Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 84, 19 February 1917 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, FEB. 19, 1917
Dependable Market News for Today
Quotations on Stock, Grain and Produce in Large Trading Centers by Associated Press Local Prices Revised Daily by Leading Dealers.
BULLISH INFLUENCE SHOWN IN WHEAT
(By Associated Press)
Chlcaeo. Feb. 19. Prospective end-
tag of the tie-up of neutral shipping lad a bullish influence today on wheat
In this connection, special notice was
taken of reports that the Dutch gov
ernment would open bids for 100,000 barrels of flour on Wednesday.
Promises of improved railway condit
ions tended also to lift the market
Opening prices, which ranged from the
came as Saturdays finlsn to lc nign
er with May at $1.74 to $1-74 and
July at $1.49 to $1.50, were followed by material gains all around.
Announcement of liberal export sales gave strength to oats. Besides,
the market was affected by the upward course of other cereals.
Provisions developed firmness owing
to the lightness of lard stocks. Lower quotations on hogs, however caused some wavering at the start Corn rose with wheat Selling was
of only scattered sort After opening
to e higher the market continued to ascend.
I GRAIN 1 Chicago Futures WHEAT Open. High. Low. Close. May 174 "6 174 175 July . 149 150 149 150 CORN May 101 102 101 101 July 99 100 99 100 OATS May 57 . 57 57 57 July 65 55 55 55 LARD May 16.85 17.00 16.85 17.00 July 16.97 17.12 16.97 17.07 Toledo Grain TOLEDO, Feb. 19. Wheat cash: 1.88; May. $1.91. Cloverseed: Prime cash, $11.95; March. $1160. Alsike: Prime cash, $11.75; March, $11.80. Timothy: Prime cash, $2.42; March, $2.52. Chicago Cash CHICAGO, Feb. 19. Wheat: No. 2 red. $1.80; No. 3 red, nominal; No. 2 hard, nominal; No. 3 hard, nominal, j Corn: No. 2 yellow. $1.02; No. 4 yellow. 98 $1.01; No. 4 white, 98 f $1.00. Oats: No. 3 white, 5859; Standard, 5960. Rye: No. 2, $1.47. Barley: $1.001.30. Ribs: $15.5016.00. 1 Lard: $16.80. Cincinnati Grain
CINCINNATI, Feb.. 19. No. 2 red winter. $1.9001.92; No. 3, $1.851.88; No. 4. $1.551.65. Sales, 9 cars. Corn: No. 2 white, $1.071.08; No. 3 white, $1.07; No. 2 yellow, $1.071.08; No. 3 yellow, $1.07; No. 2 mixed, $1.07 1.08; ear corn, $1.06 1.08. Oats: No. 2 white, 64; No. 2 mixed. 62 63. Rye: Range. $1.35 1.52.
Buffalo
EAST BUFFALO, Feb. 19 Cattle,
Receipts, 3,500; slow; shipping steers,
$8.5011.25; butchers, $7.2510.50; heifers, $6 9.75; cows, $4.508J25;
bulls. $69; stockers and feeders, $6
7.75; fresh cows and springers, ac
tive, $50 105.
Veals Receipts, 1,000; active and
lower; $515; few at $15.50.
Hogs Receipts, 10,000; slow and
steady; heavy, $12.85 12.90; mixed,
$12.8012.90; Yorkers $12.7512.80.
light do $11.5012.50; pigs, $1111.25
roughs $1212.25; stags $9.50 10.50.
Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 5,000;
steady; Iambs $12 15.65; yearlings,
$11.6014.50; wethers $1212.50;
ewes $612; mixed sheep $12 12.25.
PRODUCE
Chicago
CHICAGO. Feb. 19. Butter, 3242
Eggs: Market, lower 40.
Poultry alive: ., Steady; fowls, 20;
springers, 20. ,
Potato market: Lower; Westerns, $2.50 2.65; Wisconsin and Michigan
Whites, $2.50. Receipts, 62 cars.
Cincinnati Produce CINCINNATI. O., Feb. 19. Butter
Creamery extra, 46c; centralized extra, 43c; do firsts, 40c; do seconds, 37c; dairy fancy, 34c; packing
stock, 20 26c.
Eggs: Prime first, 42; first 41;
ordinary firsts, 39; seconds, 38. Poultry: Broilers under 1 lbs 31; fryers over 1 lbs., 23; roasting
4 lbs. and over, 22; turkeys, 24 26;
roosters, 15.
Lemons: California, $2.75 3.75;
Messina, $2.503.00: limes, 85c$1.00
Potatoes Michigan, $9.009.50;
tome grown, $9 9.50. Cabbage $7.50 8.00.
Onions Spanish, $2.35 per crate;
shipped, $12.0013.00 per 100 lbs.
sweet potatoes: $L501.60 per
hamper. ;
New York Exchange Closing
Quotations American Can, 44. American Locomotive, 71. American Bee Sugar, 88. American Smelter, 98. Anaconda, 77. Atchison, 102. Bethlehem Steel, 375. Canadian Pacific, 154. Chesapeake & Ohio, 59. Great Northern, pfd., 113. Lehigh Valley, 73. New York Central, 95. No. Pacific, 104. So. Pacific, 93. .Pennsylvania, 54. -U. S.. Steel, com., 107. U. S. Steel, pfd., 117.
LIVE STOCK
Chicago CHICAGO. Feb. 19. Hogs Receipts, 67,000; mJket, slow to 5c lower; bulk of sales, $12.20(6)40; lights, $11.6512.30; mixed, $12.0512.45; heavy, $1212.50; rough, $1212.10; pigs, $9.2510.65. Cattlo Receipts, 26,000; market weak, native beef cattle, $7.7511.90; ttockers and feeders. $6.159.10; cows and heifers, $5.1010.25; calves $9.75 13.75. Sheep Receipts. 23,000; market weak; wethers, $10.8511.90; lambs, $12.25 1-1.65.
Cincinnati CINCINNATI. Ohio, Feb. 12. Hogs Receipts, 4,400; market, steady; packers and butchers, $12.5070; common to choice, $8.50 12.00; pigs md lights, $8 11.85. Cattle Receipts. 2,000; market, active; eteers, $6 10.25; heifers, $6
9.25; cows. $5.50 8.25
Calves
Shcp $6ft9.50. Lambs f 14.50.
Market steady; $6 13.30.
Receipts, market, steady; Market, steady; $10.00
Pittsburgh PITTSBURGH. Pa., Feb. 19. Hogs, Receipts, 5,500; market, steady; heavies, $12.90 95; heavy Yorkers, $12.50 ?380; light Yorkers. $11.50012; pigs, $11 11.50. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 2,500; market, steady; top sheep, jlE.OO; top lambs, $15.25. Calves Receipts, 1,000; market, steady; top, $14.50.
Indianapolis INDIANAPOLIS, Indiana Feb. 19. Hogs Best heavies, $12.65 12.75:. medium and mixed, $12.65 12.70;' good to choice lights, $12.65 12.70; common to medium lights, $11.50 12.63: bulk of sales best hogs, $12.65 12.70: roughs $11 11.85; best pigs, $10.75 11.25; light best pigs, $9.00 10.75. Receipts, 5,00. Cattle Prime steers, $10.50 11.25; good to choice steers, $9.75010.50; common to medium, $6.257.00; heifers, $5.50 8.75; good cows, $6.25. $11.00. Receipts, 1,900. Calves Common to best veals, $9 14.00; common to best heavy calves, $5011. Receipts, 450. Sheep and Lambs Good to choice $1.00 9.50; common to medium lambs ;3S.75: good to best lambs, $13.50 11.65. Receipts, 100.
PALLADIUM WANT ACS PAY
RICHMOND MARKETS
Glen Miller Prices Hogs.
Heavies, 260 to 300 lbs $12.00
Heavy Yorkers, 160 to 180 lbs. . .$11.75 Light Yorkers, 130 to 160 lbs $10 00
Medium, 180 to 225 lbs.-. $11.75
Pigs $7.008.0d
Stags $4.508.00 Cattle. Butcher steers. 1.000 to 1.500 lbs $6.007.00 Butciior cows $5.00.6.0" Heifers $6.00 7.00 Bulls $4.506.00 Calves. Choice veals $10.00 Heavies and lights $5.Q06.00 8heep. Spring lambs , . . ,$8.0u Produce Corrected Dally by Edward Cooper.) Old chickens, dressed, selling, 30c;
young chickens, selling. 30c; country butter, selling, 35 40c; creamery
butter, selling, 48c; fresh eggs, selling
40c; country lard, selling, 22c; potatoes, selling, 75c a peck. Feed Quotations (Corrected Dally by Omer Whelan) Paying Oats, 58c; corn, 1.00; rye, $1.15; clover seed, $9 10 a bushel, straw. $9.00 a ton.
seumg cotton seed meal, 547.50 a
ton, $2.50 a cwt; middlings, $42.00 a ton, $2.10 a cwt; bran," $38.00 a ton, $2.00 a cwt; salt, $1.85 a bbl.; Quaker dairy feed, $35.00 a ton, $1.80 per cwt. Tanktage, $64 a ton, $3.25 per cwt Wagon Market Timothy hay $14.50. Mixed $1314. Clover hay $12 14. Alfalfa $15,00. Straw $9.00. Indianapolis Representative Sales
HOGS 6 113 22... 125 66 202. 50 196 STEERS 4 612 3 686 20 ......1014 18 .....1367 HEIFERS 2 630 5 624 3 .'. 853 1 . 870 COWS 2 855 C .- ...... 781 3 ....1036 2 985 2 1340 BULLS 1 850 1 920 1 1830 1 1260 1 ...1530 CALVES 5 348 7 ....137 7 . 145
I 8 ... 167
$11.00 11.50 12.65 12.75
$
7.00
5.20 9.40 10.85 $6 00 7.15 S.75 9.25 $ 5.00 5.30 7.00 7.50 8.50 $ 7.00 7.25 7.75 8.50 9.10 $ 7.00 13.00 13.50
lLOOjj
LOAN ASSOCIATION FILES INCORPORATION FOR $100,000 STOCK
Incorporation papers for the Business Men'B Remedial Loan association were filed at the county recorder's office. Capital stock is named at $100,000 $50,000 preferred and the remainder common. The preferred stock will be sold at $50 a share. The incorporators, Charles B. Beck, William H. Davis, S. Edgar Bond, William A. Bond, C. E. Haseltine, Frederick S. Wellsmere, Indianapolis, and Allen C. Dennis, , Indianapolis, stated that the new irm will open an office within two months. The purpose of the association is to buy and sell state, county and municipal bonds, borrow and loan money, buy and sell promissory notes, bills of exchange and real estate. "Special attention will be devoted to the loan department," said Attorney Bond.
INSPECTOR ENLISTS BOYS TO TRAP FLYS; SCHOOLS INTERESTED
Food Inspector George McKinley not only believes in swatting theh fly but also in trapping the pesky insect Today McKinley was notified by Superintendent Giles of the public schools that he would enlist the boys in the manual training department of the high school to assist McKinley in his campaign by the construction of a number of fly traps, to be distributed over the city. "Now is the time to begin the fly extermination' campaign," McKinley said today. '1 am appealing to every business concern, every civic organization and every householder to join in the movement. The more traps put out the less flies there will be. I
think every business house will aid in the movement by placing traps in front of and in the rear of their places, and the householders can do great work if they will place traps near garbage and trash recipticles. "These traps should be placed not later than the first of next month to catch as many flies as possible before warm weather increases their number."
RURAL CHURCH SESSION OPENS
Dr. A. B. Storms, Indianapolis, and
W. A. Millis, Hanover, will make ad
dresses at the opening session of the Rural Church Workers' conference at
Earlham college at 1:30 o'clock tomor row afternoon.
FAIRVIEW PEOPLE DEPRIVED OF STREET CARS FOR EVENING
Residents of Fairview and the north half of West Richmond were deprived of street car service from 1 o'clock yesterday afternoon until 6:30 o'clock this morning. The trouble was caused by the grounding of a high tension wire which furnishes current to the Fairview line as the result of an automobile , striking the trolley pole standing on the north side of the National road at the dangerous curve half way up the hill which leads west from the temporary Main street bridge. It was with great difficulty that the trouble was located. To escape running into two automobiles coming up the bill a man whose identity has not been learned ran his car into the pole which carries the high ension wires. His machine was slightly damaged but was removed under its own power.
DISCUSS- EXCISE BILL
Secretary Haas of the Commercial
club announced today that there would be a business men's meeting
at the club rooms tomorrow evening
for the purpose of discussing the ex
cise tax bill, pending before the legislature, a measure which vitally effects every business concern in the state.
"We want every business man in
town, club member or non club member, to attend this meeting," Mr. Haas said.
FORM CHECKER CLUB
Your move! A checker club will be organized at
the Y. M. C. A. tonight by iie checker
committee.
Arrangements will be made for
weekly meetings, on Monday evenings, with games and championship series,
etc.
City Statistics
MAY CUT RATE OF ELECTRICITY
Mayor Robbins said today that he intended to call a meeting of the committee of citizens, appointed over a
year ago to assist the city in its ne
gotiations for the purchase of the L. H. &P. electric plant for the purpose of devising a scheduel of reduced electric lighting and power rates for the municipal plant, the ned schedule to become operative soon after the plant retires an '$80,000 bond issue, next August. "I have been advised by Supt. Kleinknecht of the municipal plant that the city plant before the close of this year, will be in a position to reduce both lighting and power rates," Mayor Robbins said.
PYTHIANS ATTEND COUNTY MEETING
LYNN, Ind., Feb. 19. A large number, of K. of P.'s went to Winchester to attend the county meeting. The first degree was given to fifty candidates by the celebrated , Greenville team. After the work a banquet was served. ....Mr. and Mrs. Milton Abernathy, Benj. Green and Glen Hiatt and family were entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hartley.... Mr. and Mrs. William Watson are the parents of a baby girl born Friday.. . . .Revival services are still going on at the Friends church and great interest is being manifested..... Mr. and Mrs. Estley Surface and son, of Richmond, were the Sunday guests of Mr., and Mrs. A. F. Surface Verl Newton of Richmond, spent Sunday here guest of Lynn friends.
LYNN, IND.
Mr. and Mrs. George Alexander visited Mr. and Mr. J. A. Drill at Redkey, Ind., Friday and Eaturday. ...Mr. John Snyder and daughter Delia, and Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Snyder were visiting relatives hfcre Saturday On last Friday a baby boy was born to Rev. and Mrs. B. W. Bass Misses May Hadgins and Vada Daly and Messrs. George Alexander, Jr. and Willard Jordan were in Richmond Saturday night to see "Gypsy Love" at the Washington Mrs. J. B. Chenoweth underwent an operation Saturday at the Methodist hospital at Indianapolis .... Miss Esther Jones spent Sunday in Spartansburg Mr. and
Mrs. L. B. Grannis are spending a few days in Indianapolis Alva Study of Fountain City was a business visitor in Lynn Saturday.
Y. M. I. HEARS ZEPF
One hundred members of the . Y. M. I. attended mass and received communion at St Andrew's church yesterday. They listened to an address on the subject "For God" by Rev. Clement Zepf. This service followed one held in the club rooms last Wednesday night when Rev. ' Francis Roell spoke on "For Country," which is the otjoer half of the Y. M. I. motto.
LET NAVY CONTRACTS
(By Associated Pross) WASHINGTON. Feb. 19 Contracts for navy projectiles which had been let to .Hadfields Limited, an English concern, were today given to the Midvale Steel company, the Washington & Steel Ordnance company and the Crucible Steel company.
FORCES OF SPRING ROUT OLD WINTER
King Winter was forced 'to beat a steady retreat last week. Records at Waterworks Pumping station show the temperature maintained a steady rise from Monday on. Last Monday thermometers registered eight below. . , By Tuesday the lowest was seven above, Wednesday it had raised to fifteen, Thursday to twenty-one, Friday to twenty-three and Saturday to thirty degrees above.
PICTURES TELL STORY OF CHICAGO BLAZE
Deaths and Funerals. HUNT Mrs. Smith Hunt aged 68
years, died at trie nome or ner son,
Jesse Hunt, 400 North West Eighth street, Sunday morning Her husband, th-ee sons and two daughters, survive. The funeral will be held
from the home Tuesday afternoon at
o'clock, the Rev. L. E. Murray offi
ciating. Burial will be at Centerville. Friends may call any time.
TOWN SEND Susan Townsend, age
54, wife of William Townsend, 300 Randolph street died at 8 o'clock
Monday. Or e son and one daughter.
Desme me nusDana, survive, ine iuneral arrangements have not been announced. Burial will be at Covington, Ohio.
ROWAND Benjamin Rowand, age
18 years, a grandson of the late Charles Farnham, died Sunday at the home of his parents in Fort Wayne. The body will be brought to Richmond Tuesday morning and will be
taken direct to the Earlham cemetery
for burial. Short services will be held
at the grave.
.HUDSON Hannah J. Hudson, age 3 years, died at the Margaret Smith
Home after a lingering illness. Two
brothers and one sister survive. The funeral will be held from the Home Tuesday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Burial will be in the Earlham cemetery. Friends may call any time.
WASSON Frances A. Wasson, age
76 years, died at the home three miles east of the city, Sunday morning. Death was due to paralysis. The de
ceased leaves two brothers, Minor B. and George W. Wasson; two sisters,
Mrs. Emma A. Parsons and Louise K.
Wasson. The funeral arrangements have not been announced.
Marriage Licenses. Earl E. Stikeleather, 22, miller, to
Ada G. Barton, 21.
John W. Godwin, 26, linotype opera
tor, to Willodine Throckmorton, 29.
Eugene Patterson, 34, colored, to
Laura Richardson, 25, colored.
Application for Naturalization. Joseph Andrew Kutter, Frank Tepe,
Joseph Hiller, Henry G. Schultz, Hen
ry Kimm.
Warranty Deeds. George H. McCanley to James J.
McCanley, 14, C. T. Price.,
William T. Chase to Jackson Boggs,
7 and 8, 2 East Germantown, $250.
Florence M. Hoover to Eliza J. Van-
Etten, Pt N. W. 28-14-1.
Mary J. ' White to James L. Town-
send, Pt S. E. 29-14-1.
Otis Baldwin to Dora Wampole, 2 N.
Baldwin, Dalton, $75. .
Owen A. Miller to Carl W. Weist et.
al. 112 Reeveston.
Eliza A. Bunyan to Helen T. Hod-
gin, 16 P. V. W., Richmond.
Thomas R. Jessup to Wilfred T. Jes-
sup, Pt 32-i-!. . l
Tradition has it that the Chicago conflagration was the result of a balky cow, owned by a Mrs. O'Leary. The cow kicked over a lantern in the stable and so started the fire that got beyond the control of the Chicago lire department Some idea of this terrible conflagration can be gained from a group of pictures shown in the window of Finney's Confectinery on Main street. Mr. J. S. Zeller, the local agent of the Glens Falls Insurance company, has placed them there on exhibition.
AWARD PIERIAN CONTRACT
The Stafford Engraving company, of Indianapolis, has been awarded the contract for engraving in connection with the publishing of the Pierian, the school annual. The work on the issue is progressing satisfactorily according to Editor-in-chief Guerney Stid-ham.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY
When Fire Ravaged Chicago A Reminiscence of Nearly Half
a Century Ago. It was forty-six years ago, namely, on October 8, 1871, that one of the greatest fires of modern times started in the rapidly growing city of Chicago. Chicago was 'then practically a wooden city, even to the sidewalks, and when, as tradition has it, Mrs. O'Leary's cow kicked over a lantern in a stable in the lumber section of the town, it was not long before a conflagration was raging beyond the power of the city's fire department to control. The fire was not checked until an area of 3 1-3 miles had been burned, over 17,450 buildings were destroyed,
with a property loss of $196,000,000; 100,000 people were left homeless and 1 250 lost their lives. All this terrible situation in Chicago is vividly brought to mind by a group of pictures now exhibited in the window of Finney's Confectionery on 919 Main street. Mr. J. S. Zeller, the local agent of the Glens Falls Insur-; ance Co., has placed these pictures on exhibition there. The insurance com-i pany intends to issue a series of these 4 great fire scenes, which are as au-. thentic as it can obtain. Many of the . scenes were drawn at the time by rep
resentatives of such illustrated papers as Harper's Weekly.
WITALIS IM and u IGOR Has Made Thousands
EALTHY EARTY and APPY
It is what you "ARE" not what you "WERE" that counts today in the constant struggle for supremacy in the Social, Laboring and Commercial World. When Ambition deserts you and your Vitality Is at ebb tide, when you are overworked in brain or body and your nerves lack Vim VITALIS by reason - of its very nature reaches deep into the seat of the trouble and builds up the weakened and debilitated system. SWEET'S VITALIS, the remarkably effective reconstructive tonic is benefiting thousands, old and young, it will do as much for you. Sold and recommended by any
ui yujgiey 5 o stores, a viiaiis a
specialist is at yuigiey s store, 806 Main St., where he is daily explaining the merits of this effective tonic.
u
Diamonds
Under present market conditions it is particularly Important to be ultra-critical about the quality of any diamond you may purchase. The rapid and phenomenal advances in the price of rough diamonds have encouraged the offering of the lower grade stones. We wish to reiterate the statement that we have not permitted market conditions to influence our diamond policy. Only first-class stones will be found here and due to fortunate purchases, prices are the same as they were before the recent advances. We urge a comparison of goods and prices. 0. E. DICKINSON Eastern Indiana's Largest Exclusive Jewelry House.
.PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY
LEVI S. MILLER, CHIROPRACTOR If the spine is right the Man is right InvestigatA Knollenberg's Annex, 2nd Floor . Pioiie 1868
BARGAINS IN
SECOND-HAND BICYCLED
We have several second-hand and one slightly used Bicycle which we '
auuov wiA ai vuw m ui uci iu lildtc 1UUU1 lUT our LARGE STOCK OF NEW BICYCLES Come in now and buy one of these for second hand wheels are alway scarce in the spring. " ' -
BICYCLES and REPAIRING 8 South 7th Street
lo m
Your HnsWd Is Interested
I jn Wash-Day Economies? i Jit is to his interest to save i you, the clothes,and the cqs L f the laundry. -"fThi" HortonjHectric 'VVaslierfand Wringer i$lmpnesllaundryoperations. Electrically driven and eleo! trically controlled, Frictionliss ma- ; chine-cut geara, a high-class, durable ' idee trie motor, a swinging, reversals .wringer, and a safety wringer-release (are a few of the Special Hortonj Electric features. Ask us to explain its aftvantsers and. its. fwt-vaa
L
Weiss
Fornitare Store
J
EZZ2E
Bead, Leather Silk Bags The latest effects in the most stylish and original shapes ever shown in Richmond. Do you want a purse or bag that is strictly up-to-date and different? See our line. Prices from $1 to $6 JENKINS a co. Richmond's Foremost Jewelers
1
DUNING'S PHONE 2174 43 NORTH 8TH STREET
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