Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 76, 9 February 1917 — Page 10

PAGE TEN

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, FEB. 9, 1917

Today's Market Quotations

WHEAT DEVELOPS RENEWED STRENGTH ON STRIKE AGREEMENT

CHICAGO, Feb. 9. Considerable strength developed in the wheat mar

ket today owing largely to settlement of a threatened strike of switchmen here.. Reports that . the Canadian Pacific railroad was sending cas to Minneapolis to take out wheat and flour for the British government tended also to encourage bullish sentiment. Serious crop damage complaints from Nebraska helped further to life prices. The opening,' which ranged from c decline to a like advance, with May at I1.68U to $1.69 and July at I1.46U, was followed by decided gains all around, but then a material reaction. Corn like wheat, had a noticeable upward slant Country offerings re-i

mained light and Argentine crop news

was bullish. After opening off to

up, the market scored a moderate

general advance.

Oats went higher with other cereals.

Trading though lacked volume.

A rise in the hog market lifted pro

visions. Demand was chiefly for ribs.

market, steady; top sheep $11.75; top

lambs, $14.85.

Calves r Receipts, 100; market,

steady; top, $15.00.

. Indianapolis INDIANAPOLIS, Indiana, Feb. 9. Hogs Best heavies, $12.5012.60; medium and mixed, $12.40(12.50; good to choice lights, $12.4O12.50;

common to medium lights, $11 12.50,

bulk of sales best hogs, $12.50; best pigs, $107511.25: light best pigs, $9 10.75. Receipts, 6,000. Cattle Prime steers, $10.5011.25; good to choice steers, $9.75 10.50; common to medium, $6.257.00; heifers, $5.508.75; good cows, $6.25. $11.00. Receipts, 700. Calves Common to best veals, $913.50; common to best heavy calves, $511. Receipts, 350. Sheep and Lambs Good to choice, $9.009.50; common to medium lambs $5.008.75; good to best lambs, $14 $14.60. Receipts, 100.

GRAIN

Toledo Grain TOLEDO, Feb. 9. Wheat: Cash, ' $1.80; May $1.83; July, $1.52. Cloverseed: Prime cash, $11.65; March, $11.40. Alsike; Prime cash, $11.50; March, $11.60. Timothy: Prime cash, $2.45; March, $2.50.

May July May July May July May July

Chicago Futures WHEAT Open. High. Low. 168V4 171U 168 ...... 146 i 147 146

CORN 101 102 Vi

, 99 100 OATS 54 55 53 '4 54 LARD 16.50 16.62 16.65 16.75

101 90 54 53 16.50 16.65

Close. 169 2 147 101 99 54 53 16.57 16.72

Chicago Cash CHICAGO. Feb. 9 Wheat

red, nominal; No. 3 red, nominal;

2 bard, $1.77; No. 3 hard, $1.74. Corn: No. 2 yellow, nominal; No. 4 yellow. 99 $1.01; No. 4 white, 99

$1.00 Oats: Standard

No. 3

56 57.

Rye: No. 2, nominal. Barley: $1.0001.29. Pork: $29.87. Ribs: $15.12(015.75. Lard: $16.27.

No. 2

No.

white, 55 56;

Cincinnati Grain CINCINNATI. O.. Feb. 9. Wheat: No. 2 red winter, $1.84 1.86; No. 3. $1.8001.83; No. 4, $1.551.65; sales, 2 cars. Corn: No. 2 white, $1.04; No. 3 white, $1.021.04: No. 4 white, $1.00 ?D 1.02; No. 2 yellow, $1.04; No. 3 yellow, $1.021.04; No. 4, yellow, $l.001.02; No. 2 mixed, $1.01; ear corn, $1.02fal.04. Oats: No. 2 white, 60??60c; No. 2 mixed, 57 58c. Rye: Range, $1.301.48.

LIVE STOCK j

Chicago CHICAGO, Feb. 9 Hogs Receipts 33,000; market, strong, 15c higher; bulk of sales, $12.2545; lights. $11.75(?tl2.40; mixed $12.051il2.50; heavy $1250; rough, $1215; pigs, $9.75 10.90. Cattle Receipts, 3,000; market, steady; native beef cattle, $7.80ftll2.25; western steers, $7 90(3)10.30; stockers and feeders, $6.109.25; cows and heifers, $5.10 10.50; calves ;i0.50(? 15.00. Sheep Receipts, 10,000; market, firm; wethers, $10.00(511.80; lambs, $12.10(14.60.

Cincinnati CINCINNATI O.. Feb. 9. HogsReceipts. 5,600; market, active; packers and butchers, $12,250)40; common to choice, $8(11.60.

Cattle tteady. Calves Sheep tteady. Lambs

Receipts, 950; market,

Market, weak; $613.50. Receipts, 300; market, Market, quiet, $10114.60.

Pittsburgh PITTSBURG, Pa., Feb. 9. Hogs Receipts, 1,500; market, 5 to 10c higher; heavies, $12.95013; heavy Yorkers. $12.9095; light Yorkers, $11.75 12.50; pigs, $llfrtll.50. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 100;

BRIEFS

Bender's Pure Ice Cream excels, because it Is made in a sanitary plant. Fried oyster lunch Saturday afternoon and evening. Patterson's, 14 South 9th St. Ev. thur.fri-tf

Place your order with Bender's for Ice Cream in Geo. Washington moulds. NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT State of Indiana, Wayne County, ss: Estate of Catherine Johanning, deceased. ' ' Notice is hereby given that the undersigned have duly qualified in Wayne Circuit Court, as executors of the last will and testament of Catherine Johanning, deceased, late of Wayne County. Indiana. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. WALTER JOHANNING. JOHN JOHANNING, Executors. Gardner, Jessup. Hoelachcr & White, Attys. 2-9 ,

Kansas City KANSAS CITY, Mo., Feb. 9. Hogs

Receipts, 6,000; higher; bulk, $11.-

901Z.30; heavy, $12.2012.35; packers and butchers, $12 12.30; light, $11.6012.05; pigs, $10.25110. Cattle Receipts, 1,000; steady; prime fed steers, $11.25012; dressed beef steers $911; southern steers, $6.509.50; cows, $5.509.50; heifers $711; stockers and feeders $7.00(3) 9.75; bulls, $6.508.50; calves $7.00 13.25. Sheep Receipts, 1,000; steady; lambs f 12.50 14.40; yearlings $12.25 13.25; wethers $10.50 11.50; ewes $1010.90.

Chicago CHICAGO, Feb. 9. Butter: High er, 3242.

,ggs : necerpis, 3,ms cases ; mar

ket higher, 4042. , .

Poultry alive: Lower; fowls,. 20;

springers, 22.

Potato market: Higher; Westerns,

z.40z.&o. i Receipts, 45 cars.

New York Exchange Closing

Quotations , , American Can, 52. American Locomotive, 69. American Beet Sugar, 96. American Smelter, 95. Anaconda, 74. Atchison, 101. . Bethlehem Steel, 395. Canadian Pacific, 151. Chesapeake & piho, 57. Great Northern, pfd., 113. Lehigh Valley, 73. New York Central, 92. No. Pacific, 102. . So. Pacific, 92. Pennsylvania, 53. . U. S. Steel, com., 104. , U. S. Steel, pfd., 117.

St. Louis ST. LOUIS. Feb. 9. Hogs Receipts, 12,500; higher; lights, $12.05 12.40; pigs, $9.0011; mixed and butchers, $12.1012.50; good heavy, $12.40012.50; bulk, $12.1512.45. Cattle, Receipts, 1,000; higher;

native beef steers, $7.5011.75; yearling steers and heifers $8.5011.50; cows $5.509.00; stockers and feeders $5.308.50; calves $614.50. Sheep Receipts, 200; steady; lambs, $12.7514.75; ewes, $6.50 10.60; yearlings $1112.25.

9. and

Buffalo EAST BUFFALO, N. Y., Feb. Cattle Receipts, 150; active

steady. Veals Receipts, 400; active, $5.00 16.00. Hogs Receipts, 1,600: active; heavy and mixed, $13.50 13.60; Yorkers, $13.50; lights, $12.5013.25; pigs, $12.2512.50; roughs, $12.1012.65; stags, $1011. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 1.600;. active; lambs $1215.40; yearlings, $1114.25; wethers $1212.50; ewes, tmu.no.

RICHMOND MARKETS

Glen Miller Prices Hogs. Heavies, 260 to 300 lbs $11.75 Heavy Yorkers, 160 to 180 lbs. . .$11.75 Light Yorkers, 130 to 160 lbs $10.00 Medium, 180 to 225 lbs $11.75 Pigs $7.0008.00 Stags '. $4.508.00 Cattle. Butcher steers. 1.000 to L500 Iba $6.00(37.00

Butciior cows $5.00 6.00 Helfera $6.007.00 Bulls $4.50(36.00 Calve. Choice Teals ..$10.00 Heavies and lights $5.006.Q0 8heep. Spring lambs $8.04

GIRLS WHO NAMED LEWIS IN MODEL MURDER

H T'l 'l ' ii j i.. 1. I his 4 P V l- I k- h I, V mm - -. - k 1 j j -ffinirmiiiin 11 E.:4MM-.'AVMW.tuMdUW.WA-vyuMWMU4...1.l.. .. .

MISSES YLAEiZX, AND ETH? L KVXrS

This is the first photograph of the two Germantown school teachers, who

supplied the Philadelphia police with the name of Bernard W. Lewis, selfslain suspect in the "model" murder case. It was on information supplied by the teachers that detectives traced Lewis to Atlantic City, where he took his

life just in time to avoid arrest. The girls were motoring with the wealthy young Pittsburgher on the night before Maizie Agnes Colbert, or Grace Roberts, as she was professionally known, was slain. They have since expressed

themselves as sorry mat xney were instrumental in starting a search for

their friend.

City Statistics

Produce tCorrected Dally by Edward Cooper. Old chickens dressed, selling, 28c; young. chickens, selling. 30c; country butter, selling, 3540c; creamery butter, selling, 45c; fresh eggs, selling 40c; country lard, selling, 30c; potatoes, selling 70c a peck.

PRODUCE

Feed Quotations (Corrected Daily by Omer Whelfln) Paying Oats, 55c: corn, 95c; rye, $1.10; clover seed, $89 a bushel; straw, $8.00 a ton. Selling Cotton seed meal, $47.50 a ton, $2.50 a cwt.; middlings, $38.00 a ton, $2.00 a cwLj bran, $36.00 a ton, $1.85 a cwt.; salt, $1.85 a bbl.; Quaker

dairy feed, $34.00 a ton, $1.75 per cwt. Tanktage, $64 a ton, $3.25 per cwt.

Cincinnati Produce CINCINNATI, O., Feb. 9. Butter: Creamery extra, 43c; centralized extra, 40c; do firsts, 37c; do seconds, "4c; dairy fancy, 32c; packing stock, 22Cri25c. Eggs: Prime firsts, 40c; firsts, 39c; ordinary firsts, ,37c; seconds, 35c. Poultry: Broilers under Vs ibs., 31; fryers over IV2 lbs., 24; roasting, 4 lbs. and over, 22; turkeys, 2325; roosters, 15. Lemons: California, $2.753.75; Messina, $2.50z3.00; limes, 85c5?$1.00 Potatoes Michigan, $6.757.00, home grown, $6.757.00. Cabbage $7.508.00. Onions Spanish. $2.35 per crate; shipped, $8.009.00 per 100 lbs. Sweet potatoes: $1.501.60 per hamper.

The International Union of Metal Polishers and Buffers has appointed

tneir first Canadian organizer.

Wagon Market Timothy hay $14.00. Mixed $12.00. Clover hay $12.00. Airalfa $15.00. Straw $8.00.

Indianapolis Representative Sales

Deaths and Funerals. BODE The body of Miss Lillian Marie Bode, who died in San Antonio,

Tex., will arrive in this city Saturday night and will be taken to the residence of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Henry E. Bode, 901 South Eighth stree, where friends may call after tiOon, Sunday. Funeral will be held at the home next Tuesday afternoon at 1:30, followed by services at the St John's Lutheran church at 2:00 o'clock, services being conducted by the Rev. Albert J. Feeger and the Rev. Specht, superintendent of Wernle home. Burial at Lutherania cemetery. PAXSON Funeral services for Isaac H. Paxson were held from the home Thursday afternoon. Rev. J. J. Rae officiated. Burial was in the Earlham cemetery. Bearers were Ed Cooper, Abijah Pyle, John Peltz, Will

iam Porter, James Porter and Jacob Lichtenfels. Warranty Deeds. Lafayette Larsh to Marck C. Mendenhall, 524 E. Starr, Richmond, $3,200. Francis M. Rich et. al., to Willis D. Rich, Pt. N. W. 30-14-1. Henderson B. Oler to Omer J. Oler, Pt. S. W. 4-17-13, $1,800. Cordelia M. Arnold to Edward L.

i Brown, 560 E. Starr.

Willis D. 'Rich et. al. to Francis M. Rich, Pt. Fraction 25-14-2. Daniel VanEtten to Trustees Inter-

church, 42, Baxter,

national Holiness Richmond.

Marriage Licenses. Clayton T. Souder, 21, Hagerstown, farmer, to Edna Wilson, 20, Hagerstown.

HOGS

11 13 13 8 59 60 13 22 3 19 3 4 5

98 110 118 346 200 250

$ 8.00 10.75 11.40 11.65 12.50 12.60

STEERS

516 $

652 870 1024 1093 -HEIFERS

I

. 790 . 746 .1025

$

6.50

8.00 8.60 10.00 10.25

6.25 7.50 8.25 8.25

.1100 . 920

COWS

. 692 . 855 .1056 .1200 .1260

BULLS

4 10 18 10

. 720 .1250 .1140 . 990 .1520

CALVES

430 535 168 146 160

$

8.75 9.00 5.15 6.50 7.25 8.00 9.00 6.00 7.00 7.50 7.75 8.50 7.C0 8.00

9.25 12.50 13.00

JAPAN SAFEGUARDS SHIPPING INTERESTS FROM SUBMARINES

(By Associated Press) TOKJO, Feb. 9. (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) Special measures have been taken by the Japanese naval department to prevent Japanese shipping from German submarines. While details of the governments plans are kept secret for obvious reasons it is understood that several steamers plying between Japanese and England ports, by way of the Suez

Canel will be armed with three-inch guns manned by naval gunners. The activity of the German undersea destroyers in the Mediterrean has

caused some uneasiness in Janpanese shipping circles which has been increased by the news just received that the Tsingtau Mara has been sunk by a submarine in the western Mediterrean. This steamer was a vessel of 2,500 tons and was named after the German fortress in China which was captured by the Japanese early in the war.

Lasft Ctoaiimcs

1 M M

We don't want to carry over a single coat. These prices will move every one-left. Come early!

Ladies' Coats LOT NO. 2 This lot consists of Coats that have sold up to $25.00. Come early! Your choice tomorrow

Ladies' Coats LOT NO. 1 2S Cloth Coats, some of them have sold for 15.00 early in the season. Your choice tomorrow ,

.00

Betty Wailes Style DRESSES In serges, nice assortment just received from J1 O 7C New Yorkworth $18.00, special XtJ,eJ

Muffle (GM9 Coats The remaining stock in two groups for tomorrow, up to $8 values,

S8 amiKffl

Menu's Mtts-.& vcreoffljts 10 to 33 Discount

REMEMBER HIRSCH'S Credit Price Is the Lowest Cash Price.

minu

QTi CASH PRICE

Credit Store

15-17 North 9th t.

Butcher Knives Food Choppers Paring Knives Meat Saws Meat Forks Steels

"UNIVERSAL" L. F. & C. MADE

THIRTY WOMEN ATTEND COUNTY ECONOMICS DAY

; About thirty women from all parts of the county attended the annual Home Economics' Day celebration in the Richmond high school auditorium to'day. ' Miss Grace L. King, county domestic science supervisor, acted as chairman and gave the address of Welcome. Miss Roberta McNeill, Purdue univers

ity, advised women to apply business methods to the home. She said that time should be divided so that women of the county and city could have definite times for home work, community activities and recreation. Special study should be given to purchasing,' accounting and elimination of waste, she said. Miss Adelaide Steele Baylor, Indianapolis, spoke on "The Value of a Survey to Home, School and Community." She dwelt at great length on the industrial survey which was made of

Richmond last year. She said that a thorough study of the report of the survey by all citizens would result In much good for the community. "A survey gets people of a community in touch with the schools and industries. It gives them an opportunity to know their city or their county.'Application of more sanitary methods to rural home life was urged by Miss Zella Wigent. She advocated the use of fly proof vaults and the elimination of the fly. The fly was described as the first aid to disease.

GOFF FUNERAL HELD

AT DAUGHTER'S IIOUE! Funeral services for Mrs. Charlotte I

Goff, aged 90 years, who died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. A. W.j Goodie, 130 South Fifteenth street. I Thursday evening, will be conducted! at the home Saturday morning at 11 : o'clock. Burial will be at Oxford, O. Friends may call at any time. Mrs. Goff, who was one of the oldest residents of this community, was born near Liberty, Union county, and lived there the greater part of her life. She is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Goudie, Mrs. Evangeline Sites and Mrs. Josephine Smalley; also nine grand children and one rreat erand-

child.

I

VISIT KITCHEL FRIENDS

KITCHEL, Ind., Feb. 9. Mr. and Mrs! Walter . Veregge of Indianapolis, 6pent the week-end In KitcheL the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Will Weidaer. Joe Dunbar has returned home.

INSURANCE FIRMS PLACED ON GUARD

CBy Associated Press) NEW YORK, Feb. 9. One of the largest life insurance companies with headquarters here today instructed its agents to make the same stipulations to all applicants for insurance that were effective when militiamen were sent to the Mexican border. The applicant will be asked whether he intends to serve in the army, navy, or red cross organization.

' PI I r s

Entertain the Children with their Favorite Melodies from the

Ptoomogiraipln Play them music for dancing, tell funny stories, sing the songs that all children love to hear! For education and pleasure the Starr is unequalled. Its singing throat of costly silver grain spruce brings forth the richest, sweetest and most realistic tones from all disc records. Let us play your favorites so you can decide. Styles, $50 to $300. Our terms will suit you. Starr Phonographs and Records

FOR SALE BY The STARR PIANO CO., 935 Main St Druitt Bros., 627 and 629 Main St Quigley Bros., Main & 4th and 821 N. E "The Sign of the Starr Store Where StanService Is Guaranteed."

IBtwMsir IBirciP'iblhKsr S&miStf airy Ircleayd; Filarlkot SPECIAL WEEK-ENID SALE Elgin Creamery Butter 59e pound

Prime Beef Roasts, pound. .... 15c Pot Roast, pound 15c Choice Boiling Beef 10c

Fresh Pork Shoulders, pound ... 17c Loin Pork Chops 22c Breakfast Sausage 15c

aH5imare Oysters, )t 55

SMOKED MEATS No. 1 Sugar Cured Hams, pound.. .20c No. 1 Sugar Cured Shoulders, pound 17c No. 1 Sugar Cured Breakfast Bacon, pound 23c

OLEOMARGARINE Moxley's Special, 2 pounds 52c Moxley's Superior, 2 pounds 52c B. B. Special, 2 pounds 50c

HWHD Iffl ELrlE R . B IR T IS IS M S 15 South 7th Street