.00 Heifers $6.00 0 7.50 Bulls $4.5006.00 Calves. Choice veals '. . . . $11.00 Heavies and lights $5.0006.00 Sheep. Spring lambs $9.00 Produce (Corrected Dally by Edward Cooper) Old chickens, dressed, paying 200 22c; spring chickens, dressed, paying 30c, selling 35c; country butter, paying 25c, selling 33c035c, creamery butter, selling 38c, eggs, paying. 30c, selling 35c; country lard, paying 13c, selling 18c; new potatoes, selling $2.00 bushel. Feed Quotations (Corrected Daily by Omer Whelan) Paying Oats, 38-40c; corn, 80c; rye, $1.00; clover seed. i,7 a bushel; straw $6 a ton. Selling Cotton seed meal, $38 a ton. $2 a cwt; middlings, $32 a ton, $1.60 a cwt; bran $27 a ton. $1.40 a cwt; tankage $48 a ton, $2.50 a cwt; salt, $1.60 a bbl.
Coal Quotations (Corrected by Hackman A Klehfoth.) Anthracite nut, $8.85; anthracite, stove or egg. $8.60; coke, $7.00; Pocchontas lump or egg (forked), $6.60; Pocahontas lump or egg (shoveled), $6.00; Pocahontas, mine run, $5.00; Pocahontas washed nut, $5.00; Pocahontas slack $4.50; Jackson lump, $5.57; Tennessee lump, $5.50; Kentucky lump, $5.25; White ash lump, $5.25; West Virginia lump, $5.00; Hocking Valley lump, $4.75; Indiana lump, $4.25; Winifred wash pea, $4.60; nut and slack, $4.00. Indianapolis Representative Sales HOGS 2 285 $ 9.25 10 141 10.00 27 169 10.30 46 185 10.55 45 .. 225 10.85 STEERS 2 720 $ 6.00 3 620 6.00 2 800 6.85 20 866 7.25 1 1350 9.00 HEIFERS 2 520 $ 5.00 3 840 6.00 2 665 6.25 2 640 6.75 1 800 8.00 COWS 2 870 $ 4.00 4 888 4.25 2 840 4.75 2 1050 5.75 1 1210 6.50 BULLS 1 680 $ 5.25 1 1080 5.50 1 1250 5.65 1 1230 6.00 CALVES 2 410 $ 5.00 6 168 11.25 7 122 11.50 4 ". 187 12.00
GAMPFIRE GIRLS TO LIGHT FIRES AT CENTERVILLE
About sixty Richmond girls will attend the Grand Council meeting of Wayne county Camphre girls at Centervllle Saturday. Representatives from the six local camps, Akipsaya, Wuda, Wahpikameki, Oklciyoci, Kodacopi and Earlham, will be present. Cambridge City and Milton camps will also attend the meeting. The affair which is to be held in the town hall, is open to the public. At 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon an infromal reception for all delegates will be given in the Centerville park. Hold Picnic Supper An Indian picnic supper will be served at 5 o'clock and at 7:30 o'clock the evening ceremonies will start with a council meeting in the town hall. Miss Mary Mather, Richmond, first guardian in Wayne county, will have charge. Candle lighting ceremonies will be held with Miss Bessie Buhl, Centerville; Mrs. Squires, Milton, and Mrs. Horace Whiteside, Richmond, representing Work, Health and Love, presiding! Miss Mary Mather will then give the Ode to the Fire. The roll comps will be called. National honors will be presented to three girls. The program will close with an oldfashioned play by the Centerville camp.
SAYS WILSON WILL CAPTURE OLD NEW YORK
SHADOW LAWN. N. J., Sept. 28. Judge Samuel Seabury, Democratic nominee for governor of New York after another conference with President Wilson, said before departing today: "The tide is turning away from Hughes. President Wilson will carry New York." He added that Mr. Wilson probably would speak twice in New York state during the campaign.
Don't "Drag "--Take This Drugless Tonic Sliced Grape Fruit or Pomelo makes a rare, inviting delicacy. And it merits a universal esteem, for in that cooling, acid, aromatic pulp, reposes strong medicinal virtue. Extracted and distilled with strength giving beef and iron, that virtue forms the chief constituent of Wine of Pomelo. Persons who fail to smile when the scale-balances and the test of each successive day records a loss of weight need not despair. They may avoid being reduced to "a rag, a bone and a hank of hair" by reviving their failing functions with the faultless food-tonic. Wine of Pomelo In frail Youth and fagged Maturity alike it encourages all the active agencies of assimilation and circulation. And to wearied frames it imparts that peculiar elasticity characteristic of abundant health. Wine of Pomelo is a Tonic not a "Cure." Pint Bottle, 75c. A. G. Luken & Co. 630 Main Street Phone 1213 Next to First National Bank
WHO MUST REGISTER? BOlTOAf GIVES ANSWER
In an effort to make clear just who must register October 9, Lewis Bow. man, county auditor, today Issued a list of questions and answers. The questions are those which have been asked him several times a day over the telephone, and the answers are taken from the registration 'law. They follow: Voter When Is registration day? Auditor On Monday, October 9th. Voter At what time will the registration boards be in session. Auditor From 6 o'clock a. m. to 9 o'clock p. m. Voter Will I be required to register this year? Auditor Did you register In 1914 Voter Yes. Auditor Did you vote at the general election in 1914? Voter Yes. Auditor Have you resided continuously in the same precinct since 1914? Voter Yes. Auditor Then you need not register, as you are already properly registered in your precinct. Voter Then who must register? Auditor All voters who did not register in 1914, including first voters. All voters who registered and voted in 1914, but have since moved to another precinct. All voters who registered in 1914, but who failed to vote at the general elecUon in 1914. And all voters residing In a precinct in which the registration books have been destroyed, or for any other reason an entire new registration is necessary. Voters Have any registration books been destrayed in Wayne county? Auditor No. Voter What voters need not register? Auditor All voters, residents of any precincts, who registered in said precinct in 1914, and who voted in said precinct at the general election in 1914, and who have resided continuously in said precinct since the general election in 1914, and who have not been disfranchised for any cause, are not required to register again unless a general registration of all the voters is had in such precinct. Voter Will an entire new registration be held in any precincts in Wayne county this year? Auditor Yes. In.,the new precmct, known as Precinct Number 36, in the City of Richmond. Voter Where is Precinct No. 36? Auditor Precinct Number 36 is bounded as follows: All that part of the City of Richmond which lies north of the middle of North S street, and south of the middle of North G street, and east of the middle of North Sixteenth street, and west of the middle of North Nineteenth street, shall constitute one voting precinct, and shall be known and called the Thirty-sixth Precinct of Wayne Township.
Voter Is an absent voter required to come home to register? Auditor No; he can register by affidavit, , Voter Where may blank affidavits be procured? Auditor At the Auditor's office, or from the County Chairman of either political party. Voter1 Have there been any changes of precinct boundaries this year? Auditor Yes; eight precincts have been changed. , Two in Wayne Township and six within the "City of Richmond. Voter Will voters living in precincts in which changes have been made be required to re-register? Auditor No. The County Auditor and County Chairman of the two leading political parties are required to certify the names of voters to the new precinct to which they belong. General Cautions Voters . residing in precincts the boundaries of which have been changed, and who are in doubt as to being properly registered,
should make inquiry at the place of
registration in their precincts as changed, and ascertain whether their names appear on the registration records. In case of doubt for any reason consult the chairman or other officer of your party organization, and be properly informed in the matter.
TABERNACLE FILLED DESPITE DOWNPOUR
In spite of threatened storm the Greensfork revival tabernacle was well filled again last night A downpour of rain began before the service was half through but the interest in the service did not slacken. Chorister Brock led in a rousing song service which was followed by an old fashioned testimony meeting. "'Tis the Old Time Religion" and other favorite hymns were vigorously sung. Mrs. Brock sang a solo. Arrangements for the final services on next Sunday are being worked out and it is expected to make the day the biggest religious rally the community has ever had. All the Sunday schools of the township are to participate in a union Sunday school in the tabernacle beginning at 9:30 in charge of the Sugar Grove churches. Vacant store rooms, halls, and the churches will be used for the various women's and children's classes leaving the tabernacle to the men and young men's classes. A place will be provided where those bringing their basket dinners may eat. The subject of the sermon tonight will be "How You May Know You Are a Christian." Special subjects have been announced by Evangelist Hamilton for all the remaining services of the meeting.
One man at North Charlestown, N. H., pitched twenty-two loads of hay in one day.
J. E. BUNDY PROCLAIMED AS DEAN OF "RICHMOND GROUP" OF ARTISTS
In an article on "Art in Indiana" by William Forsyth, a prominent Indianapolis artist, appearing in the Indianapolis News, the writer has the following to say of the now famous "Richmond Group" of artists: Richmond, not one of the larger cities of the state, has the distinction of possessing a group of painters that almost amounts to a school. With slight personal variations they paint in the same method, choose almost the same motives, and seem to have the same vision of art and nature. Perhaps this is because Mr. J. E. Bundy, who is the dean of the group, is also the ablest and most successful as well as the oldest. With the exception of Miss Newman now of Fort Wayne they are all landscape painters. The origin of their method can perhaps be traced to the Williams family of Richmond who were first in the field at least there is a distinct resemblance traceable. Their themes are mostly, local, of places near at hand, characteristic of the country. There is little to remind one of the newer movements of art in its search for light and color or realistic impress
ions, but the artists depend almost entirely on their appeal to the eye through the presentation of the familiar in subject the everyday effect of things to the everyday man. In this thy are highly successful. Especially is this true of Mr. Bundy, whose beech woods in all their varying aspects of autumn and winter have won him great success and wide acquaintance; and they meet with the readiest sale, perhaps, of paintings by an Indiana artist. The late Charles Connor was a painter of no common gifts and bid fair to become perhaps the most vigorous of the group. He had not the poetic feeling that is often marked in Mr. Bundy's work, but he had a certain strength and dash of presentation that wah promising. Others of the group are Messrs. Baker, GIrardin, Forkner, Mote and Eyden but Mr. Bundy remains the dominant figure.
MUST MAKE GRADES I TO JOIN ORGANIZATION
I
OXFORD, O., Sept. 28. No fraterw Ity or sorority until the second semes ter. Only those whose grades hav been satisfactory will be permitted tq
join organizations.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.
The rapid growth of vegetation in polar regions, despite the brief summers, is attributed to the strength of the electric currents in the atmosphere.
There's a distinctiveness and cleverness in styling to Stoors-Schaefer Made to Measure Men's Clothes that mark them Immediately as pre-eminent for those men and young men desiring clothes oat of the ordinary In styling, tailoring and workmanship. Our selection of Fall patterns is complete in every respect. Make your choice now. Suits and Overcoats to measure $18 to $40
See our line of Ready-Made Suits at $15.00 SOL FRAKEL 820 MAIN STREET
wel;
FEET
H
m
H Your happiness, health and appearance depend greatly on your Shoes. The Shoes that we sell are made to j fit the feet. If you wear shoes bought here your feet will be comfortable and attractive.
3
Shoes for Men
While some Shoes have style, some have comfort and others give service, none offer such a satisfactory combination of all three as
Ralston Shoes They are the Shoe of the well dressed, the busy man, (who must have comfort,) and the man who looks first to his pocket book. It's a safe bet you'll find here what you want Ralstons, $4 to $6 Similar styles $3.00, $3.50
Shoes for Ladies Come in and ask for the most beautiful Shoes that have been designed for fall and winter. You are urged to investigate the claim we make for Dorothy Dodd Shoes They are unequalled in style, beauty, and comfort. Shoes to fit every foot at prices every woman can afford to pay. A style for every taste. Dorothys $3.50 to $6 Other makes $2.50 and $3.00
Shoes for Children Our Boy's Shoes have the reputation of giving the most service and at a price you can afford to pay. Ask for our Boy's Shoes with Sole Leather Tips They Give Double the Wear of the Ordinary Tip. - Prices $2.00 to $3.50 Depending on the size and quality of the shoes.
ess
E-3
NefJ
Nuns
SHOES
SS3
700 Main Street
RUBBERS
imililiilili
