Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 289, 21 October 1916 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, OCT. 21, 1916

PAGE FIVE

BRINGING UP FATHER

By McManus

.

I J y 'ouv I jfS- I I f 00O WOfcNINc,-: ) 7 ( Oo YOU KNOW 1 IT HADN'T ( HftW 1 iC N. S. i

' . , . . .

I Snorts and Athletics &?1

; 1VI 7

DISTRICT TEAMS FACE NECESSITY TO DEVELOP MUCH GREEN MATERIAL

HAGERSTOWN. Ind.. Oct. 21. The Off. Hagerstown high school all team, a strong contender for .:Uh district honors this season, got away to an auspicious start last night when the Cambridge City leather tossers were badly mussed up, turned around and sent back to Cambridge w ith the ten part of a 66-10 total. Despite the somewhat top-heavy score the game was not devoid of features and proved an Interesting battle for a big crowd of H. H. S. and C. YL S. rooters. R. H. S. Gets Self-starter. With R. H. S. billed to get on Its 6tate title Jaunt a week from this coming Friday night and with practically all of the high schools of the county and district either already In the field or about to oDen ud their campaigns

the season of 1916-17 is virtually under way with prospects for a rattling lusty session to culminate In the big sectional meet In i Richmond during the early part of March. A careful canvass of the basketball fituation of the Sixth district and of the state for that mater shows that the coming season is to see an entirely "new generation" supplanting the Browns, Lawsons, Englishes, Tilsons, Coffinss and Grimses heroes of the state "drive" last spring. Practically all of the stronger teams of the district and state are badly "shot" as far as veteran material Is concerned. The present season will have to develop an entirely new set of stars. New Teams Develop. "From Carthage, "the dark horse of the Richmond district meet." to Jefferson High (Lafayette) the state team, advance indications are for "new" teams. None of the teams which figured materially In the final count at Rloomlngton are the same in personnel this year. This feature of the coming campaign is to be a pronounced one. From a local standpoint, Richmond U more or less favored. Of any in this part of the state, R. II. S. has ii'tp veterans to start the season. 'tp nil canvass of the hlnh school ball Fituation of the Sixth dl3- ' 'in.es out the following points cem to indicate more or less fr: Richmond: BROOKVILLE i

Practically the entire varsity of B. II S. winners or the district title last year are lost to the team by graduation. Of the first string squad figuring in the Richmond game last March. Ois. a sub forward, is the only veteran. The new material Is fairly promising, reports say. NEW CASTLE Captain Wib Kampe, who at present Is threatened with disqualification because of eligibility rulings and John Klinger. forward, are the only part of the N. H. S- "old guard" left to the team this year. Kampe will know his Me within a few days. The second stringers are of average ability. CARTHAGE "The find" of the spring tournament is up against it good and proper. Every member of the speedy five that battled so gamely for district honors here, is lost by graduation. Carthage

probably will not be represented by a team this year. HAGERSTOWN H. H. S. startB the season with a veteran team. Every member of the first squad of last year was in togs last night when H. H. S. opened with Cambridge City.. The Jefferson township was ineligible for the state meet last spring and a line on its strength then was not obtainable. Hagerstown expects to win the district title and has good grounds to substantiate its claim. LIBERTY With a number of veterans on hand to form the nucleus for a team and with a bunch of promising yearling fry coming out for the team, L. H. S. has hopes for a winner this year. Lee O. Snook, coach, is busy lining up his prospectives and is a bit backward about noise until the season actually gets under way.RICHMOND Barring results of ineligibility rulings which. at present, threaten the team, R. H. S. will have one of the best teams In Its history. "With three veterans and a number of promising second stringers to start with, Coach Lyboult has the "makings" of a state team. One of the big points in favor of the Quakers Is the strength of its reserve squad. OF UNKNOWN QUANTITY Connersville, Rushville, Mooreland, Spiceland and Cadiz are to be represented by teams of more or less unknown quantity. Of the above mentioned lot, Rushville claims flourishing!

chances. Connersville, it is reported is badly "shot."

R. H. S, HOPEFULS COMPEL QUAKERS TO OPEN THROTTLE

Although the veteran Quakers managed to total a slightly larger figure in the practice session with coach Lyboulfs R. H. S. youngsters in the high school gym last night, the high school team proved its worth against its more experienced and heavier opponents. The game which was in the nature

of a practice session for both squads!

afforded a line on the probable strength of the two teams. The Quakers, with several additions, look a lot stronger than last year. R. H. S. seems to be better than ever. A feature of the session, from a Quaker standpoint, was the stellar work of a new recruit Johnny Logan. J. Logan was the chief factor in the Quaker score.

HUMAN SUBMARINES AT WATER CARNIVAL EMULATE U-BOATS

EMPIRES TRAMPLE MACHINE QUINTET

Empires, 3; Machines, 0. Although the Machines came within thirteen pins of taking the second one, the entire set of Amsco League games at the "Y" alleys last night went to John Ulrlch's men. Ulrich

himself, led the attack of the Empires.

His 166 average was head and shoulders above the rest of the figures. The

scores: EMPIRES

1st. 2d. 3d. Total. Av.

Emulating stunts of U-boats in the big pond, some twenty human "subs" of the Y. M. C. A. led by Director Schwan splashed, dove and swam to

the immense entertainment of a capacity gathering of visitors at the "Y" water carnival In the association natorlum last night. The exhibition vas most novel and unique. Winners of different events were H. Eickenberry, Dick Holcomb, Thomas Needham and Roland Dollins. In the game of water polo a team captained by Roland Dollins defeated a squad under Paul Hay ward, 2 toO. Russell Taylor and Hayward took honors in the horse-and-rider event, one of the most interesting numbers of the program. An exhibition of fancy and spectacular swimming and diving by Mr. Schwan, director, and a free-for-all-rplash in which the smaller "fishes" dove for coins flipped into the water concluded the program.

PLAYS NEW GASTLE

HAGERSTOWN, Ind., Oct 21. Accompanied by a delegation of rooters, the Hagerstown football team. Journeys to New Castle tomorrow afternoon for a game with the MaxwellEriscoes of that place. This is the third meeting of the teams this year, cne resulting in a drew and another going to Hagerstown by a margin of one goal.

Player

Ulrich 167 Loof burrow ..115 Owens 123 Williams ....113 Knight 144

177 139 122 164 167

154 149 174 144 136

498 403 419 421 447

166 134

140 140

149

Totals . . Player Hilles .... Barker . . . Ellis Quigley ... Blind ....

,. 662 769 757 2188 ... MACHINES 1st. 2d. 3d. Total. Av. ..110 166 124 400 133 , .145 149 108 402 134 ..144 141 154 439 146 ..123 128 116 367 122 .. 94 153 101 348 116

Totals ....616 757 599 1956......

MANY GROW RICH TRADING IN WHEAT

HAGERSTOWN HIGH TRIMS CAMBRIDGE

The who, the how, the why and the how many of the Hagerstown-Cam-bridge high school basketball battle at Hagerstown last night is detailed in the following set of figures: C. H. S. G. F. M.Pts. Fischer, f 1 0 0 2 Dill, f 1 6 2 8 Gehring, c 0 0 0 0 Dolan, g 0 0 0 ft Kelly, g 0 0 0 0 Johnson, g 0 0 0 0

Winters, g 0 0 0 0 Totals 2 6 2 10 H Ha S G. F. M.Pts. Teetor, f .. 8 4 4 20 Wichter, f 8 0 0 16 Foyst, c 10 0 0 20 Endsley, g ...... 0 0 0 0 Petty, g 1 0 0 2 Purple, f 0 0 0 0 Northcutt, g . .. 0 0 0 0 Orr, g 0 0 0 0 Totals 27 4 4 58 Fouls committed (C) Kelly, 3t; Dill, 2t; Gehring, pt.; Dolan, p.; Fischer, t. (H) Foyst, 2t2p; Wichter, 2t; Sndsley, p.; Petty, t. Referee Gwin (Hagerstown). Timers Bookout, Cable. i

Scorers Mohler, Diffen.

aniioreign i t

MARKET UNSETTLED AS TRADING OPENS

CHICAGO, Oct. 21. Wheat and corn did an up and down In the first hour after the opening today. Good buying at the start made wheat stronger and it bulged M to 1 cents over last night's close. Cables showed moderate strength and private advices said Argentine still was dry. Selling for profits by pit longs sent the prices down 2 cents from the extreme top. At $1.69 for December the market ran into resting orders and prices rallied nearly a cent Corn started stronger to a shade higher with scattered buying and liberal trading. An early advance of cent was made, then those who had bought at the start turned to the se Jling side and prices slumped a full cent. Oats are about the same as yesterday's close. Provisions were firmer. There were further net gains In the market of 1 cents today and this strength was largely on covering by foreign shorts as well as shorts in this country. The selling came mainly from longs and they were scattered orders on that side of the market from abroad. The strength in corn was a help to wheat as the December corn closed with a gain of 2 cents. The May was up 14 cents and July cents higher. Oats were to cent better. Hog products were better all around with pork leading and with gains of 40 to 50 cents. Lard was 7 cents at 15 cents higher, and ribs were 12 cents

higher. Cash sales for export were 18 boat loads winter wheat at the seaboard and from 300,000 to 500,000 bushels in other positions. Cash sales of wheat here 20,000 bushels; corn, 20,000 and oats, 90,000 bushels.

Pittsburg PITTSBURGH, Oct. 21. Cattle supply, light; market, steady; prime steers, $8.759.00; good 6teers, $8 9.60; fair, $6.757.00; common to fat cows, $3 6.50; heifers, $5 7.75; fresh cows and springers, $4085; veal calves, $11.5012. -Shep and lamb supply, fair; prime wethers, $7.7585; spring lambs, $7 $10.50. Hogs Receipts, 15 dd.; market, higher; prime heavy, $10.4050; mediums, $10.40; heavy yorkers, $10.2545; light yorkers, $9.7510; pigs. $9.25 50; roughs, $9 60; stags, $8.00 25; heavy mixed, $10.4050.

PRODUCE

New York NEW YORK, Oct. 21. Live poultry: Quiet; chickens, 1718c; folws, 14 19c.

New York Exchange Closing

Quotations

American Can, 61.

Anaconda, 94. American Locomotive, 82. Ai berican Beet Sugar, 100. American Smelter, 1124. U. S. Steel, com., 119. U.. S. Steel, pfd., 121. Altchison, 105,. St; Paul, 95. Gi?eat Northern, pfd., 118. Lehigh Valley, 84. N. Y. Central, 107. Northern Pacific, 112. Southern Pacific, 100. Upion Pacific, 150. , Pennsylvania, 57. Bethlehem Steel, 545.

(1ICHM0ND MARKETS

Glen Miller Prices Hogs. He.ivies, 225 to 250 lbs $9.50 Heavy yorkers, 160 to 180 lbs... $9.00 Life-ht yorkers, 130 to 160 lbs $8.00 Meaium, ISO to 225 lbs $9.25 Pigs $7.008.00 Clag3 $4.50 7.50 Cattle. Butcher steers. 1.000 to 1.500

lbs $6.007.00 Butcher cows $5.00 6.00 Heifers $6.007.00 Bulls $4.506.00 Calves. Choice veals $10.00 Heavies and lights $5.006.00 Sheep. Spring lambs $8.00 Indianapolis Representative Sales HOGS 40 108 $ 9.15 5 292 d.75 9 480 9.90 72 188 10.20 16 . 255 10.50 Feed Quotations (Corrected Daily by Omer Whclan) Paying Oats745c; old corn, 80c; new corn, 65c; rye, $1.10; clover seed, $7.508.50 a bushel; straw, $6 a ton. Selling Cotton seed meal, $40.00 a ton, $2.10 a 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 6eed, $28 a ton, $1.50 per cwt Wagon Market Timothy hay $13.00. Mixed $12.00. Clover hay $10.00. Alfalfa $15.00. Straw $7.00.

GRAIN

Chicago Futures WHEAT

Open. High. Low. Close. Dec 170 170 168 170 May 170 170 168 170 CORN Dec 85 87 83V2 87 May 86 87 84 87 OATS Dec 50 51 50 50 May 54 54 53 54

Football Today

CHICAGO, Oct. 21. Stories that rival those of fabulous "war bribes" profits were winging in r.bout LaSalle street today as a result of wheat's sensational skyrocketing during the last fortnight. Wheat has risen 15 cents a bushel in that time, and those who were "in right" have cleaned up fortunes.

WILL SERVE DINNER

Thanksgiving dinner. will be served by the women of the Methodist church of Williamsburg at the church, according to announcement made today by the Rev. I Ulm pastas.

WEST Chicago vs. Northwestern at Chicago. Illinois vs. Ohio State at Urbana. Iowa vs. Purdue at Iowa City. Minnesota vs. South Dakota at Minneapolis. Albion vs. Adrian at Albion. DePauw vs. Rose Poly at Terre Haute. St Marys vs. Friends at St Marys. Knox vs. Carthage at Galesburg. Lake Forest vs. Lawrence at Lake Forest. Miami vs. Kenyon at Oxford. Mount Union vs. Case at Alliance. Oberlin vs. Ohio U. at Oberlin. Missouri vs. Ames at Columbia. . Wooster vs. Wittenberg at Wooster. Wabash vs. Butler at Crawfordsville. Washington vs. Drake at St. Louis. EAST Harvard vs. Massachusetts at Cambridge. Princeton vs. Lafayette at Princeton. Cornell vs. Bucknell at Ithaca. Pennsylvania vs. Penn State at Philadelphia. Army vs. Trinity at West Point. Navy vs. West Virginia at Annapolis. Dartmouth vs. Georgetown at Han

over. Syracuse vs. Pittsburgh at Syracuse. Tufts vs. Boston College at Medford. SOUTH Vanderbllt vs. Mississippi at Nashville. Tulane vs. Jefferson at New Orleans Florida vs. Alabama at Gainesville. Kentucky vs. U. of South at Lexington. Louisville vs. Chattanooga at Louisville.

Toledo Grain TOLEDO, Oct. 21. Wheat: Cash, $1.70; Dec, $1.75; May, $1.78.

Cloverseed: Cash, $1U.5U. Alsike: Cash, $10.20; Dec, $10.30. Timothy: Cash, $2.40; Dec, $2.45. Chicago Cash CHICAGO, Oct. 21. Wheat: No. 2 red, $1.67 1.70; No. 2 hard winter, $1.71 1.76. Corn: No. 2 white, 9798; No. 2 yellow, 9899; No. 5 yellow, 9697. Oats: No. 2 white, 4950; No. 3 white, 4849; No. 4 white, 48; standard, 4949. Cincinnati Grain CINCINNATI, Oct. 21. Wheat: No. 2 red winter, $1.711.72; No. 3. $1.65

1.70. Sales 12 cars. Corn: No. 2 white, 9999c; No. 2 yellow, 99 99c. Oats: No. 3 mixed, 50c.

LIVE STOCK

HOLD QUARTERLY MEETING

The second quarterly meeting of the Methodist church will be held at Chester on Monday night with the Rev. Somerville Light having charge of the services.- : . . - -'

Chicago UNION STOCK YARDS, Oct. 21. Hogs Receipts, 14,000; market, 10c higher; mixed and butchers $9.65 10.45; good heavies, $9.65 10.40; rough heavies, $9.659.80; light, $9.60 10.40; pigs, $7.009.45; bulk of sales $9.010.35. Cattle Receipts, 1,000; market, steady; beeves, $6.5011.40; cows and heifers, $3.409.30; stockers and feeders, $4.757.75; calves, $7.2511.85; Texans, $7.00 8.15. Sheep Receipts, 1,000; market, steady; natives and westerns, $7.00 8.25; lambs, $8.2510.55.

Indianapolis INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 21. HogsReceipts, 7,500; market, 5c higher; best hogs, $10.50; heavies, $1050; pigs, $79.50; bulk of sales, $1020; Cattle Receipts, 100; market slow, choice heavy steers, $8.7510.50; light steers, $6.258.75; heifers, $4.508; cows, $56.50; bulls, $4.506.50; calves, $4 10.75. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 100; market, steady; prime sheep, $6.75; lambs, $6 9.50.

3

An examination of any of the five popular patterns at our garage will positively convince you that Motor Weave offers more solid value and durability than were ever before built into an automobile robe. And the guarantee is further substantial evidence of Motor Weave quality. Motor Weave designs are smart in appearance and pleasing to the eye and touch. The

fabric is sturdy, pliant and flexible. These robes cling snugly about the body and afford warmth and comfort during the coldest weather. Motor Weave robes are extra large in size 60x80 inches. There is plenty to "tuck-in" at the sides. Motor Weave is built for looks and long wear just the combination which the automobile nublir. has

sought for years in an auto robe. And all these guaranteed advantages are yours in Motor Weave robes at a really popular price $6.75.

mpeipnail Primmer

It Sprays Vaporized, Fireable Gasoline into the Manifold. It Makes Starting Quick, Easy, No Matter How Long Your Car Stands in the Cold. It is a Necessity Not an Accessory! Saves Batteries of Your Self-

dtarter. A Permanent, Complete Outfit at the One Price Not Extras. Lasts a Lifetime Put it on Your New Car When You Get One. ' A Battery to Suit Your CarA Service to Suit Your Needs The battery on your car should satisfy two conditions. It 6hould have abundant power, vitality and stability; and it should be backed by a SERVICE that will insure your satisfaction in its use. In all respects the Prest-O-Lite Storage Battery leaves nothing to be desired. Manufactured by the world's oldest and best known automobile lighting organization; it is the result of years of earnest effort with ample capital and complete facilities to produce a bcttery distinctly superior to other existing types. - And it Is "Backed by Prest-O-Lite Service" the same broad-minded, progressive, wide-spread service that made night motoring not only pleasurable but even possible In the very dawn of the automobile era, The Prest-O-Lite Battery already has proved its worth in the honds of not merely thousands, but hundreds of thousands of users. It has earned high rank in tests made by leading motor car manufacturers. Under contracts already made, it will be used on more than 300,000 electrically equipped 1917 . cars. . . v . . . , .

lcC(DMtoa' (E

QJJ

418-420 MAIN ST.

THE McCONAHA CO. "Richmond's Oldest Established Automobile House.'

PHONE 1480