Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 298, 1 November 1916 — Page 9
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 1, 1916
BULLISH NEWS SENDS WHEAT PRICES DOWN
CHICAGO. Nov. 1 Argentine news is unfavorable and foreign crop news is bullish today. Export business of the last two days aggregated 2,750,000 nusneis. As a result prices opened 1 to 1 cents lower with the market weak. With seventy-three cars of new corn received the market opened easy and prices were down to cents. Oats were easy to cent lower. Provisions were unsettled but took a generally higher trend. There were sensational price declines in the wheat market under heavy and continued selling, not only by longs but short lines in large amounts were thrown into the pit. December lost 6V6 and May was off 6V4- July was unchanged. The cash market here was 3 to 5 cents lower and premiums were off sharply. Sentiment was Quite bearish at the close, although there were re-actions and advances from the lowest levels. Corn was cents lower for December and 2 to 2 cents off for the deferred month. Oats were to 1 cent lower. Cash gales of corn here were 40,000 bushels and oats, 360,000 bushels. Cash sales of wheat were 80,000 bushels. Hog products were irregular and mainly higher.
GRAIN . . . Chicago Futures WHEAT Open. Hish. I.otv. Close Dec 188 188H 1824 182 May 185V& 181 181 CORN Dec 86V 86 84 84U May 88 88 86 86 O ATS Dec 54 64" 53 53 May 57 68 58 67 Toledo Grain
TOLEDO, Nov. 1. Wheat: $1.81; Dec, $1.84. Cloverseed: Cash, $10.70; $10.82. Cash, Dec,
DEUTSCHLAND ARRIVES SAFE AFTER PASSING UNDER FLEET PATROLLING COAST OF U. S.
NEW LONDON,' Conn.'' Nov. 1. Looming up out of the fog and rain like a gray ghost of the seas, the German merchant submarine Deutschland arrived in part early today on her second voyage to the United Elates The submarine doclced at 2:33 o'cloc!; at the pier of the Eastern Forwarding Company. The voyage frcm Bremen was made in 21 days, which was 4 days longer than it took the Deutscbland to make her maiden trip to Baltimore. Capt. Paul Koenig reported that the V(.yago had been made without Incident and that all of the. 25 member of his crew were in good health. The German seamen will be transferred to the German merchant ship Willshad. The Deutschland passed beneath the powerful British warship fleet which is patrolling New England 6lnce the mid of the U-53 The usual quarantine regulations were waived, but James McGovern, collector of the potts of Connecticut, arrived today from Bridgeport to look alter the Federal interests and to see lhat the German submarine observed strictly all the maritime laws of the United Stales. The clearance papers were made out for Baltimore "or any otter American Atlantic port." QUIGLEY IS BEST MASKED "Y" BOY Some one hundred juvenile editions of the Y. M. C. A. decked in make-ups too numerous to mention made no vis,ble impression on the walls and foundation of tho "Y" building last evening although those fortunate enough Lo have attended the affair considered tliemBclves lucky to get away whole and unharmed. Altogether some 103 boys were there in masked uniform nd of that number no two came in similar dress. In the contest to determine the best "made-up" boy. James Quigley, u youth In girl's attire, wor. the approval of the judges. Dr. and Mrs. Allen Drankamp and Mrs. E. M. Learner. The judges, however, found considerible trouble In picking a winner. 3ames, doughnuts and cider were features of the program mapped trut by Athletic Director Schwan WILSON CONTINUES TO STAY IN ADVANCE ON NATIONAL BALLOT Counting electoral votes represented by the national straw. vote which is! being taken by 8,000 drug stores all over the United States, Wilson leads ! with 281 to 250 for Hughes. These returns were receivevd from the national headquarters, Boston, today by the Fosler drug store which is assisting in taking the vote. Counting the number of ballots cast, the latest returns received here show Wilson still in the lead with 240.230 votes. The Hughes vote totals, 171,559. The vote in the northern states stands: Wilson, 141,524; Hughes. 146,938; in the south, Wilson, 98.788, Husthes, 24,621; in Indiana, Wilson, 9.798, Hughes. 10,605; In New York, Wilson. 24,798. Hughes. 25.205; i n Pennsylvania, Wilson, 8,226, Hughes, 10.544.
FOURTH BIG ADVANCE MADE BY COAL IN MARKET HERE
, A fourth advance in the prices of coal this fall was announced today, coupled with the statement that Richmond's coal supply was now very low and that If there was a sudden advent of severe cold weather this supply would not last a week, was made toIday. Anthracite coaj advanced in price on the local market today from 50 to 75 cents a ton. Anthracite chestnut now sells for $11.00 and anthracite furnace for $10.50. A year ago the former grade sold for $8.75, the furnace grade for $8.50. Pocahontas coal advanced in price today from 75 cents to $1 a ton. Pocahontas lump now sells for $S and the mine run for $7. A year ago these grades sold for $5.75 and $4.75 respectively. The price of coke Bhot up today Alsike: Cash, $10.46; Dec, $10.55. Timothy: Cash, $2.45; Dec, $2.50. Chicago Cash CHICAGO, Nov. 1. Wheat: No. 2 red, $1.81. .Corn: No. 2 white, $1.001.06; No. 2 yellow, $1.05(8)1.06; No. 4 white, $1.04; No. 4 yellow, $1.001.03. Oats: No. 3 white, 5253c; No. 4 white, 5142c; Standard, 52 63 C Cincinnati Grain CINCINNATI, Nov. 1. Wheat: No. 2 red winter, $1.881.89; No. 3, $1.82 1.86. Sales, 6 cars. Corn: No. 2 white, $1.08 1.08; No. 2 yellow, $1.06 1.07. Oats: No. 3 mixed, 54 55c. LIVE STOCK nu ittsbure PITTSBURGH. Nov. 1. Cattle sup ply, light: market, steady; prime steers, $8.7o9; good steers, $860; tidy butchers, $7.758.00; fair, $6.75 7.00; common, $56.00; common to fat bulls, $4.50 7.00; common to fat cows, $57.75; fresh cows and springers, $4085; veal calves, $1150. Sheep and Lamb supply, light; Great secrecy marked the coming of the submarine and few saw her as she wallowed up to harbor under the convoy of a powerful seagoing tug. As soon as she was in her berth, a fence was swung out to hide her. It is believed that the Deutschland's corga consists of dyestuffs and chemicals, similar to those she carried on ner first voyage. The cargo is said to be worth $1,000,000. The safe arrival of the Deutschland ucalls the mystery of the sister merchant submarine Bremen and it is now a certainty that the Bremen was lost at sea or captured by the British. During practically all of her 3,000 mile voyage the Deutschland passed through stormy weather, but her powerful motors drove the craft through the billows and the master seamanship of Capt. Koenig saved her from mishap. Capt Frederick Hinsch, of the Eastern Farwarding Company said that all but two of the seamen had been on th Deutschland when she made her first trip. BIRTHRIGHT QUAKER ASKS FOR LENIENCY Because he is a birthright Quaker and because he Is the most expert corn husker of his age, 61, in Wayne county, his services now being in great demand, John Charles Freemont Kinsey, asked the leniency of the court when arraigned before the mayor today on a charge of intoxication. "One dollar and costs," said -the mayor. "Oh, pshaw," remarked J. C. F. Kinkey. WARRANTY DEEDS Margaret Presbaugh, et. al., to Dorothy Dublin et. al., 1-7, Hagerstown, $1,400. Raymond Hogan to Dorothy Dublin, Pt. N. E. 22-17-12, $3,400. Dickinson Trust company, trustee, to Howard C. Hunt, 102 Reeveston, $700. Cornelius Ratliff et al., to Raymond Thomas et al., 148 Fairview Heights. Marriage Licenses. Paul Raymond Sperling, 25, insurance agent, to Frank Edmundson, 21, clerk. Curb Stocks
are very active some are highly speculative.. Unusual opportunities are offered for making money if knowledge and judgment are used. We will execute your orders thru the Curb Market and charge regular commission. We handle your 'business at same cost as if you placed your orders with New York Curb houses. On most of the stocks we loan a part of the market value. . Get our free service It mean more than circulars
from $7.50 to $9 a ton. Coke sold for $6 a year ago. . v The average Increase in other grades of coal, as shown , by the last quotations, is $1 a ton. Coal dealers declare that notwithstanding the steady advances in coal prices they are, operating at less profit than they did in the summer when prices were normal. One. dealer reported today that he had received two cars of coal ordered two and a half months ago. This is a situation all local dealers have been up against, it lb announced. Car shortage and scarcity of labor at the mines is blamed for the near "coal famine." It has been . openly charged that railroads are using many of their gondola cars -"for hauling freight which brings a higher freight rate than coal.
prime wethers, $7.257.50; spring lambs, $7.00 10.75. Hogs Receipts, . 10 dd.; market, steady; prime heavy, $10.15; mediums $9.9510heavy yorkers, $9.75g95; tight yorkers, $9.3550; pigs, $925; roughs, $950; stags, $7.508.25; heavy mixed; 10.05(10. Chicago UNION STOCK YARDS, Nov. 1. Hogs Receipts, 44,000; market, 5c higher; mixed and butchers. $9.25 10.25; good heovies, J9.7010.25; rough heavies. $9.259.60; light, $9.20 10.15; pigs, $6.408.60; bulk of sales $9.5510.10. Cattle: Receipts, 22,000; market steady; beeves, $5.7511.65; cows and heifers, $3.508.40; stockers and feeders, $5.257.80; Texans, $6.858.60; calves, $9.5011.25. Sheep: Receipts, 25,000; market strong; natives and westerns, $4.00 $8.60; lambs, $7.8511.25. Indianapolis INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. 1. HogsReceipts, 12,000; market, 20 to 25c higher; best hogs, $10.20; heavies, $9.4510.20; pigs, $78.75; bulk of sales, $9.4510.00. Cattle Receipts, 1,450; market, steady; choice heavy steers, $8.75 10.75; light steers. $6.2508.75; heifers! S4.508; cows, $56.50; bulls, $4.50 6.50; calves, $410. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 350; market, strong; prime sheep, $7.00; lambs, $6.0010.00. Cincinnati CINCINNATI, Nov. 1. Hogs Receipts, 4,500; market, weak; packers and butchers, $9.5010.10; pigs and lights, $6.50 9. Cattle Receipts, 600; market, active; calves, $4.5011. Sheep Receipts, 700; market, steady; lambs, $6.5010.35. PRODUCE New York NEW YORK, Nov. 1. Live poultry, Irregular; chickens, 1818; fowls, 15 19c. Butter: Strong; creamery firsts, 3436c. Eggs: Irregular, 35 37c. Chicago ceipts, 5,000 tubs; tirsts 3233c. Eggs: Receipts, 3,720 cases; firsts, 3132. Live poultry: Chickens, 1416c; springers, 17c; roosters, 13c. Potatoes: Receipts, Minnesotas, Dakotas and Ohios, $1.401.70. Cincinnati Produce CINCINNATI, O., Nov. 1. Butter: Creamery whole milk extras, 39c, centralized extra, 36c, do firsts, 33c; do seconds, 30c; dairy fancy, 30c. Eggs: Prime firsts 34c, firsts, 36c, ordinary, 32 c. Poultry: Broilers under 1 lbs., 19c, fryers over 1 lbs., 15c; roosters, 12c. 3 V 5 i HARRY T. FISHER Republican candidate for County Recorder.
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Potatoes: Eastern Cobblers, $5.50 6.00 bbl.; home grown. $5.506.00. Lemons: California, 8.505.00:
Messina, 3.50 4.50; limes 2.753.00 box. Peaches: Ohio Solways, $1.501.75; A-B, 751.30. New fork Exchange Closing Quotations American Can, 62. Anaconda, 95. , American Locomotive, 88. American Beet Sugar, 103. American Smelter, 112. U. S. Steel, com., 120. U. S. Steel, pfd., 121. Atchison, 107. St. Paul, 94. , Great Northern, pfd., 118. Lehigh Valley, 84. N. Y. Central. 108. No. Pacific, 111. So. Pacific, 100. Union Pacific, 150. Pennsylvania, 57. Bethlehem Steel, 645. RICHMOND MARKETS Glen Miller Prices Hogs. Heavies, 225 in 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 Stags $4.508.00 Cattle. Butcher steers. 1,000 to 1.500 lbs $6.007.00 Butchor cows $5.00tfi6.00 Heifers $6.007.00 Bulla $4.50 6.00 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, apying 20 25c, selling 30c; young chickens, paying 25c, selling 30c; country butter, paying 25 30c, selling, 38c, creamery butter, selling 40c; eggs, paying 32c, selling 38c; country lard, paying 14c, selling 20c; new potatoes, selling $2.25 bushel. Feed Quotations (Corrected Dally by Omer Whelan) Payin Oats, 48c; old corn, 85c; new corn, 70c; rye, $1.10; clover seed, $8.009.00 a bushel; straw, $6 a ton. SellingCotton seed meal, $42.00 a EC
Two Things to Remember FIRST Monday next is the last day to pay your taxes. SECOND For glasses to see better you had better see Edmunds?Optometrist
10 North Ninth St. See East Window
Fashionable Mid-Winter Opening In Our Millinery Department. Thursday Friday Saturday
x Winter Styles
Winter Styles of Rich Fur and Velvet Millinery Priced $3.50 to $25 00
NEW TURBANS trimmed in Fur, Mole, Ermine, Seal or Mink. NEW WINTER VELVET HATS The richest Velvets trimmed with the Richest Furs or Seal, Mink, Beaver or Ermine. EXQUISITE HATS with crowns of Satin Antique or Brocade Silver or Gold Cloth. The Creative Genius of Expert Designers Has Conceived These Winter Hats in Enchanting Designs
Lee XB.
FACTORY EMPLOYES OBTAIN POTATOES IN CARLOAD LOTS
Despite the vicious and persistent attacks of Brer Wolf, alias H. C. L. (high cost of living) the more brave hearted and stoic citizens of Richmond and vicinity are not going to give into the destructive onslaughts of their pocket-book assailants and will greet the invader with strategisms of various nature. If the man or men who is or are planning a '17 model mansion on the profits accruing from the sale of Irish potatoes to Richmond consumers is counting a certain group of factory employes as contributiors to his fund, he or they had better change his or their minds at once. For said group has resorted to "war measures" and will charter a car load of potatoes from ton, $2.25 a cwt; middlings, $34.00 a ton, $1.75 a cwt; bran, $30.00 a ton, $1.60 a cwt; salt, $1.60 a bbl. Quaker dairy feed, $28 a ton, $1.50 per cwt. Coal Quotations (Corrected by Hackman & Klehfoth.) Anthracite nut. $11.00; anthracite stove or egg, $10.50; Pocohontas lump or egg, (shoveled) $8.00; Pocohontas nut, $7.25; Pocohontas mine run, $7.00; Pocohontas slack, $6.50; Jackson, lump, $7.00; Tennessee lump, $6.75; Kentucky lump, $6.75; West Virginia lump, $6.50; Winifred washed pea, $6.25; Hocking Valley lump, $6.50; Indiana, $6.00; coks, $9.00; nut and slack, $5.00. Wagon Market Timothy hay $13.00. Mixed $12.00. Clover hay $10. OC. . Alfalfa $15.00. Straw $7.00. Indianapolis Representative Sales HOGS 16 Ill $ 8.75 13 938 9.25 5 418 9.50 37 201 10.00 90 222 10.10 STEERS 3 653 $ 4.75 2 715 6.75 Phone 2765
NUSBAUM'S
Exploiting All the Late All White Black Ready
oooa iviatenais ana I
Beautiful Trimmings Have endowed them with a fineness and quality only found in the very best of Winter Millinery and yet we sell them for many dollars less the regular millinery prices. 'Tis an Achievement in Millinery Art to Produce Such Hats for the Prices. A visit to our Millinery Department will reveal the most stunning Winter Hats you ever saw.
Nusbaum Go.
the very stronghold of the tuber the spud fields of Michigan. Likewise, the party or parties who are betraying certain principles contained in the Eighth commandment of the Good Book might just as well remove from their list of benefactors the Richmond neonle who are going to
veto the use of $10 coal for wood that ! grows right here in Wayne county. J Acres upon acre of "fall" wood is Ntnr anA wilnir trt wast a almost! Within the city limits. Richmond per- j sons, wise to 'the plan, are aireaay making their "contracts" with farmers on whose land the wood is doing no earthly good other than furnishing winter quarters for the various members of the species of insect. 3 1100 7.25 2 . 1290 9.00 2 i 1105 10.00 HEIFERS 3 693 $ 5.00 4 682 6.25 2 745 6.50 2 770 7.25 2 '. 630 8.00 COWS 2 885 $ 3.75 2 825 4.00 2 860 5.00 1 1070 6.25 1 1150 7.00 BULLS 2 1370 $ 5.75 1 i 1200 6.35 Attention Hog Raisers We have for sale in any quantity TANKAGE for FEED Hogs Thrive on It ANTON ST0LLE & SONS Liberty Ave. Phone 1316 See East Window and All 11ifo - to - Wear "aia
PAGE NINE 1 ...................1040 6.50 1 1580 C.75 CALVES 2 285 $ 5.00 2 90 8.50 2 125 10.00 3 153 10.50 2 .....175 11.00
Lots for the Tots Choose Shoes for the tots and big girls and boys, with plenty of foot room in them enough to make sure that nature won't be cramped for space. Choose . quality that endures as the ch'ld matures. Reflect don't neglect. There's lots for the tots in our Mature Shape Shoes at the price paid for the certainty of foot comfort in the years to come. For Tots, 50c Up For Big Girls and Boys $1.50 Up. Walk - Over Boot Shop "We treat you right" GEO. THOMAS USE COOPER'S BLEND Colffise i COOPER'S GROCERY Republican Ticket STATE TICKET President CHARLES EVANS HUGHES Vice President CHARLES. WARREN FAIRBANKS United States Senator HARRY S. NEW JAMES E. WATSON Governor JAMES P. GOODRICH Lieutenant Governor EDWARD BUSH Secretary of State EDWARD JACKSON Treasurer of State UZ. McMURTRIE Auditor of State OTTO KLAUSS Supt. of Public Instruction HORACE ELLIS Reporter Supreme Court WILL ADAMS State Statistician HENRY ROBERTS Attorney General ELE STANDBURY Supreme Court Judge DAVID MYERS LAWSON M. HARVEY Appellate Court Judges IRA BATMAN E. A. DAUSMAN COUNTY TICKET Congress DANIEL W. COMSTOCK Prosecuting Attorney FRANK T. STRAYER Representative WILLIAM H. BARTEL Joint Representative OLIVER P. LAFUZE Treasurei EDWARD J. WEIDNER RecorderHARRY T. FISHER
7ZZ MAIN 3T. RICHMOND tWT
Sheriff CLEM CARR Coroner ROY D. MORROW Surveyor HOWARD H. HORTON Commissioner, Western District ANDREW J. SIMPSdN Commissioner, Middle District WILLIAM H. CHEESMAN.
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