Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 280, 11 October 1916 — Page 9
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 11, 1916
PAGE NINE-
ocal and foreion
GRAIN SELLS FREELY AS TRADING STARTS
CHICAGO, Oct. 11. Wheat was sold freely at the start today and prices opened to cents lower. Argentine cables reported a continuation of
drought and the move on the part of
the British government to control grain is regarded as favorable by the sea-board. Cables were unchanged to
i cent higher. Corn started steady with prices
lower to H higher. Corn was quoted
at H to 1 cent higher in the cables. Oats opened firm on moderate trading. Provisions were slightly higher.
GRAIN
Chicago Cash
CHICAGO. Oct. 11. Wheat: No. 2
red. $160; No. 2 hard winter, $1.62 1.62V4Corn: No. 2 white, 9i,C", No. 2 yellow. 89U32ni: No. 4 yellow, 88 88Hc Oats: No. Xwhite, 4848Vic; No. 3 white, 2647 xv
Uincmn.. jrain CINCINNATI. Oct. .J. Wheat: No. 2 red winter, $1.61 163; No. 8, $1.58 1.60. Sales. 11 cars. Corn: No. 2 white, 9394c; No. 2 yellow, 93 93Vc Oats: No. S mixed. 47tf 48c.
LIVE STOCK
Chicapo TJNION STOCK YARDS, Oct. 11. tTos Receipts, 28.000; market l c V-hw: mixed and butchers, $910.50. kV heaves. $10.451M0; rough heaV. $9125: light, W-0510.10: piss, t?, 60 8.75; bulk of sales, $9.50 Cattle Receipts. 20,000; market steady; bee--s. 55.75611.40; cows and heifers. $5.753 50; stockers ; and feeders. $5.25 7.85; calves. $9.50 11.75 Sheep-Rece. 30.000; market, w.iv natives ami westerns, $4io,
lambs, $7.6510.65.
Cattle. Butcher steers. 1.000 to 1.500 lbs A$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 $5.00 6.00 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 S3c35c. creamery butter, selling 38c, eggs, paying, 30c, selling 35c; country lard, paying 13c, selling 18c; new potatoes. Belling $2.00 bushel. Feed Quotations (Corrected Dally by Omer Whelan) Paying Oats, 3S-40c; corn. 80e; rye, $1.00; clover seed. v7 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.
CINCINNATI, Oct. li.riogo rvo-
market. nignet; pac.n
Cinrinnaii
feints. 4.200:
and butchers. $9.7510;
,.hnt t7.50(S9.25:
Jrt.o0ffi9.25: stags, $7.00 8.75.
Cattle Receipts, 1,000;
Sheep Receipts, 1,000; market, steady. ..
common
tiles and
to
lights,
market,
Pittsburg PITTSBURGH, Oct 11. Cattle supply, light; market, steady. Sheep and Lamb supply light; market, steady; spring lambs. $10.75. Hogs Receipts. 2.000; market, loc. higher; prime heavy, $10.1010.15; heavy vorkr $9.7510; light yorkers, $9.259.o0; pigs, $9.009.75. Indianapolis INDIANAPOLIS. Oct. 11. HogsReceipts, 7,500; market, 10 to 25 cts. hisher; best hogs, $10.30; heavies, $9.5010.30; pigs, $69.25; bulk of sales. $9.50 9.90. Cattle Receipts, 1,150; market, strong; choice heavy steers, $8.75 $11; light steers, $6.25 8.75; heifers, $4.508.00; cows, $56.50: bulla, $4.50(56.60; calves, $4.0011.75. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 400; market, strong to 20c higher; prime sheep, $6.25; lambs, $6 9.25.
PRODUCE
New York NEW YORK, Oct. 11. Live poultry: Fair demand; chickens, 1720c; fowls 1719Hc Butter: Weaker; creamery firsts, 3435c. Eggs: Quiet. 353c. Cincinnati Produce CINCINNATI. O.. Oct. 11. Butter: Creamery whole milk extras, 38c, centralized extra, 36c, do firsts, 32 He, do seconds, 29c; dairy fancy. 29c. Eggs: Prime firsts, 34c, firsts Z2ftc, ordinary, 31c Poultry: Broilers under 2 lbs., 20c, fryers over 2 lbs., 18c, roosters, 13c. Potatoes: Eastern Cobblers. $3.75 4.00 bbl.; homrown, $3.754.00. Lemons: California. 3.505.00; Messina. 3.5004.5ft; limes 2.753.00 box. Peaches: New York Elbertas, $1.65 bu.; Michigan, $1.251.50. 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 PiM $7.00 8.00 ligs $4.507.50
BRIEFS
WANTED Housemaid and man to work out of doors. See Mrs. R. G. Leeds, South Eighteenth street. 6-tf RUGS Have your old carpets made Into beautiful rugs by the Indianapolis Rug Co. Phone 2912 or City Restaurant 1359. Ask for Mr. Fly. 3-10t
LOST Pocketbook, black, 3 one-dollar I bills and small change. Return to Palladium. Reward. 16-tf
Coal Quotations (Corrected by Hackman & 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 Virginia lump, $5.25; Winifred washed pea. $4.76; Hocking Valley lump, $5.75; Indiana lump, $4.50; Coke all sizes, $7.50; Hack, $4.00.
Indianapolis Representative Sales
9 5 71 54 42 4 2 3 18 3 2 2 2 4 3
HOGS
110 338 178 181 248 STEERS 1000 975 1200 1176 HEIFERS 766 ....606 775 698 COWS 776 823 1055 1280 BULLS 840 1020 1240 .....1880 CALVES 286 245 164 180
$ 9.00 9.50 970 9.85 10.15 $ 7.25 8.00 9.55 11.00 $ 5.50 6.50 7.00 8.50 $ 4.00 4.50 6.25 6.50 $ 5.25 5.90 6.00 6.60 $ 6.00 8.50 11.00 11.50
HOTEL OWNER DIES
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Oct. 11. Harry B. Gates, one of the owners of the Hotel Severln of this city, and the Miami Hotel of Dayton, Ohio, is dead here from a stroke of apoplexy. He was interested in many other business enterprises.
HEALTH CONDITIONS OF UNION COUNTY REPORTED VERY BAD INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Oct 11. A report of the state board of health on sanitary Conditions in Union county today is not complimentary to the county In many respects. In a summary of the survey the board reports that 97.7 of the farm.houses surveyed in Union county are insanitary, that the death rate ia higher than the state rate by 0.5 per cent in 1,000; that the consumption death rate is 13.6 higher than the state rate, but that the typhoid death rate is 14.2 lower than the state rate. The birth rate is 19.3 in 1,000 against the state rate of 20.3. being 1.0 per cent lower. The population of the county decreased 7.2 per cent and the number of school children decreased 14.6 per cent in the ten years ending in 1915. SAYS GERMANY LOOKS FOR BASE NEAR MEXICO
NEW YORK, Oct. 11. A possibility that Germany has established or is seeking to establish a submarine base on the Mexican coast is contained in the latest developments in the U-boat raid on shipping in American waters. , The last reported position of the U-53 was 158 miles due east of Fire Island, which Is considerable distance south of the Nantucket Shoals zone where she was operating on Sunday. A high British official stated that Captain Rose of the U-53 might head for the Gulf of Mexico and attempt to resume raiding operations. But he admitted that the temptation of sinking ships such as the Adriatic, the Phlladelphian and Minnehaha might Induce him to linger off New York. The Minnehaha will carry 10.000 tons of war materials when she sails, while other great cargoes of war supplies will be carried on the Adriatic and Philadelphian. The mystery of the Kingston, or Kingstonlan, which was reported to have been sunk off Nantucket on Sunday, has not yet been cleared up. It has not yet been definitely established whether five or six ships were sunk by the Germans.
SOUTH BENDERS JUMP TO LEAD IN "Y" CONTEST
South Bend, a dark horse, last night jumped in on the first quarter of the State Y. M. C. A. membership contest and finished far in the lead of either Muncie or Richmond with 1614 points, not counting handicap. In number of points gained by memberships, Richmond ranked second at the end of yesterday with 364 points,- with Muncie third having 306 points. When the handicap points were added, however, both Muncie and Richmond were put out of the running as far as the first lap is concerned. With handicaps considered, Richmond ranked eighth and Muncie came across the line ninth. Few Teams Reported Few of the teams working; in the local field reported on time last night. Efforts ara being made today to get the teams out in .full force and to get them to report enough points at 6 o'clock this evening to put Richmond among the first. Now that there are no more handicaps to be awarded, both Muncie and Richmond have a chance to go straight to the first rank. The standing counting handicaps at the close of yesterday's race follows: Evansville, 930; South Bend, 1,689; Muncie, 1,081; Richmond, 1,414; Vincennes, 1,492; Lafayette, 1,495; LaPorte, 1.520; Marion, 1,680; Terre Haute, 1,713; Indianapolis, colored, 1,619. 4 H. C. Bookman's , team won first place among Richmond workers yesterday with thirty-two points; Robert Bramcamp's team at Garfield school, and Nat. Siegal's team tied for second with ten points each.
WASHINGTON, Oct 11. The mystery of the letter to Ambassador Von Bernstorf brought to Newport by Captain Hans Rose on the German sub.
I marine U-53 was cleared up this after
noon. The German embassy announced that the letter contained only a formal notification that the U-53 had entered an American port and would depart within less than 24 hours. The embassy pointed out that all German submarine commanders who enter neutral ports must make such reports to the German ambassador in the country visited.
CLEARS UP MYSTERY ABOUT U-53 NOTE
PENNSY OFFICIALS PASS ON SPECIALS
Four special trains of six special parlor cars each carrying Benjamin McKeen, general manager of the Pennsylvania lines west, and about onehundred other high railroad officials passed through Richmond this morning. The officials were on their general inspection of all the company lines west of Pittsburg. -The trains stopped in Richmond only long enough for the engines to get water and the men did not get off the trains.
DEMAND TO HEAR PRESIDENT WILSON
INCREASES WAR FUND
SEN. JOHN KERN ILL
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Oct. 11. Senator John W. Kern, majority leader In the senate, has abandoned his speaking tour temporarily because of illness due to a deep-seated cold.
Gity Statistics
LONDON, Oct. 11. Premier Asquith in the House of Commons today moved a vote of credit for $1,500,000 with which to carry on the war. This is the thirteenth vote of credit since the war began and brings the total to $15,660,000,000. The present credit it is expected, will finance the war until the end of the present year.
"Safety first" signs are placed in hemispherical bases, so they right themselves in case they are knocked out of place by passing vehicles.
Deaths and Funerals. 1 BUNDY Rev. Jason Bundy, a form- j er resident of Richmond, died Monday I evening at his home in Evanston, 111. I The body will be brought to this place j
ior Dunai ana win ue ia&en 10 me home of Grovelle Bundy, 225 South Tenth street. Services will be held Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock from the Bethel A. M. E. church. Burial will be in Earlham cemetery. Marriage Licenses Harvey H. Lyon, 30, clerk, Cincinnati, O., to Iva Mae Wimmer, 31, Hagerstown. Clyde M. Ronan, 23, gardener, to Emma S. Sleeth, 23.
Duffy Pure JLclIi Whiskey
Id
Is a medicinal whiskey for tem
perate use that na
helps put new life into you. "Get Duffy's and Keep Wefl w
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Oct. 11. Frantic appeals were made to the managers of a pure food show today to permit President Wilson to make a speech on rural credits in Tomlinson hall tomorrow afternoon after his big speech at the State Fair grounds coliseum. The pure food show officials had declared they had already paid for the booths and would put up booths tomorrow regardless of the fact that it was advertised that President Wilson would speak In the halL
WILSON LEAVES EAST
SHADOW LAWN, N. J., Oct. 11. President Wilson left this afternoon at 1:15 o'clock for Indianapolis, where he will deliver three speeches tomorrow.
PICKS UP LIFE BOAT
NEWPORT, R. I., Oct. 11. The steamship Antonio Lopez, eastward bound, reported by wireless today, that she bad picked up five abandoned life boats off Nantucket shoals. It was in that vicinity that German submarines carried out their raid on Sunday. All the boats were In good condition and one had "Liverpool" painted on its side.
PENNSY GETS DEEDS
APOLOGY IS FILED IN GERMANY'S NAME
LONDON. Oct 11. Replying to tho protest of the Norwegian government regarding the sinking on April 9 of the Norwegian steamer Sjolyst by a German submarine without warning; Germany officially notified Norway that she regrets the act and declares her willingness to pay full Indemnity. No lives were lost in the sinking.
Deeds to the Pennsylvania railroad for the strip of land east of Nineteenth street and north of Glen Miller park containing 61 x 75 acres which will be used in the east yard extension were filed at the county recorder's office today. Most of this land was owned by the Granite .Improvement company, composed of railroad men, of this city. .
OPEN ART EXHIBIT
Pupils of the city grade schools will be given the opportunity to witness the art exhibit at the high school art galleries. The pupils of the various grade buildings, in body and in charge of their instructors will be taken to the high school building.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY
Through the advance of the ocean on its shore. Great Britain loses each year an area equal to that of Gibraltar.
WOMAN ALL RUN DOWN Made Strong and Well By Vinol Waynesboro, Pa. "I was all im down after a. hard spell of bronchitis so it was hard for me to keep about I had pains in my chest and took cold easily. A friend asked me to try VlnoL I did and it built me up so I am strong and well and I am able to do my housework which I had not done for three months before taking Vinol." Mrs. Y. R. Horbough, Waynesboro, Pa. Vinol creates an appetite, aids digestion, makes pure blood and creates strength. Your money back if it falls. Clem Thistlethwaite, druggist, Richmond, Ind. Also at the leading drug stores in all Indiana towns.
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Insurance Company of New York
New District Office. 255 Colonial Building,
1
Phone 2011 Richmond, Indiana.
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Gray-light and dark Ghampaigne Ivory, White Havana Brown Plum and Golden Brown
We have these in combination and solid colors in the very newest patterns. Priced $5.00 to $8.00
Similar Styles in Black Kid and Patent Priced from $3.00 to $5.00 Keff ..& Mislbaim
MIWTflD
1IU 11 WUM
M A IT WW TO MTP
VUlUflllLillll 11 1111 UlSJliW
Quality as applied to "HOME FURNISHINGS" means more than it does to any other Class of Goods which you may purchase. Quality Furniture does not go out of Style, will last for generations and will always give you Good Service. Quality, without Costliness, is what you will find at the "HOUSE OF GROTHAUS." Home Furnishings in the Latest Styles that look as well, wear as well and will give you just as Good Service as goods that command much higher prices elsewhere. Observe below our Offerings. QnaMy Jdtaroom Mte Pictures and Figures cannot convey the Real Merit and Values we are offering in Bedroom Goods. They must be seen to be understood. These we consider good examples of the Cabinet Maker's art, and represent Quality, Style and Service at Splendid Bargain Values. We carry the various Period Styles and show them in the different woods and
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rift tkfltiAw'ttmmit; JiniHk:
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SSDSJQD
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Brown Mahogany Bed, Dresser, Chiffonier, Dressing Table, Triple Mirrors
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two
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American Walnut Bed, Dresser, Chiffonier, Dressing Table
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FURNITURE OF QUALITY
614 MAIN STREET
Jl
