Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 313, 13 November 1917 — Page 12
MARKETS .
CORN PRICES FALL GN CHICAGO MARKET
CHICAGO. No. .5.-Coru prices weakened toda,v t Urtly u instability of tho Nx Nort. nvK luarKFt. Decline here, feor,-
checked by fcUuacy Kut telUns tnj
the face of a iwemur-ut minimum on hog value ami itm vowsosvxmt Uklihoud of sutaUuvl demand for com to food on farm.. Abrn- of any JRH.of seasonable eohl weather tended also to handicap th tr. Oiwnins quotations, which ranged from I S off to l-2c advance werv followed by a moderate general setback. Oats were depressed by liberal commission house selling. The market was governed by the same general reasons as corn. Strength in the hog market lifted provisions. Stock yard interests were the principal buyers.
breeding ewes, $6.5014.00; good to best spring lambs, $15.5016.50.
GRAIN QUOTATIONS
CHICAGO, Nov. 13. Tho. range of futures on the Chicago Board of Trade follows:
No trading.
EAST BUFFALO, Nov. 13 Cattle Receipts, S50; market steady. Veala Receipts, 300; market 6low, $7 .00gri4.R0. .Hon Receipts, 6,000; active and trom:; heavy, $18.15 13.25; mixed, $17.S0! 18.15; yorkers, $17.8518.00; llsht yorkers. $17.2517.50; pigs, $17 ii 17.25 ;-roughs, $16.2516.75; stags, $14 001500. Shep and Lambs Receipts, 2,600; slow; lambs, $12.0016.85; yearlings, flVOOvif 14,00; wethers, $11.2511.50; ms. $6.00Jf 10.50; mixed 6heep $10.75 11.00. , , - ,
PRODUCE MARKET
CHICAGO. Nov. 13. Butter Market Higher; creamery firsts, 3844c. Kegs Receipts. 5,836 cases; market higher; firsts. 44g?44tc; lowest, 39c. Live PoultryMarket higher; fowls, 17S?21c; springs, 20c Potato Market Lower; receipts, 45 cars. Minn.. Wis. and Mich, bulk, ?1.752.00; do sacks. $2.102.20.
Wheat Dec. . . May .. Dec. .. May . . Nov. ., Jan. . ,
Open.
Low. Close.
High.
Corn .120 121 .113 117 y8
Oats . 63U 64i 62 . 64 64 63 Lard
120
24.47 24.75
t 24.40
121
116 "s 64 4 64 27.22 24.75
TOLEDO, O., Nov. 13. Wheat $2.17. Cloverseed Old $16.25; New $16.30, Dec. and Jan., $16.25; Feb. $16.20;
Mar. $16.02. Alsike $14.35; Dec. $14.35;
$14.55: Mar. $14.55. Timothy Qld $3.50; new $3.62; Dec. $3.65; Mar. $3.80.
Feb.,
CHICAGO, Nov. 13. Corn. No. 2 yellow, $2.28; No. 3 yellow, $2.25; No. 4 yellow, nominal, Oats No. 3 white, 64Vi66; standard, 6563. Pork Nominal. Ribs Nominal. Lard $27.3027.40.
CINCINNATI, Nov. 13. WheatNo. 2 red winter, $2.17; No. 3, $2.13 St2.uy2; No. 4, $2.102.12; sales, 6 cars. Com No. 2 white, $2.202.25; No. 3 white, $2.20f?2.23; No. 4 white, $2.18 (2.20; No. 2 yellow, $2.202.21; No. 3 yellow, $2.202.21; No. 4 yellow, J2t182.20; No. 2 mixed, $2 20; sales, 5 cars. . Oats No. 2 white, 64y2c; No. 2 mixed. 620 63c. Rye No. 2. $1.7301.74; No. $1.71 1.73; No. 4, $1.691.71; sales, 1 car.
LIVE STOCK PRICED
CINCINNATI, O , Nov. 13 Buttercreamery, whole milk extra, 46c; centralized extra. 43c; do firsts, 41V.C; do seconds, 39c; dairy fancy,
S9c ; packing stock, No. 1, 32c; No. 2, 2Sc. , Eggs Prime first loss off, 47c; firsts, 46c; ordinary firsts, 39c; seconds, 37c. Poultry Broilers over 2 pounds, 19c; do, 2 pounds and under, 22c; roosters, 15c; hens 5 lbs., and over, 20c; do ZV lbs., and over, 19 cents; do under 3 pounds, 15c; hen turkeys, 8 lbs., and over, 25c; toms, 10 lbs., and over, 25c; culls, 8c; white ducks, 3 pounds and over, 20 cents; colored do, 18c; geese choice full feather, 17c; do medium, 16c; guineas, $3.25 per dozen: younger guineas, 1U lbs., and over, $4.505 doz; do under 1 lbs., $3.50(4.00. Potatoes Early Ohio, $4.755.00 per barrel; home-grown, $4.75i5i5.00. Cabbage Home-grown, $2.002.25 per bbl. Tomatoes Hothouse, 15 20c per lb. Onions Home-grown, $3.754.00
per 100 lb. sack; Spanish, $2 per crate.
FRUIT & VEGETABLES (Corrected Daily by Eggemeyers) SELLING PRICES
Opening of Fall Season to Take Place at Murray Next Saturday; Theatre is Newly Decorated
Vegetables. Beets, 5c a bunch; carrots, 5c; green beans, 12c; cabbage, 10c a. pound; cucumbers, 15c, or 2 for 25c; egg plants 25c; curly lettuce, 15c lb.; dry onions, Bermuda onions, 10c Spanish 15c lb.; cabbage, 4c per lb.; lb.; Shallot t onions, 10c per bunch; green mangoes, 30c doz.; red mangoes, 30 50c doz.; parsley 5c bunch; parsnips, 5c lb.; new potatoes, 3c lb.; sweet potatoes, Sc lb.; okra, 35c per lb.; dill, 15c per bunch; oyster plant, 5c bunch, breakfast radishes 5c bunch; new turnips, 5c lb.; finger peppers, 5o doz.; Brussels Sprouts, 35c quart; red cabbage, 10 lb.; kahl. 10c per lb.;
ripe tomatoes, 35c per lb.; Sorghum'
molasses, 30c per quart $1.10 per gal.; kunquots, 35c per quart. Fruits. , New apples, Grimes Golden, 8c; bananas, 7c lb.; grape fruits 15c; Japanese persimmlons, 10c each; pineapple, 20c each; lemons, 40c a doz.; limes, 30c doz.; oranges, 40c doz.; Honey Dew melons, 50c each; Bartlett pears, 5c each; home-grown Bartlett Dears, 10c lb.; alligator pears, 35c each; California plums, 15c lb.; summer squashes, 1015c; Hubbard squashes 3c lb.; cider, 50c per bal.; Concord grapes, 35c per basket; California pears 6 for 25c; Honeydew melons, 25c, 40c and 50c; fresh cocoanuts, 10c. Miscellaneous. Hickory nuts, 10c per lb.; walnuts. 15c per peck; eggs, 47c; creamery butter, 50c. Fry chickens, 35c lb. PRODUCE (Paying Prices.) (Corrected Daily by Eggemeyer and Sons.) Butter 40c; chickens, old, 16c; fryers, 18c; eggs, 42c; potatoes new, $1.50
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
NEW YORK, Nov. 13. Closing quotations on the New York Stock Exchange follow: American Can., 327gAmerican Locomotive, 50. American Beet Sugar, 72, American Smelter, 73. Anaconda, 56. Atchison, 84. Bethlehem Steel, bid. 77. Canadian Pacific, 131. Chesapeake & Ohio, 47. Great Northern Pfd., 9214. New York Central G8. No. Pacific, 86. So. Pacific, 81. Pennsylvania, 48. U. S. Steel Com., 92.
CINCINNATI, O., Nov. 13. HogsReceipts, 5.000; market, steady. Cattle Receipts, 1,100; market, steady. Calves Market steady, $5.00(313.00. Sheep Receipts, 400; market steady. : Lambs Market slow.
PITTSBURGH, Pa., Nov. 13. Hogs Receipts. 2.O0O; market steady; heavies, $17. 701) r 17.75 ; heavy yorkers, J17.5017.60: lieht yorkers, $16.75 17.10; pigs, $16.5017.00. " "' Sheep and lambs Receipts, 500; market higher; top sheep, $11.60 top lambs, $16.50. Calves Receipts, 200; market, steady; top, $14.50.
CHICAGO. Nov. 13. Hogs Receipts, 24.000; market strong; bulk of sales. $17.25fa 17.60; lights, $16.90& 17.60; mixed, $16.90ft 17.70; heavy, $16.90(fi 17 "0: rough, $16.9O17.70; pigs, $13.50S7l7.25. Cattle Receipts, 16,000; market, weak; steers. $6.85!??16.40: western steers, $5.85?i 13.40; stockers and feed
ers. $3.65111.50;. cows and heifers, .44.5011.75; calves, $6.75.-0:13.00. Sheep Receipts. 1,400; market stendy: wethers, SS. 70$?12. 85; lambs, $12.0016.65.
LOCAL QUOTATIONS
GLEN MILLER HRICES Hogs.
Heavies, 260 to 300 lbs., ......$16.00 Heavy Yorkers, 160 to 180 lbs.,. .$15.50 Light YorKers, 130 to 160 lbs... $12.00 Medium ISO to 225 lbs. $15.0015.50 Pigs $8.0010.00 Stags $8.00( 12.00 Sows .. $12$14 Cattle. Butcber steers, 1,000 to 1.E00 lbs .$8.009.00 Butcher cows $5 00(fJ8.0i Heifers $6.008.00 Bulls $5.007.00 Calves. Choice veals ..$12.00 Heavies and lights .$5.00(7.00
Sheep.
Indianapolis Representative Sales HOGS
...126 .120 .if;r .212 ...260 STEERS 693 ...805 1034 ...949 ...1030 HEIFERS 403 . 601
3 44 55 25 29 3 30 19 10 2
$15.00 16.90 17.50 17.60 17.75 8.00 9.25 9.90 10.50 11.00
10 16 4
2 1 3 1 1 1 1
COWS-
..790 .1150 .1030
815 935 1095 1260 1143 BULLS 896 ......1010 i3:5 1170 1410 CALVES ...320 100 130 150 ..148
5.50 7.25 8 25
8.50 10.00 5.00 6.00 7.25 8.00 8.75 6.25 7.25 7.75 7.85 9.25 8.00 10.00 11.00 12.50 13.00
The opening of the Murray theatre will take place on Saturday. November 17, conducted on the same general lines and offering the same big attractions as the Strand and Rialto theatres In New York, and Circle theatres in Indianapolis. The Introduction of Triangle and Artcraft photoplays to local theatregoers, presented with all those Important artistic accessories and effects of atmosphere which distinguish the above mentioned theatres from all other playhouses, will unquestionably mark an epoch in the annals of motion pictures locally. The silent drama "will reign supreme at the Murray theatre, where Triangle and Artcraft productions will include stories selected solely for their picture merit, and while great names are in the list of authors, the reduction will be the principal thing. A glance ' at the names of the players for the opening week will showr casts
of uniform excellence have been selected for the various plays, and will also disclose the entire absence of antiquated "stars" of questionable ability, whose days have long since gone by.
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Charles Ray In Triangle Play, "The Clodhopper."
dollar beauties. Margery Wilson ap
pears as Ray's country sweetheart, while others in the cast are Thomas
Guise, Charles French and Lydia
Knott.
.$12.00
Spring lambs
FEED QUOTATIONS (Corrected Daily by Omer Whelan.) Paying Oats, 55c; old corn, $1.65; new corn, $1.10; rye, $1.60; straw, $7 50 a ton. Selling Cotton seed meal, 57.00 a ton, $3.00 a cwt.; middlings, $48.00 a ton. $2.50 a cwt.: bran, $38.00 a ton, $2.00 a cwt.; salt, $2.35 a barrel; tankage, $87.00 a ton; $4.50 a cwt.; oil meal, $60.00 a ton; $3.25 a cwt.
INDIANAPOLIS. Nov. 13. Receipts Hogs, 8,500. higher; cattle, 800, active; calves. 350, steady ; sheep, 450, Ftrong'. Steers Prime corn fed steers, $13.00 and up. $15 16; good to choice steers 13no and up, $14.00 15.00; com$13.00514.00; good to choice steers. 1150 to 1250, $12.50'fl3.50; common to medium steers, 1150 to 1250, $11.00 12.25; good to choice steers, S00 to 11C0. $9.00(5 '11.00; common to medium steers, 800 to 1100. $6.509.50; good heifers. $S.00?i 10.00; fair to medium to choice yearlings, Sllig'lS.OO. Heifers snd Cows Good to choice heifers, $7.00 7.75; common to fair heifers. $5.0006.75; good to choice cows, $7.7c(g9.; fair to medium cows, $6.75 7.50; canners and cutters, $4.00 6.50. Bulls and Calves Good to prime export bulls, $7.75(5 9.00; good to choice butcher bulls. $7.50 8.00 common to fair bulls, $6.007.25; common to best veal calves, $8.0013.00. Stockers and Feeding Cattle Good to choice steers. 700 lbs., and up $8.75 10. common to fair steers under 700 lbs., !p6.508.75; good to choice steers under 700 lbs.. 7.50 8.25; com- - . . rr lkn
mon to tair steers, uu .ei ,m $5.50 6.75; medium to good heifers, $67.00; medium to good feedijg cows, $5.256.75; springers, $5.50 8.00; stock calves. 250 to 430 pounds. 87.50 10.00 Hogs Best ftwnes, 190 and up, $17.60 17.85; good to choice lights, $17.50 175; common to medium, $16.7517.50; light pigs $13.0015.75; best pigs, $16.0016.75; roughs and packers. $15.5016.75; bulk of sales, . $17.50017.75. Sheep and Lambs Good to choice to medium yearlings, $1015.75: common to fair yearlings, $9.5010.75; hnrs. 100 lbs.. S729: cood to choice
Four languages were used last year in the preaching of the Rev. Paul Burgess, Presbyterian missionary in the Quezaltenango field of Guatemala, according to the Guatemala News. He spoke in Spanish, . English, German and Cakchiquel.
Teddy Will Address Suffrage Meeting
NEW YORK, Nov. 13. A "victory" mass meeting in celebration of votes for women won in the recent election will be held at the Metropolitan. Opera House on Nov. 20, on the eve of the opening of the forty-ninth annual convention of the New York state woman suffrage party. Theodore "Roosevelt will speak. - Women with their new found ballots, have already become an impor
tant political tactor In the state. Gov. Whitman, it is announced, is taking steps to- extend to them the right to take part in the spring primaries and Mayor-elect John F. Hylan announces women will be named on the newboard of education. It is reported women also will be offered other important city positions by the new mayor.
! v AARGVEftiTt Clark
1 'BAEtf LWrglarT J8r PICTURE Marguerite Clark, in "Bab's Burglar," a picturization of the book by Mary Roberts Rhinehart, will head the program for the opening of the fall tneatncal season on Saturday and Sunday, November 17 and 18. The story which appeared in the Saturday Evening Post, was followed by thousands of readers all over the country who will recognize in Miss Clark a perfect "type" for Bab. She has been surrounded by a most competent cast, including Frank Loses, as her father, Helen Greene, as her sister, Leone Morgan, as her friend, Richard Bartnelmes, - as her youthful suitor and WTilliam Hinckley, as her more mature lover, who is just beginning to sea the charm of the "sub-debutante." To, all well informed followers of the photoplay the name of Charles
Ray is a familiar one, and an excel
lent attraction is guaranteed when
this popular Triangle star is the featured player. For Monday and Thursday, November 19 and 20, "The Clodhopper" discloses a new phase of his
versatility. In this picture Ray intro
duces a new and certainly original
dance called the "Clodhop," in which
he is ably supported by a bevy of little clodhoppers known as the billion
9 X I ' -A Ml ' mf&t r S ' I
choruses, dancers and big Jazz bands of a pretentious Broadway cafe that it might be called a gigantic musical comedy on canvas. Charles Gunn, Margaret Thompson, Darrel Foss, Charles K. French, J. Frank Burko and Louis Durham support Miss Thom
as.
Very seldom Is a story bo ably pro
duced and with such a remarkable
cast as "The Flame of the Yukon," which features in the stellar role that wonderful actress, Dorothy Dalton, the
attraction for Friday and Saturday. November 23 and 24 The story is
during the period of '98, when the gold mad crowds pack the little town
of Hoye City, Alaska. Dorothy Dalton appears as the "Flame," a harpy of the dance hall. Many thrilling epi-
sides are enacted in the dance hall, where gambjers, miners and all types of men meet to try their luck with the roulette wheel. In one exciting
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Dorothy Dalton In Triangle Play, "The Flame of the Yukon."
scene the "Flame" succeeds in breaking the bank and getting the money
COUNTY COUNCIL NAMES DIRECTOR OF FOOD SUPPLY
Nomination Submitted To State BoarcJ Telegram Is Made Public.
Nomination of a county food director has been made by the members o the Wayne County Defense Council
and submitted to the State Council of Defense for ratification. No action has been taken on this nomination by the State Council, but a prompt con
firmation is anticipated. The name of the food director is being withheld until his nomination has been confirmed. This office is one of the most important on the County CouncU of Defense. This officer will have supervision over the marketing of foodstuffs, the purpose being to see that fair and equitable prices are maintained. Dr. Harry E. Barnard, of Indianapolis, Indiana, food administrator, has made public a telegram recently received by him from Miss M. E. B. Culbertson, secretary of the Wayne County Council of Defense, at the time the food conservation campaign was being conducted in the county. The telegram reads: Rumors Are SDeedy. "Rumors are traveling faster than the food card agents and it is difficult indeed to persuade people that they are not signing somethine over to the government when they sign the food enrollment cards." This telegram is additional confirm
ation to reports published in The Pal-
.AT A. V. V, - If-vn rt
crooked game. An exact reproduction li" ,PB ?f "food
of the streets of Nome in the days' of
the gold rush is seen. Here a realistic fight takes place between Kenneth Harlan, as the Stranger, and Melbourne McDowell, as Black Jack Hovey. A company of nearly 300 people, including thirty Eskimos and their dog teams, enact their parts in this scene. Others in the cast are Margaret Thompson, Carl Ullman and May Palmer. In addition to the features above mentioned, each change of program will include a series of travel pictures covering a comprehensive tour of the world, and the comedy element will give added strength to the entertainment. There is as great a difference in the ways of showing motion pictures as there is in, the magnificent artistic productions and the cheap films of the nickelodeon, and it may be said conservatively that motion
OLIVE THOMAS On Wednesday and Thursday, November 21 and 22, Olive Thomas, the noted "Follies" beauty and Harrison Fisher girl, with a company of 500 people and settings that surpass in magnificense any yet brought to the screen, will appear in "An Even Break." Although this is "silent drama," it photographs so effectively the
conservation campaign mat verv ac
tive German propaganda was being employed in Wayne county, especially in Richmond, in an effort to defeat tho aims of the food conservation movement. According to Dr. Barnard's report Albion was another Indiana community where German propaganda was effective during food conservation week. , Spotted the House." Albion school children whose mothers had signed food pledge cards reported to their teachers that their mothers hd declined to display their cards for the reason that a man. whose name is now known to the Department of Justice, it is said, that the display of these window cards spotted1 the house "for the Germans, who
would get them", when the enemy soldiers entered the town. Dr. Barnard said that Mayor McClellan of Auburn had reported that a rumor was persistent there that the government would fix a maximum price for hogs of $10 to $12 per hundred weight, and that as result the food conservation campaign was seriously handicapped.
MISS MARIE HAMILTON
Planned For War in Time of Peace
WASHINGTON, Nov. 13. Admiral j
Californians say there is no sea coast sand binder that surpasses in effectiveness Ammophila arenaria, sea bent grass. It has done more to
hold the shifting dunes during the 1
building of Golden Gate park, San Francisco, than any other agency.
T
RAISE POULTRY-PRODUCE EGGS By P. G. HOLDEN.
HE high price of feed and the high price of poultry have combined in
causing farmers to greatly reduce their fUiks and as a result we are facing a serious shortage in poultry and eggs at a time when they are badly needed to help feed the world.
We must not forget that while feed is high and while poultry brings good prices, nothing else costs so little to raise on a farm as chickens, and that eggs are bringing such high prices we cannot afford to shut off the source of theii supply. Large flocks of poultry are needed on every farm, and every farmer should keep his young pullets, which will soon be his best layers. Get rid of the roosters. Avoid wasteful methods in handling poultry and in marketing eggs. Enormous Waste in Eggs. The waste in eggs in the United States every year amounts to nearlj $30,000,000. It is estimated that 17 per cent of all the eggs produced in this country become unfit for human food before reaching the consumer because of careless methods of handling. We should help to prevent this loss by producing Infertile eggs, by not letting hens nest on the damp ground, by keeping the nests clean, by not washing the eggs, by being careful not to crack them while handling, by gathering eggs daily, by storing them in a cooL dry place and by marketing them at least once a week twice a week if possible. Few people understand that eggs are almost as perishable as meat or milk They belong to the same class of food, but because they are enclosed in a hard shell, many of us think they will stand any kind of treatment. , We will need poultry and eggs. We must produce and conserve them.
William S. Benson, charged with "the
operations of the fleet and with the preparations and readiness of plans for its use in war," is the most important man in the navy today and yet, save within "naval circles, little is heard of the man himself or of the work he has accomplished. Admiral Benson has served as chief of naval operations since May of 1915 and long before America's entry into the-, war he had prepared and completed many plans of naval policy and action that would meet almost all wartime eventualities. That so little is known of h;m even among many men high in Washington affairs is most likely the result of his quiet methods. Decides Naval Questions. Deciding matters of naval strategy in home and foreign waters, looking after the details of every phaso of America's naval war program ashore or afloat, tnd supervising all matters relating directly or indirectly to naval war plans, these are the most important of the duties which Admiral. Benson has to perform. From a practical viewpoint he is commander in chiaf of the navy ashore and afloat. He is to the navy what the chief of staff is to the army. Admiral Benson's decision is virtually final. He must coordinate all the
ramifications of the nation's naval policy into such shape that they do not conflict and that they do not retard the most important plans. In the vast complicated machinery of naval endeavor there must be no short circuits, no wires crossed, no conflicting plans. And Admiral Benson's duty is to see that this rule is effectively carried out. Had War Plans Ready. The war games in which the battleships of the fleet as well as other crafts participated before this nation's entry into the war were initiated by Admiral Benson, who widened the scope of previous plans so they included possibilities or real war. When war between the United States and Germany broke out Admiral Benson was asked to draw up a plan for the
protection of the Atlantic coast and for the acquisition of ships that were lacking. It was believed it might take a month to complete it. Admiral Benson went to his desk and brought it out in complete form. He had thought
I : i J m-
Admiral William S. Benson, such a plan might be needed and had
used his spare time getting it ready,
! An example of this trait was strik
ingly shown on tb.3 occasion of a recent statement issued by the committee on public information concerning a brush between an American destroyer and a German U-boat. The statement indicated that the submarine had certainly been sunk because oil was discovered on the water after the explosion of a depth charge. Some weeks prior to this Admiral Benson hed explained to the newspaper men that 'oil on the water meant little, as the Germans simply set oil free sometimes' as a sort of camouflage to induce the destroyer to leave the scene under the impression that the submarine had been destroped. On the other hand the statement by the committee emphasized the iniportanco of the oil. The admiral was asked about thh; phase of the committee's report. All the correspondents expected him to frame his reply in such a manner that it would as nearly as possible bear out the deduction of the committee. But his answer demonstrated how facts are always of prime importance to him in every matter pertaining to the navy. "The oil on the water does net mean that a submarine has been sunk," he explained quietly. "Our information shows that this must not be taken as indicative of the destruction of the submarine." Admiral Benson is apt to disregard
civilian conceptions of censorship
pictures when In future presented at the Mprray theatre will prove a delightful surprise and an artistic revelation. The stage has been newly set in a great floral and leaf design, with mass-, ive pillars, fountains, electrical and mechanical effects, duplicating . the magnificent stage setting of the Strand Theatre, New York, ind rivaling that of any other theatre in the country. The Murray will at ail tim.is maintain musical programs of the highest order, programs that may well serve as an education in the very best of mpsic. These include a big concert orchestra of ten pieces and Miss Marie Hamilton, soprano, in selections which are specially arranged to harmonize with the photo dramatic entertainment. The management will endeavor to furnish an entertainment with a standard of striking worth that will soon establish the Murray theatre in the same class as the Circle in Indianapolis. Matinee performances will be given daily commencing at 1:30 with prices five, ten and fifteen cents. In the evening the entertainments start at 7:00 o'clock and all seats will be reserved for each performance at ten.
fifteen and twenty cents with box
seats at twenty-five cents. Reservations can be made six days in advance.
Reserve your favorite seats now.
Today, when a new anti-submarine 1 rules on naval affairs. For example
device or a novel plan to protect ships
comes to his attention, Admiral Benson suspends judgment until he can be sure. If there is a means of finding out the merit or lack of merit of the scheme he will be in favor of having the investigation, made. His theory is that one out of a thousand of
these ideas may be of practical value. ;
The important thing to his mind is not to escape the trouble of the unsuccessful experiment, but to find the one idea of value. Believes in Frankness. A dominant characteristic of Admiral Benson is his frankness and unswerving loyalty to definite facts regardless of w hat they lead to. He believes in seeing things as they are and not as he would like them to be. If a situation looks bad he admits it frankly and seeks for a remedy. But he does not attempt to deceive himself into believing that it is not bad nor does he seek to picture it in rosy colors to others.
there was the greatest secrecy about
the most general phases of the cam
paign against submarines until Ad
miral Benson happened one day to be acting secretary. He answered all
proper questions and saw no reason
why the answers should not be print ed.
On the question of convoying ships
and taking them in groups it was like
wise Admiral Benson who explained
the matter in a general but interesting way. He saw no reason why he should not. But if he had stopped to
Inquire of persons charged with en
forcing censorshiy rules he would
have found that he was violating the
regulations
Much of Admiral Benson's time at home is spent in working on the constantly increasing maze of problems which come under his attention. His home life is simple and ideal. His two sons have adopted the navy as a career and his daughter is married to an instructor at the Naval Acadc-my. '
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CASH FOR CREAM 48 Cents This Week. Bring us a can of cream, see it tested and get your can and check immediately. Ship us a can of cream, we will return can and check same day cream is received. Honesty and accuracy in weights and tests guaranteed. We invite inspection. Pay us a visit and get acquainted. Open for business at all times. Richmond Cash Cream Station 37 So. Sixth St, Richmond, Ind.
