Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 275, 5 October 1916 — Page 9
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. THURSDAY, OCT. 5, 1916
PAGEINE
ocal aniioreian
GRAIN HITS HIGH MARK OF SEASON
CHICAGO, Oct. B. Wheat, opening to 1 higher today, started at the high mark of the season. Higher
cables and continued dryness In Argentine were the main factors. Estimated shipments from the Argentine, how
ever, are unusually large. Corn was
strong and to cent higher. Oats were strong and cent higher. Lard
was stronger and higher, ribs slightly
higher, and there was little dealing In pork.
Record were broken in the wheat
market today when December sold up to $1.60 and May $159. Much realizing was encountered on
the advance and at one time a break
resulted to well below the previous close. The finish was stronger, however. Corn was strong. Final prices were 114 to 2 cent8 higher. T)ats were to cent higher.
Cash sales were: Wheat, 40,000
bushels; corn, 1,365,000; oats, 95,000. Provisions closed strong.
GRAIN
Chicago Futures WHEAT Open. High. Low. Close. Deo 160 '160 158 1604 May ..159V4 159 158 158 CORN Dec. . 76 78 75 76 May 78 78 77 78 OATS
.. 49 49 49 49
Dee. .. May .
62 52 51 51
Cash,
Toledo Grain TOLEDO, O., Oct. 5. Wheat:
$1.62; May. $1.68. Cloverseed: Cash, $9.85. . Alslke: Cash, $10.15. Timothy: Cash, $2.42; December, $2.47. Chicago Cash CHICAGO. 111., Oct 5. Wheat: No. 2 red. $1.621.63; No. 2 hard winter. $1.64 1.65. Corn: No. 2 white, 90c; No. 2 yeilow, 8990c; No. 4 white, 8888c; No. 4 yellow, 8888c. Oats: No. 2 white, 48c; No. 3 white, 4848c; No. 4 white, 48 48c; standard, 4849c. Cincinnati Grain CINCINNATI, Oct. 5. Wheat: No. 2 red winter, $1.601.61; No. 3, $15601.59. Sales, 15 cars. Corn: No. 2 white, 92c; No. 2 yellow, 9090. Oats; No. 3 mixed, 47.
LIVE STOCK
Chicago UNION STOCK YARDS. 111., Oct. 5. Hogs: Receipts, 20.000; market, 10 to 15c higher; mixed and butchers, $8.759.75; good heavies, $9.109.70; rough heavies. $8.60 9.00; light. $8.75 (7J9.70; pigs, $6.4008.75; bulk of sales, $9.009.60. Cattle: Receipts. 5.000; market, strong; beeves, $5.85 11.35; cows and heifers, $3.859.50; stockers end feeders, $5.157.60; calves, $10.5012.50. Sheep: Receipts, 28,000; market, steady; natives and westerns, $4.00 $8.50; lambs, $7.7510.25.
Indianapolis INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 5. Hogs Receipts, 6,000; market, higher; best hogs, $10.00; heavies, $910; pigs, $6 8.65; bulk of sales, $8.909.60. Cattle Receipts, 850; market, strong; choice heavy steers, $8.15 10.55; light steers, $6.25 8.75; heifers $4.508.00; cows, $56.50; bulls $4.50 6.60; calves, $412.25. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 200; market, steady. Pittsburg PITTSBURGH, Oct. 5. Cattle supply, light; market, Bhol; prime steers, $8.759.00; good steers, $860; tidy butchers, $7.758.00; fair, $6.757.00; common, $56; common to fat bulls, $4.50 7.00; common to fat cows, $3 6.50; heifers, $5 7.75; fresh cows and springers, $4080; veal calves, $12.50 13.00. Sheep and Lamb supply Light; prime wethers, $7.758.00; spring lambs, $0.50010.25. Hogs Receipts, 20 d.d.; market, higher; prime heavy, $9.50; mediums, $9.60; heavy yorkers, $9.4060; light yorkers, $9.2535; pigs, $9.0025; roughs, $8.509.00; stags, $7.D08.00; heavy mixed, $9.5065. Cincinnati CINCINNATI, Oct. 5. Hogs Receipts, 5.600; market, higher; packers and butchers, $9.1565; common to choice, $78; stags, $78.25. Cattle Receipts, 1,500; market, slow. Sheep Receipts, 700; market, steady; lambs, steady, $5010.50.
PRODUCE 1 1 i
New York NEW YORK, Oct. 5. Live poultry: Unsettled; chickens, 21; fowls, 17 19c. Butter: Firm; creamery firsts, 34 36c; eggs, strong 34 36c.
Chicago CHICAGO, 111., Oct. 5. Butter: Receipts. 5,805 tubs; firsts, 32 33c. Eggs: Receipts, 3,912 cases. . Live poultry: - Chickens, 13 17c; springers, 18c, roosters, 13c.
, Potatoes: Receipts, 25 cars; Minn esotas, Dakotas & Ohlos, $1.151.20.
Cincinnati Produce : CINCINNATI, O., Oct. 5. Butter: Creamery whole milk extras, 38c, , centralized extra, 35c, do firsts, 32c, da aconda. 29c; dairy fancy ,29c.
Eggs: Prime firsts, 32c, firsts 31c, ordinary, 30c. Poultry: Broilers under 2 lbs., 18c, fryers over 2 lbs., 16c; roosters, 13c. Potatoes: Eastern Cobblers, $3.75 4.00 bbl.; home grown, $3.754.00. Lemons: California, $5.757.00; Messina $6.507; limes $33.75 box. Peaches: New York Elberta, $1.50 bu.; Michigan, $1.25 1.50.
New York Exchange Closing Quotations American Can, 65. Anaconda, 97. American Locomotive, 82. American Beet Sugar, 99. American Smelter, 113. U. S. Steel, com., 117. U. S. Steel, pfd., 120. Atchison, 107. St. Paul, 97. Great Northern, pfd., 120. Lehigh Valley, 86. N. Y. Central, 113. No. Pacific, 114. So. Pacific, 120. Union Pacific, 150. Pennsylvania, 59. Bethlehem Steel, 550.
RICHMOND MARKETS
Glen Miller Prices Hogs. Heavies, 225 to 250 lbs $9.00 Heavy yorkers, 160 to 180 lbs. . . .$8.50 Light yorkers, 130 to 160 lbs.... $8.00 Medium, 180 to 225 lbs $9.00 Pigs $7.008.00 Clags $4.50 7.50 Cattle. Butcher steers, 1,000 to 1,500 lbs $6.007.00 Butcher cows $5.00 6.00 Heifers $6.00 7.00 Bulls $4.506.00 Calves. Choice veals $10.00 Heavies and lights $5.006.00 Sheep. Spring lambs $8.00 Produce (Corrected Dally by Edward Cooper) Old chickens, dressed, paying 20 22c; spring chickens, dressed, paying 30c, selling 35c; country butter, paying 25c, selling 33c35c, 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 Oat3, 38-40c; corn, 80c; rye, $1.00; clover seed, 7 a bushel; 6traw $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 Haekman & Klehfoth.) Anthracite nut, $9.00; anthracite stove or egg, $8.75; Pocohontas lump or egg, (shoveled) $6.50; Pocohontas nut. $6.00; Pocohontas mine run, $5.75; Pocohontas slack, $4.50; Jackson lump, $6.00; Tennessee lump, $5.75; Kentucky lump, $5.50; West Vireinia lumn. $5.25: Winifred washed
pea, $4.75; Hocking Valley lump, $5.75;
Indiana lump, 54.50; Coke all sizes, $7.50; slack, $4.00. Indianapolis Representative Sales HOGS 4 302 $ 8.35 62 141 8.75 5 376 9.00 17 139 9.20 34 240 9.75 STEERS 2 700 $ 5.75 7 558 7.00 3 796 7.50 6 1158 8.50 2 1395 10.00
HEIFERS 2 . 725 $ 5.25 2 i. 800 5.75 2 .... 720 ' 6.25 3 873 7.00 2 650 7.60 COWS 2 .. 740 $ 4.00 2 '.. 930 4.25 3 .J.... .. 816 4.75 1 1280 6.00 1 ...........1320 7.00 BULLS 1 .... 560 $ 4.50 1 1170 , 5.50 1 ..1460 6.00 1 1630 6.50 CALVES 2 . 490 $ 6.00 6 173 9.00 2 100 10.50 4 120 11.00 2 170 12.00
M'CONAHA PROMOTED
E. P. McConaha, a former Centerville man, has been appointed manager of the Boston branch of the Maxwell automobiles sales organization. Mr. McConaha's new post takes him away from Detroit where he held a similar position with the Maxwell company.
ANNA KNOLLMAN DIES
One of the earliest German residents of the city, Anna Maria Knollman, 78, died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Gus Cook, of Greenwood avenue, at 5 o'clock this morning. Besides Mrs. Cook, another daughter, Mrs. Henry Bullerdick, of this city, and nine grandchildren and three great-grandchildren survive. The funeral arrangements have not been announced. Friends may call Saturday afternoon or. evening.
SELECT EXECUTIVES
Principal Pickell or the high school this morning announced the following executives of the R. H. S. Athletic association: Supervisor, Mr. Nohr; general manager, Charles Towle; assistant, Mr. Driver; bookkeeper and auditor, Mr. Helman; assistant, Mr. Haekman. Intra-mural athletics will be in charge of Mr. Nohr, assisted by Mr. Whisnand and Mr. Sipple.
MRS. JOHNSON SUES
Failure to provide is the charge in the divorce suit of Ethel Gernet Johnson vs. John L. Johnson, filed in the circuit court today. Mrs. Johnson asks the custody of her two children, aged three and five.
MISS THORNBURG RETURNS
Elsie Thornburg, Hagerstown, will resume her duties as an assistant in the county treasurer's office, next week. She has been on a three months vacation, during which time she made an extended trip through Canada.
A. HECKER STAYS AT FATHER'S SIDE
LEWISBURG, O., Oct. 5. Otto Radabough and wife, and Jacob Crider and wife are spending a few days at th reservoir... .Mr. Ambrose Hecker, Monterey, California, is here on a prolonged stay on account of the illness of bis father. : , Visit Sick Sister Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Kessler spent Thursday with the latter's sister, Mrs. Cal. Pease, who is very poorly Mr. Ed. Kirkland spent Friday and Saturday in Ansonia with his aunt, Mrs. Rebecca Winterhalter Miss Martha Herman spent Sunday afternoon with Miss Ruth Davidson,. James Gates and wife attended a surprise on Van Geer Sunday.
CITY WILL OBSERVE HALLOWEEN THIS YEAR
Richmond has for a number of years had the reputation of staging the best Hallowe'en celebrations in the middle
west. The reputation will not suffer this year. Plans are now under consideration for the affair which will be conducted on the order of a Mardi Gras. Ghosts and goblins will flock the streets and traffic on Main street will give way to the customary promenade.
SHIVELEY RETURNS
Charles E. ShiVeley returned from Indianapolis today, where he has been attending the K. of P. Grand lodge meeting.
ZOLLA SPEAKS
Continued From Page One. an operation. He plans to make a campaign in Indiana at a later dte.
Henry U. Johnson will preside at the
meeting tonight and will deliver an address on the campaign issues. The county Democratic organization has just completed its "thirty-day" poll of the county and the poll books are being examined this week by Webster Parry, a traveling auditor of the state
board of accounts and formerly city
controller under the Schillinger administration. Mr. Parry states that he is taking a weeks vacation to assist the
Democratic organization in compiling
the poll. Henry Farwig is also assisting in this work. Democrats Pleased. "We have received the poll from every precinct with about two exceptions and are very well satisfied with the information this poll has revealed," Mr. Parry said today. Asked if the poll showed what ticket the majority of the Progressives would support at the election Mr. Parry replied that it was almost impossible to find a man who would confess he had ever been a Progressive. Rep. Finly H. Gray was in New Castle today but will attend the Coll-
We Want to Buy
AT
c
Will Pay Cash or Exchange for Mill Feed or Corn Omer G. Whelan "THE FEED MAN" 31-33 South 6th St. Phone 1679
FffiBS
CLOTHES
SUETS OVERCOATS
$
Made-to-FIt
W and.
Always the Same Prices
Take your choice from hundreds of the latest Fall and Winter Styles from pure wool Serges, Worsteds, Cassimeres, Mixtures qualities that other stores can't show below $15 to $22.50. A comparison will immediately prove this to your satisfaction. The same high quality, the same fine workmanship, the same larger assortments and the same REAL, PERSONAL SERVICE prevails here as always. Simply compare our garments with others we want you to convince yourself and you'll say with hundreds of other' men WHY PAY MORE?
ALL CLOTHES SOLD BY US PRESSED AND REPAIRED FOR ONE YEAR FREE OF CHARGE.
Yes, Sir, We Can Fit You and hand you a regular three dollar Quality Hat in the very latest styles and colors, in a variety great enough to please men of every taste. Our price only
$2.00
seum meeting tonight. Gray will probably spend Friday and Saturday in Wayne county. On the night of October 18, he will deliver an address at the K, of P. temple and will be in Wayne county all of the week preceedIng this meeting.
MUSIC FEATURES
Continued From Page One. that have been held for the past two weeks, except that there will be no luncheon. Committees to Report. The committees will make their reports on the campaign blackboard, and will tell of amusing, inspiring or discouraging features of their canvass for subscriptions. Chairman John M. Lontz, who was toastmaster at the $100,000 dinner several weeks ago, will be chairman of the meeting. Other local speakers will make short talks. The meeting Is free to the public and no one will be solicited for a subscription', the committee announced. This morning the committees gathered for the last time in the campaign to go out to resume their canvass. According to D. H. McFarland, professional campaigner, the industry and faithfulness of the local committee has never been excelled any where. More Money Is Needed. The work at the present time is ex-
"BINGO" Absolutely Removes Corns and Galluses Completely 25 Cents, All Drug Stores, Including
tremely difficult because the committees must work on persons who have already been canvassed, or others who were overlooked In making up the lists. The committees appeared to have about $1,000 signed up when they left the Commercial club rooms this morning. This leaves $3,500 that must be
secured to make the total reach th hundred thousand mark. The committees were elated to learn that the legality of the subscription by the Municipal lighting plant has been confirmed. This subscription was reported last Friday and will not count as a part of the $3,500 still to be secured.
Come Now Before announcing our formal opening we will add a few finishing touches to our store, but we are prepared now to entertain you all of our friends. A.A Victrolas and Victor Records will be played and displayed whenever you wisK. You will find our new store a very pleasant place to visit. Ask to hear the new Victor records for
uciooer. . iw .
. :
1000 Main Street Martin's Music Shop Just Victor
NUSBAUM'S
Buttcrlck Patterns Forecast the Advance Styles This Month's Fashion Sheet Free. Ask for one.
Butterick Patterns Forecast the Advance Styles See the Butterick Quarterly
Dress Goods and Silks For Fall and Winter
A distinguished collection which will give you an abundance of information concerning the Season's New Fashionable Materials. Silks and Woolens can be chosen with the greatest economy here. The opportunities for saving on Fashionable Dress, Suit, Skirt jr Waist Materials was never more eminent than now.
THE VOGUE OF BLACK SILKS Assumes large proportions among the Fall Silk Fashions and includes Yard Wide Taffetas, Grograins, Failles, Crepe De Chine, Satin Croquettes.
Peau de Cygne and Messalmes at $1.00 to 52.50 Yd
SPECIAL 36-in. Fine Chiffon Finished
Black Taffeta Silk, at per yd., only
SPECIAL 36-in. fine lustrous finished An Black Messaline Silk, at per yd. only..
I 111 iw I i
-moo
FANCY TAFFETA SILKS Fine lustrous finish Batin plaids and stripes, from the small, neat effects to the distinctive wide variety. 36-in. Fancy Taffeta Silks at $1 to $2.50 Yd. $1.50 FANCY TAFFETA SILKS All beautiful colorings, stripes and plaids; while the lot QQ lasts, per yard OU
36-INCH SATIN COQUETTE SILKS Rich dress quality, fine twilled serviceable silks, satin finish, in all the dark Fall shades (J- r?r at per yard pL I O
FAILE SUITING SILKS Finest quality in all the new shadings $1.00 and $2.00
40-INCH ALL SILK POPLINS in the Q- A new Fall Shades, at per yard only.... JJ-"l
FALL'S DAINTIEST SILK WAISTINGS 40-INCH ALL SILK CREPE DE CHINES in all the popular evening shades, up to $2.00 values, will be offered for a few days at $1.50 and $1.25 Yard. 36-INCH WASHABLE SATINS in most all the popular waist and costume shadings, an excellent serviceable silk with a beautiful lustrous finish at only $1.25. Velvets and Corduroys Are a Big Factor in Autumn and Winter Fashions
FINE SILK CHIFFON VELVETS in black and an imposing variety of new Fall shades at $1.25 to $2.50 Yard. YARD WIDE COSTUME VELVET in pretty Fall colorings at $2.65 Yard.
FINE VELVETEENS in all the new representative shades, specially fine quality at 65c Yd. including Rose, Myrtle, Navy, Black, Cerise, COSTUME CORDUROYS in all the desired shades Peach, Brown, White and Emerald, at only $1.00 Yard.
Plain and Novelty WOOLENS 54-inch Plaids, Stripes and Checks in wonderful variety; rich, somber colorings in plain and fancy weaves, neat and large checks, handsome pin stripes, medium stripes, large fashionable sport stripes, plaids in light and dark effects, per yd. 1.75
FASHIONABLE PLAIDS FOR SCHOOL WEAR
Washable Half Silk Plaids in light and dark shadings, per yard 69J 40-lnch Plaid and Striped Woolens Excellent colorings for school wear, per yard...50? 40-inch Plaid Wool Goods Light and dark Scotch Plaids, per yard 75 Serges predominate and always will among the plain weaves. Fine French and English Serges, all colors, priced at 50c to $1.25 Yd.
Broadcloths Fashionable, foremost among the fine suitings, all colors, 54 inches wide, at $1.25 to $2.50 Gaberdines in all colors, 44 inches $1.00 and $1.50 yd. Gaberdines in all colors, 44 inches $1.00 and $1.50 Yd. Poplins in all colors, 54 inches wide at $1.75 Yd. Popular Fromo Suitings, 45 in. wide, hard twisted, serviceable fine finished Suitings, in aU colors ....$1.50 Yd.
Lee B. Nusbaum Co,
The Home of Butterick Patterns.
