Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 314, 20 November 1916 — Page 9

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRA1X, MONDAY, NOV. 20, 1916

PAGE NINE!

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GRAIN

Cincinnati urain , CINCINNATI. Not. 20. Wheat: No. 2 red -winter, $1.811.83; No. 3, -fl.7591.7tv Corn: No. 2 white, $1.00 O1.01. No. 2 yellow, $1.0001-01. Oats: No. 3 mixed, 67 58c. Chicago Futures WHEAT Open. High. Low. Close Dec. ...... 177 182 177 .182 May 183 189 183 "8 CORN. Dec. ...... 91 M 91 94 May ...... 93 97 . 93 96 OATS Dea ...... 66 87 66 67 May 60 62 60 62 Toledo Grain

TOLEDO, Not. 20. Wheat: Cash,

Sl.86: Dec.. $1.87: May. $1.93.

Cloverseed: Prime cash, $10.80; Dec.,

$10.85; Jan., $10.96; Feb.. $11.05. Alslke: Prime cash, $10.85; Dec. $10.90;

March, $11.20. Timothy: Prime cash,

$2.65; Dec, $2.56.

Liverpool Grain. LIVERPOOL, Nor. 20. Wheat spot No2 hard winter, 15s 10d; No. 1 northern Duluth, none; No. 1, Manitoba, 16s 2d; No. 2, old 16s 6d; No. 3, 15s 6d. Corn spot, American mixed new 13s Id. Flour winter patents, 47s. Hops In London (Pacific coast) 4, 15s O 6, 15s. Chicago Cadi CHICAGO, Not. 20. Wheat. No. 2 red, $1.82; No. 3 red, $1.74 1.80;, No. 2 hard, $1.8601-88; No. 3 bard, $1.7401-85. Corn: No. 2 yellow, 96; No. 4 yellow, 9396c; No. 4 white, 9394c Oats: No. 3 white, 6657c; Standardj768c. , Rve: No. 2. $1.50. Clover: $11.00

Aiitn narlov 28. Pnrlr

$28.60. Ribs, $14.25015.00. Lard,

LIVE STOCK

Pittsburgh

riTTSBURO, Nov. 20. Hogs Receipts 15,000; market lower; heavies $9.75 9.85; heavy yorkers, $9.25 9.50; light yorkers $8.508.90; pigs $8.008.25. :' ' 4 Sheep and Lambs Receipts 6,000; market steady; top sheep $8.25; top lambs $11.75. Calves Receipts 1,000; market steady; top $13.00.

Chicago CHICAGO, Nov. 20. Hogs Retnts 63.000; market 5 to 10c lower; '--.nllr nt alloa tl ftrtffia 70: lizhtB S8.35

r?l ."0; mixed 9.ft09,90;. rough $9.25 9 40: pips $6.35 8.20. Cattle Receipts 35,000; . market Trrak; native beef cattle $6.6012.00; western fleers $6.6010.20; stackers -id feeders $4.fi57.70; cows and hel'ors; $3.65(9.50; calves $8.75012.50. Sheep Receipts 24,000; market rtrong; wethers $7.60 8.65; lambs, ; 9.00 11.60. Cincinnati

CINCINNATI, Nov. 20. Hogs Ketelpts $8,300; market slow; packers rnd butchers $9.25 9.70; common to choice $7.00 9.00; pigs and lights $6 -ff.S5; stags $6.00 8.00.

Cattle Receipts 4,500; steers $5.00 880; heifers $5.00 7.25; cows $4.25 6.25; calves 4.5011.50, market lower, , "Sheep Receipts 800; market slow. Lambs weak, $7.00 11.25.

Indianapolis INDIANAPOLIS, Indiana, Nov. 20 Hogs-Best heavy, $9.5010.00; medium and mixed, $9.15 9.60; good to choice lights, $9115 9.35; roughs. $8.5009.25; best pigs, $$25; light, pigs, $8.C08.50; bulk ot sales, $9.15 09.60. Receipts, 12,000. Cattle Good to choice steers, $9.50 OH-05; common to medium, $8.75 9.60; heifers, $6 7.75. Receipts, 1.600. ' Calves Common to best veals, $7.60012.00; common to best' heavy calves, $49.50. Receipts, $4.50. i Sheep and Lambs Good to choice, $6.75 7.25; common to medium. $4.00 ?6.50; good to choice yews, $7.50 8.10; good medium yews, $6.5007.25; good to best lambs, $1011. Receipts, 450.

Buffalo EAST BUFFALO, N. Y., Nov. 20. Cattle Receipts, 6,300; steady. Shipping steers, $7.5010.50; butchers. $6.009.00; heifers, $5.008.00; cows, $3.507.25; bulls. $5.007.00; stockers and feeders, $57.25; fresh cows and springers, active, $50115. Veals Receipts, 1,200; active, $4.50 13.00. Hogs Receipts, 29,200; slow; heavy $9.6009.75; mixed, $9.50 9.60; Yorken, $9.40 9.50; light Yorkers, 8.50 9.00; pigs, $8.258.50; roughs, $8.50 08.60; Stags. $7.008.00. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 14)00, sheep active; lambs shot; lambs, $8 11.60; yearlings, $6.50 9.50; wethers, $8.60 8.75; ewes, $4.00 8.00; mixed sheep, $8.00 8.25.

New York Cash. NEW YORK. Nov. 20. Flour, barely steady. Spring patents, $9.50 8.75; winter patents. $8.609.00; winter straight, $S.408.65; Kansas straights, $9.509.75. Port, unsettled: Mess, $31.00 38.00; family. $32.0034.00; short clear. $29.00 31.00. Beef, qnlet; mess, $23.0023.50; family, $25.5027.00. Lard, weak; middle west, $17.00 17.10. Molasses, steady; New Orleans cpen kettle 40 50c. Hay, firm; No. 1. $1.1001.15;-No. 2. $1.05; No. 3. 96c; shipping, S0S5c. Hides, firm; Bogota 44 45c; Central America, 44c. '- Leather firm; : hemlock firsts, 62c; seconds, 50c. ) .

Kansas City KANSAS CITY, Nov. 20. Hogs Receipts, 12,000; lower; bulk, $9.40 9.70; heavy, 9.609.80; packers and butchers, $9.40 9.75; light, $9.25 9.65; pigs, $8.009.25. Cattle Receipts, 26,000; steady;

prime fed steers, $10.25011-60; dressed beef steers $7.50010.00; southern steers, $5.758.50; cows, $4.757.60; heifers, $5.6010.00; stockers and feeders, $5.25 8.00; bulls, $5.0006.50, calves, $6.5011.00. ik N ' 'Sheep Receipts', 6,000; V steady; lambs, $11.0011.60; yearlings, $8.75 9.75; wethers, $7.5008.50; ewes, $6.7507.75. 5 . . : '

PRODUCE

1 Wagon Market ; Timothy hay $13.00. Mixed $12.00. Clover hay $10.00. Alfalfa $15.00. Straw $7.00. Indianapolis Representative . .......... Sales

Cincinnati Produce CINCINNATI, O , Not. 20. Butter: Creamery whole, milk extras, -40c, centralised extra 38c; do firsts, 34; do seconds. 31c; dairy fancy, 31c. Eggs: Prime firsts, 43c; firsts, 41c, ordinary. 39c. Poultry: Broilers under 1' lbs., 21c, fryers over 1 lbs., 16c; roosters, 11c. Potatoes: Home grown. $5.25 5.50 bbl; Eastern Cobbler, $5.25 (5.50. Lemons: California, $4.00 6. 50: Messina, 3.60 4.50; limes 2.753.00 box. Tomatoes: Home grown, 7501.00.

Chicago CHICAGO. Nov. 20. Butter: Higher, 3640c. Eggs: Receipts, 2,572 cases; market stead, 3939c. Poultry: Alive, steady; fowls, 15c; springers, 16c. Potato market: Steady; Dakotas and Minnesotas, white $1.50 1.60; Minnesotas and Dakota, $1,600 1.76; Wisconsin and Michigan whites, $1.6001-70; receipts, 60 cars. New York Exchange Closing Quotations American Can, 65. American Locomotive, 94. American Beet Sugar ,102. American Smelter, 121. Anaconda,. 104. Atchison, 105. Bethlehem Steel, 698. Canadian Pacific, 173. Chesapeake Ohio, 68. Great Northern, pfd., 117. Lehigh Valley. 83. New York Central, 108. No. Pacific, 111. So. Pacific, 100. Pennsylvania, 57. U. S. Steel, com., 127. . U. S. Steel, pfd., .121. .

RICHMOND MARKETS

Glen Miller Prices Hogs. Heavies, 225 to 250 lbs... $9.25 Heavy yorkers, 160 to 180 lbs... $8.50 Light yorkers. 130 to 160 lbs.... $8.00 Medium, 180 to 225 lbs..., $9.00 Pigs V. ..... . . . $7.00 8.00 Stags $4.5008.00 Cattle. Butcher steers. 1.000 to 1,600 lbs $6.007.00 Butcher cows $5.00 6.00 Heifers $6.00 7.00 Bulls $4.5006.00 Calves. Choice Teals .....$10.00 Heavies and lights $5.000 6.00 Sheep. Spring lambs . $3.00 Produce (Corrected Dally by Edward Cooper) Old chickens, dressed, paying 22c, selling 28c; young chickens, paying 22c, selling 30c; country butter, paying 2530c, selling, 38c; creamery butter, selling 45c; eggs, paying, 35c, selling 45c; country lard, paying 15c, selling 20c; hew potatoes, selling $2.25 bushel. v Coal Quotations (Corrected by Hackman & Klehfoth.) Anthracite nut. $11.00; anthracite stove or egg, $10.50; Pocohontas lump or egg. (shoveled) $8.00; Ppcohontas nut. $7.25; Pocohontas mine run, $7.00; Pocohontas slack, $6.60; Jackson, lump, $7.00; Tennessee lump, $6.75; Kentucky Itimp. $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. I II Hill T Feed Quotations (Corrected Daily by Omer Whelan) Paying Oats, 50c; new corn. 85c; rye, ,$1.15; clover seed, $8.009.00 a bushel; straw, $6 a ton. Selling Cotton seed meal, $47.00 a ton,?2.50 a cwt.; middlings, $35.00 a ton. $1.80 a cwt.; bran, $32.00 a ton, $1.65 a cwt; salt, $1.60 a bbl. Quaker dairy feed, $30 a ton, $1.60 per cwt.

Attention

Hog Raisers We have for sale in any quantity TANKAGE for FEED Hogs Thrive on It ANTON ST0LLE & SONS

Liberty Ave.

Phone 181$

HOGS 3 233 24 98 51 143 6 345 39'...V.'.....'i'.'.;..... 226 STEERS 2 585 6 i.v 788 5 710 10 971 2 1270 HEIFERS 10 ..................... 672 2 825 6 763 9 ..........1024 COWS 4 .- 79T , 5 ...... ... 806 3 933 3 1113 1 1270 BULLS 2 .1185 1 ...........1290 1 ..1207 1 ....... 1607 CALVES 3 370 5 236 3 223 3 123 3 156

$ 7.00 8.00 8.90 9.25 .970 $4.50 5.75 6.75 7.50 9.75 $ 5.35 6.00 6.75 7.50 $4.00 4.65 5.00 6.00 7.00 $ 5.00 5.50 6.00 6.50 $ 4.00 6.50 8.50 10.00 12.00

BOILER EXPLOSION KILLS TWO PERSONS 'NEW YORK, Nov. 20 An explosion due apparently to a defective boiler cost the lives of at least two men the captain and engineer on a tug boat, the Rambler, on the Brooklyn water front today. The bodies of two other men, a fireman and a deck hand, are .believed to be in the hold of the vessel, which sank at her pier, ) A score of other persons working on lighten In the vicinity were injured.

ASKS SALOONISTS

Continued From Page One. the Immediate vicinity of their homes. The agitation for the removal of these two saloons from this district was not begun by the writer In the interest of the prohibition, temperance, or anti-saloon organizations, nor as a proposed preliminary step in a wet-or-dry campaign. , To single out these two particular saloons with such a general campaign in view, would be considered by the writer as decidedly an unfair method of procedure. He is interested and active in this matter from the standpoint of improving the moral and economic conditions in this particular locality. Asks Help Before Council. -.V, The common ' council can declare that portion of the Third Ward north of the railroad a "residence portion" of the city, which m fact it is. "By doing so these two saloons can be eliminated as they should be. This is all we ask. It Is rumored about that the liquor Interests will fight this proposition to a finish. I don't believe that, simply because I know that liquor dealers are not void of a sense of decency and humanity. Therefore, I believe that the liquor dealers who understand the situation will advise councilmen of their acquaintance to favor the proposed resolution of declaring Riverdale a residence portion of Richmond.

WHEAT DEVELOPS STRENGTH Oil NEWS FROM LIVERPOOL

- CHICAGO, Not. 20. Wheat developed strength today after a hesitating start Word from Liverpool that supplies-do not meet requirements had a bullish effect . The uncertainty at the outset .was largely due to conflicting reports as to weather conditions in Argentina and as to the likelihood of an Argentina embargo. Opening prices here, which varied from l&c decline to c advance, with Dec. at $1.77 to $1.77 and May at $1.83 to $1.84, were followed by moderate losses all around and then by a decided general upturn. :. . Corn swayed with wheat. Prospects of enlarged domestic receipts were offset .by assertions that rains in Argentina .had -been: insufficient; After opening unchanged to c lower, the market rallied to well above Saturday's finish.' V V:i;"' ;; x . : Oats were governed chiefly by the action of other cereals. The upturn was accomplished by heavy purchasing on the part of a leading firm., In provisions, as in grain, rallies succeeded early weakness. Large exports as compared with last year Beemed more than to counterbalance lower quotations on hogs. !

EMIGRANT NATION, IS NEW PREDICTION

NEW YORK, Nov. 20. The United States may become , an .."emigrant" rather than an "immigrant" nation at the clase of -the-war, predicts" Commissioner of Immigration Frederick C. Howe. He bases ; bis belief on the ground that the immigrant is not be ing treated justly. In an address last night he took the

stand that immigration was purely an economic question. - He said that those who opposed Immigration did so because they de6ired to limit the competition of unskilled foreign laborers; those who favored the wide open door did so mecause it made labor cheap. :, The immigrant no longer went to the farm, Mr." Howe said, because all the available land of the country had been taken up, "hundreds of millions of acres being held for purely speculative purposes.".' .."

PALLADIUM WANT AOS PAY.

FARM LOAN BOARD ' t MEETS IN FAR WEST. " - i ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico. Nov. 20. Four members .of the Federal Farm Loan . Board are here today te hold a hearing on land credit condiU Ions and to gather information which will aid the board in defining the twelve federal land bank districts authorized under the rural credicts act Secretary of the treasury Wm. G. McAdoo, who has participated in other hearings,' did not accompany the board here, having gone to California for a rest -.: v

LUMBER DEALERS .- HOLD CONVENTION

PORTLAND, Me.. Nov. 20. Lumber manufacturers irom middle-western and southern states are here today for a conference with Oregon lumbermen, the purpose of which Is to promote nation-wide co-operation in the lumber industry.

Millinery Sale $4.95

Starting Tuesday morning and continuing all this week, we will sell every trimmed hat in bur store (except the ones in Gold and Silver Lace). Hats that sold for $6.00 up to $16.00 will be sold during this week Tor only.

$4.95

We will also sell a few remaining hand blocked shapes, in Lyons' Velve and Silk Beaver, formerly sold at $7.50 to $10.00. Now .priced at $4.95 Every woman should take advantage of this exceptional Money-Saving Sale. Holder's

39 N. 8th St

1

Will Place on Sal

VVi

Tomorrow

A Brand New Lot of Waists There are several styles, all showing the latest style development. They possess

charm, character and distinction. .

One Lot of Crepe De Chine Waists, including styles as illustrated above in Numbers 3391, 3392, 3393 and 3394, spec- AM QQ ially priced at VVO Another lot of Crepe De Chine Waists, including styles as illustrated above in numbers 3271, 3272, 3273 and 3274, CO QQ specially priced at

Also a special lot of Plaid, All Silk Waists, regular $4.00 values, specially fl0 QQ priced at Vo We have the exclusive sale for this city of the justly famed Welworth and Wirthmor Blouses, concededly the best of all $2.00 and $1.00 Blouses.

WAIST DEPT. SECOND FLOOR

LEE B. NUSBAUM GO.

WAIST DEPT. , SECOND FLOOR

AtfttemGlffiim Frames 2 1

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Cream Seoarators

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(GoM M SMui MMk The skim, milk you fed to the stock this morning undoubtedly contained butter-fat worth 30 to 40 cents a pound at the creamery. You thought your separator skimmed clean, and so it may if turned at exactly the) speed stamped upon the crank. But no one can turn always at a uniform speed it isn't human nature. Thousands of official tests have shown that 19 out of 20 hand separators are turned too slow and, of course, lose cream. Your creamery would pay from $2.40 to $12 for the butterfat you lost per cow during one year. You can get all the gold from the milk by using

THE NEW

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Wonderful

Sep

The New Sharpie skims clean at widely varying speeds

SUCTION-FEED v - Separator. It skims dean at widely varying speeds. The milk inflow varies with the speed always in exact proportion to the separating force. No other separator can do it. The boy or "hired man" may turn 35 times a minute.

It does no. harm takes a little longer, that's all. When in a hurry, you may spin the crank 55 times a minute and finish the chore quickly. No other separator can be hurried. Whatever : the speed, the cream erill be of the same even quality-- thin today and thick tomorrow. All other separators vary the density of the cream when the speed is varied. x The larg low supply can saves a lot of heavy lifting. A small boy can easily fill it. The women folks always prefer the Sharpies-fit's so easy to clean. The simple tutmlar'bowl has only three pieces. There are no discs to wash. The entire machine can be instantly taken apart and put together. It's ruggedly built for long hard service nd fully guaranteed. v . Come in and Jet us show you how to get the gold that's now being lost in your skim milk. 4

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You'll Throw Away the One You Have - Regardless of It's Cost a a ti a a an a a a a a an a

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