Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 287, 19 October 1916 — Page 9

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, OCT. 19, 1916

PAGE NINE

1 1X3

ocai ana loreian

WHEAT IS LOWER

ON WEAKER CABLES

CHICAGO, Oct. 19 Wheat opened

weaker and lower today, owing to low

er cablet. Tbe trade u mostly long

and selling wat liberal, with prices

to 1H cents below last night's close

Outside markets were weaker and

to 1 cents lower.

Bad weather reports and forecasts

for more rain made corn strong.

Oats were strong to a shade higher. Provisions were stronger and higher. The strength In wheat . continued nearly the entire day, although there was heavy profit taking during the last half hour. On this selling there were sharp declines as resting spots for the

day ex were 1 to 3 cents higher for the nearby futures, while the July was

unchanged to cents lower.

Corn closed 1 strong and 3 cents

higher for the December and May. Oats were up to 1 cents. Cash sales her were wheat, 35,000; otra. 350,000, and oats 130,000 bushels. Hog products were better under good buying.

GRAIN

Toledo Grain

TOLEDO. Oct II. Wheat: Cash,

11.70 U: May. tl.Mtf.

CloTerseed: Cash. $10.20; May,

$9.85. Alsike: Cash, $10.20; Dee.. $10.30 Timothy: Cash, $2.40; Dec, $2.45 Chicago Futures WHEAT

Open. High. Low. Close

Deo 166 169 165 169

May ......167 169 166 168 CORN Deo. 79U 82 79 82 May 81 84 81 84 OATSDec 49 49 48 49 May 52 63 62 53

Chicago Cash

CHICAGO. Oct. 19. Wheat: No. 2

red, $1.67 01.69; No. 2 hard winter,

Xl.7061.7414.

Corn: No. 2 white, 96; No. 2 yellow,

96ftc; No. 4 white, 94c. Oats: No. 2 white. 46g46; No 3 white. 48(948. Standard, 4849,4Cincinnati Grain CINCINNATI. Oct. 19. Wheat: No. 2 red winter. $1.C61.68; No. 2, $1.60 01.65. Sales, 3 cars. Corn: No. 2 White, SM95c; No. 2 yellow, 94 5Tt5c. ' Oats:. No. 3 mixed, 4849c.

wethers, $7.75 85; spring lambs, $7 10.60. HogsReceipts, 10 dd.; market, steady; prime heavy, $10.2535; mediums. $10.2535; heavy yorkers, 10.26035; light yorkers, $9.659.?5; pigs, 9.2550; roughs, $950; stags, $82D; heavy mixed, $10.25035. Cincinnati CINCINNATI, Oct. 19. Hogs Receipts, 6,200; market, steady, packers and butchers, $9.85 10.25. Cattle Receipts, 2,000; market dull, heifers, $4.507.00; calves, $4.00 $12.00. Sheep Receipts, 300; - market, steady; lambs, steady.

PRODUCE

LIVE STOCK

Chicago UNION STOCK YARDS. 111., Oct. 19. Hogs: Receipts, 20,000; market strong; mixed and butchers, $9.40 $10.23; gocd heavies, $9.359.55; rouqh heavies, $9.3039.55; light, $9.35 10.15; bulk of sales, $9.6010.15. Cattle: Receipts 10,000; market steady; beeves, $6.5011.40; cows and heifers, $5.40 ft fl. 20; stockers and feeders, $1.7007.65; Texans, $7.00 8.15; calves, $7.25 11.75. Sheep: Receipts, 17,000,, market strong; natives and westerns, $7,000 $8.30; lambs, $8.40010.70.

Indianapolis INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 19. Hogs Receips, 11,500; market, 5c higher; best hogs, $10.40; heavies. $9.95 10.40; pigs. $7.009.50; bulk of sales, $9 95010.15. Cattle Receipts, 900; market, steady; choice heavy steers, $8.75 ;' 10.50; light steers, $6.2308.75; heifers, $4.508.00; cows, $5.00(6.50; bulls, $4.5006.50; calves, $4.00010.76. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 400;

market, steady; prime sheep, $6.75; lambs, ..609.50. .

NewYom NEW YORK. Oct. 19. Live poultry: Dull; chickens. 16 19c; fowls, 14 18c. Butter: Firm; creamery firsts, 34 35c; eggs, steadier, 8234. Chicago CHICAGO, Oct. 19. Butter: Receipts 4,262 tubs; firsts, 3233. Eggs: Receipts, 5,423 cases; firsts. $232c. Live poultry: Chickens. 1216c; springers, 16c; roosters. 12.

potatoes: Receipts, 50 cars; wis

conslns, $1.251.35.

Cincinnati Produce

CINCINNATI, O., Oct. 19. Butter:

Creamery whole milk extras, 38c, centralized extra, 36c, do firsts, 32 o,

do seconds, 29c; dairy fancy. 29o.

Eggs: Prime firsts. 346, firsts 32 c,

ordinary, 31c.

Poultry: Broilers under 1 lbs.,

2le; fryers over 1 lbs., 17; roosters. 12 c.

Potatoes: Eastern Cobblers, 4.25

4.50 bbl.; home grown, $4.254.50.

Lemons: California, 3.50 5.00;

Messina, 3.5004-50; limes 2.7503.00

box. Peaches: Ohio Solways, $1.902.00; A-B, $1.0001.40. New fork Exchange Closing Quotations American Can, 66. Anaconda, 94. American Locomotive, 78. American Beet Sugar, 99. American Smelter, 109. U. S. Steel, common, 115. U. S. Steel, pfd., 120. Atchison, 105. St Paul, 95. Great Northern, pfd., 118. Lehigh Valley, 84. N. Y. Central, 107. Northern Pacific, 111. Southern Pacific, 100. Union Pacific, 150. Pennsylvania, 58. -Bethlehem Steel, 640.

. Produce (Corrected Daily by Edward Cooper) Old Chickens, dressed, paying -209 25c. selling 30c; country butter, paying 80c, selling 35c; country butter, paying 25c, selling 8Sc35c creamery butter, selling 40c; eggs, paying 30c, selling 35c; country lard, paying 18c, selling 18c; n6w potatoes, selling $2.00 bushel. v

Feed Quotations (Corrected Daily by Omer Whelan) PayingOats, 43c; old corn, 80c; rye, $1.10; clover seed. $7.008.50 a bushel; Straw, $6 a ton. Selling Cotton seed meal, $40.00 4 ton. $2.10 ft cwt.; middlings, $33.00 a ton, $1.70 a cwt.; bran, $29.00 a ton, $1.50 a cwt.; salt, $1.60 a bbl. Quaker dairy seed, $28 a ton. $1.60 per cwt Coal Quotations (Corrected by Hackman A Klehroth.) 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 lumn. S6.00: Tennessee liimn.

$5.75; Kentucky lump, $6.60; West Virginia 'lump, $5.25; Winifred washed;

pea, 4.75; Hocking Valley lump. $5.00; Indiana lump; $4.60; Coke all sizes, $7.50; slack. $4.00.

Wagon Market Timothy hay-flS.00. Mixed $12.00. Clover hay $10.00. Alfalfa $15.00. Straw $7.00.

CITY PEOPLE USE PARCEL POST MORE THAN RURAL FOLKS

Indianapolis Representative Sales

RICHMOND MARKETS

Glen Miller Prices Hogs.

Heavies, 225 to 250 lbs $9.50

Heavy yorkers, 160 to 180 lbs... $9.00

Light yorkers, 130 to 160 lbs $8.00 Medium, 180 to 225 lbs $9.25

Pigs $7.008.00 Clags $4.50 7.50

Cattle.

Butcher steers, 1.000 to 1.500

lbs $6.007.00

Butcher cows $5.0006.00 Heifers ....$6.00 7.00 Bulls $4.506.00

Calves.

Choice veals $10.00 Heavies and lights $5.0006.00

Sheep.

Spring lambs $8.00

7 17 6 19 40 t 7 4 6 4 2 2 2 2 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 1

HOGS 177 . 140 , . 354 178 213 STEERS $40 .......1071 ..1127 1126 1270 HEIFERS 6.30 600 735 750 610

$

COWS

. 970 . 976 .1020 .1420

BULLS

. 670 . 830 .1440

CALVES

170 380 180 180

$

$ 9.25 9.75 9.85 10.05 10.20

5.75 6.75

7.25 7.76 8.25 S.35 5.75 6.50 7.25 8.00 3.75 4.40 4.75 7.00 4.50 5.25 6.75 4.75

5.60 10.00 10.75

Who .uses parcel post farmers or

city people

Statistics taken from 13 working dftys commencing October 2 at the post

office show that deliveries of packages In the city Were three io one tq deliveries on rural routes. An interesting disclosure of the survey of parcel post operations showed that ot 1,445 packages mailed here for local zone delivery, 1,383 were twoounce, against 11, the next highest weight classification of four-one packages.,' : .. . . Delivers 223 Packages. In thirteen days, the parcel post auto delivered a daily average of 223 packages of a total Of 2,902 at a total cost of $68.82 In addition to carrying all city carriers' mail to sub-stations.

AH other parcel poBt clerk hire cost $100 and a total of In and out-bound parcels of 26,282 Was reached. The total for, delivery here was 16,587 Of which 15,142 came from eight outside zones and 1,4445 were mailed here. Almost 10,000 parcels were dispatched to outside zones, making

11,140 parcels mailed here Weighing 22,112 pounds and requiring $776.74

postage. The figures were compiled by Superintendent of Mails Wilson.

80Y COUNCIL MEETS

Too much important business scheduled to come before Boytown 'council for it tor be postponed because of the Fall Festival. The question of whether the late constitutional convention was illegal Is the most important matter for consideration. The Junior police force will be oh hands tonight and will be sent after

councilmeh who are absent.

BOYS TRY NORRIS IN JUNIOR COURT

All was set for the trial of "Hobo" Norrls before Boytown Mayor Harris at the city building 3:45 o'clock this afternoon. Many witnesses for the state and the defense had been called in. Norrls Is charged with having stayed out of school during the World Baseball Series without sufficient reasons.

In Europe the average height of land above the sea is 969 feet. In Asia it is 3,189 feet.

COMMITTEES EXPECT TO MEET VISITORS

A reception committee was appointed at the last minute today to arrange for the entertainment of two delegations of 100 arh frnm Wamii.

ton, O., and ' Indianapolis tomorrow. The Indianapolis delegation sent word

inis aiternoon tne special cars Would reach here at 11 or 11:30 o'clock. The Hamilton delegation will arrive by special train. D. S. Coe Is the chairman of the committee, with Charles

Beck. Louis S. Bowman, Fred Bartel, Edward H.. Harris and Frank Braffett as the other members.

CARRIES HEAVY CARGO i SAVANNAH, Oct 19. What li C to fee the most-valuable cargo ever carried In an American ship , was; aboard the steamer Eurana, when she cleared from here with $5,000,000 worth of cotton, lead pencil slate and steel for Havre; ' - j

SCORE BABY CARDS

Scoring cards -filled out by physicians who judged babies in the Palladium county baby contest was begun today under the direction of L. B. Campbell, head of Richmond Business college and Miss Mary Kennedy, county educational nurse, assisted by deputy county, officials. Winners will be notified in time to appear at the dual contest at the Y. M.' C. A. Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock.

THE CAMERA FIEND Will Make Yon Laugh.

Want

Three Extra Salesladies

8

FOR SATURDAY

Apply at once

Cash Price Credit Store,

iimscii's

Train Your Hair as An Actress Does

No class of people devotes as much time to beauty as do actresses, and naturally no class must be more careful to retain and develop their charms. Inquiry among them develops the information that in hair care they find it dangerous to shampoo with any makeshift hear cleanser. Instead they have studied to find the finest preparation made for shampooing and bringing out the beauty of the hair. The majority of them say that to enjoy the best hair waBh and scalp stimulator , that i3 known, get a package of canthrox from

your druggist; dissolve a teaspoonfuli in a cup of hot water and your sham-j

poo is ready. It costs less than three

cents for this amount. After its use

the hair dries rapidly, with uniform

color. Dandruff, excess oil and dirt are dissolved and entirely disappear. Your haid will be so fluffy that it will look much heavier than it is. Its lus

tre and softness will also delight you, j

wnne tne sumuiaiea scaip gains me health which insures hair growth. Adv.

"THE BIG STORE WITH THE LITTLE ENTRANCE"

Mi

Fernando El Cano, of Santa Rosa, Cal., says he is 115 years old.

Pittsburg PITTSBURGH. Oct. 19. Cattle supply, light: market, steady; prime steers, $8.759.00; good steers, $8.00 60; tidy butchers. $7.7508.00; fair, $6.75(5)7.00; common to fat bulls. $4.50 ($7.00; common to fat cows, $3.00 6.50; heifers, $5. 6.75; fresh cows and springers, $4085; veal calves, $12 (0. Sheep and Lamb supply, fair; prime

BRIEFS

LOST Pockotbook, 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. Et. thur,f rl-tf The Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and 8t. Louis Railway Company Cincinnati, O., October 4, 1916. Notice is hereby given that a Special Meeting of the Stockholders ot The Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railway Company will be held at the principal office of the company in the City of Cincinnati, Ohio, on Monday, the 4th day of December, 1916, at 12 o'clock M for the purpose of considering and authorizing the following matters: (1) the purchase by and conveyance to the company of all or any part of the railroad, franchises and properties of the Saline Valley Railway Company, and of all or any part of the railroad, f ran-1

chlse and properties of the Evansvllle, Mt Camel &- Northern Railway Company (of Indiana), and (2)' such other matters and things as may be incident to or necessary or appropriate to be done in connection with such transactions. ', By order of the Board of Directors. D WIGHT W. PARDEE, ' ' Secretary, octi-B-12.19.26 nov 2-M6-28-30

Richmond's

Umbrella Hospital

m

If You Need j AN UMBRELLA j or any Part j of one, m Wfe Have It. New 1

Uumrellas

75c and up If you have an Old Umbrella with a handle that you want to keep, let us

put on a

NEW COVER OR BASE And it will be as good as new. Be-" Benefitted By Our 28 Years of Experience in This Line

I f M IN II v Km

43 NORTH 8TH 8T,

top

227 N. 6th Street.

Phone 1204

SPECIAL Friday and Saturday GROCERIES AT REASONABLE PRICES The time Is here when the housewife needs no one to point out the necessity of economizing. This is the one store that can be depended upon for Quality Service, a complete line of high grade groceries, and prices to suit the purse. I am NOT going to try to quote the price of the entire line, but I am going to quote the price of one single article, namely "Lenox Soap." After you have purchased 50 cents worth of merchandise from the Star Grocery we will sell you One Bar of Lenox Soap for 16 cents, and for each succeeding bar up to ten (10) bars we will charge you 1 cent a bar. LESLIE WHITTINGTON.

r r -

We are not mentioning prices just offering our entire stock of Furniture and Floor Coverings all this week to you at a saving of from 20 to 40. We are not excluding a single piece of Furniture; everything on our 3 floors can be bought this week at special prices. It's your opportunity to buy now at a saving and you'll find the savings worth while. Come to our store tomorrow or Saturday as regular prices prevail after those days.

FroFMttu&Te Beautiful hew pieces and designs In Tables, Chairs, Buffets, etc., some just received this week, all go now during Festival week at special reduced prices and these low prices mean a saving to you of from 20 to 40.

See Our Big Display of PENINSULAR HEATERS AND RANGES They are the best money can buy and will prove to be the best stove value you ever bought

Tine New E

MJ(G

Just received a big new stock of fine Rugs, all the new patterns and designs, the best we have ever shown. Come this week for these new Rugs and save 20 to 40.

7i i

I

IHIdDOTOlLJ

3 FLOORS 3

530 MAIN STREET

Be Sure to Stop and See Every Process of Making Men's Clothing. It's enter1 taining and educational j From ttiie Sheep's Back to ttliiie FMlsSned Garaneirott Every Yard of Cloth 100 Wool

Why should you Mr. Economical Man, pay exhorbltant prices for near-wool garments when Fred's guaranteed 100 Wool Garments are to be had at such astounding low prices. Hundreds of wise men are now wearing these ALL Wool Suits they have found out that It's the 100 Wool that wears and wears and wears holds its color and proves completely satisfactory to the end more than that, every garment is TAILORED to perfection, holds its shape and may be had In all latest styles and colorings as well as models to fit every shape of man, ,4.. SEE THE EXHIBIT 'SEE THE CLOTHES then ask yourself again WHY PAY MORE?

I " y l

A Sample of Fred's Stylish $15 Overcoats

A) AND us.

'I

One of Fred's Famous -100

Wool Suits, priced M K at only ............. tplO

v