Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 153, 9 May 1918 — Page 10
fAGE TEN
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. THURSDAY, MAY 9, 1918
MARKET
CORN HARDENS ON CHICAGO MARKET
(By AocUted PrM) CHICAGO, May 9. Corn displayed a good deal of strength today, owing more or leas to prospects of unseasonable cold. Frost tonight was predicted for Kansas and Nebraska and there was much resultant covering by shorts. Besides, assertions were current that receipts were likely to diminish in the near future. Opening rw. which varied from unchanged
irnr in 7-Se higher, with May
197 i. and Julv 146 1-2 to 143 7-8,
fniiowrd bv moderate further
gains. " t . Gossiu of a revival of export de
mand gave the oats market an upward slant. Confirmation of such talk, however, was lacking. After opening 3-8 to 1 7-8 higher with July
67 6-8 to 68. prices naraenea a mi.
GRAIN QUOTATIONS
CHICAGO, May 9. Butter Market lower; creamery firsts, 35 42c. Eggs
RecelDts. 18.165 cases: firsts, un
changed. Live poultry Market, high' er; fowls, 25 l-2c. Potato market unchanged; receipts, 28 cars.
NEW YORK STOCK LIST
NEW YORK. May 9. American Can., 44. American Locomotive, 67. American Beet Sugar, 741iAmerican Smelter, 81UAnaconda, 56. Atchison, 84. Bethlehem Steel bid, 86U. Canadian Pacific, 148. Chesapeake and Ohio, 59 . Great Northern Pfd., 91. New York Central. 71. Northern Pacific, 87 ViSouthern Pacific, 84. Pennsylvania, 44. U. S. Steel Com., 107U-
CHICAGO, May 9. The range of futures on the Chicago Board of Trade follows: No trading In wheat. Corn Open. High. Low. Close. May 127 127 127 Vi 127 July 146A 147 146U 17 OatsMay 74U 76 74 U 75 July 67 68 67 67 Lard Julv 25.80 25.97 25.75 25.77 Sept .26.15 26.15 20.10 26.12 TOLEDO, O., May 9 WheatPrime cash. No. 1 red. $2.20. Cloversced Prime cash, Jis.wu. Oct.. $14.75. Alsike Prime cash. $lo.25. Timothy Prime cash, old $.., new $3.75, Sept. $4.30, Oct. $4 05. CHICAGO. May 9. Corn No. 2 yel
low, nominal. No. 3 yellow, ?i.6Ja $1.63, No. 4 yellow $1.50 Oats No. 3 white. 77 79; standard 78 79 Vs. Pork Nominal. Ribs $23.20 23.82. Lard $25.40. CINCINNATI, May 9. Local prices of wheat are quoted on the zone basis of $2.24 Baltimore for No. 2 red, less lc per bush, less the export rate from uoint of shipment, plus the local rate loint of bhipment in Cincinnati. Corn 3 white, $1.70$1.75; 4 white $1.50$1.60; 3 yellow, $1.553$.65; 4 vellow. $1.40 CO) $1.50; white. 85c $1.40. yellow, 85c $1.30. mixed. 85c $1.30. Oats 2 white, 76c71c; 2 mixed. 72c73c.
LOCAL QUOTATIONS
(Corrected Dally by Omer G Whelan.) Paying Oats. 70c; new corn, $1.35 1.50: rye, $1.85; straw $6.00 a ton Selling Cotton seed meal, $58.00 a ton. $3.00 a cwt: tankage. $93.00 a ton. $4.75 a cwt; oil meal. $63.50 a ton, $3.25 a cwt.
FRUIT & VEGETABLES (Corrected Daily by Eggemeyefs) SELLING PRICES
LIVE STOCK PRICES
INDIANAPOLIS, May 9 Hogs Receipts. 8,000; lower. Cattle Receipts, 1.500; steady. Calves Receipts 600, lowerSheep Receipts 50, steady. Steers Prime corn fed steers, 1,500 and up, $15 23 $17.10; good to choice steers, 1,300 and up, $15.7516.2o; common to medium steers. 1,300 and up, $15.00 15.75; good to choice steers to medium steers, 1.150 to 1.250.
$14.5015.25; good to cnotce steers
PRODUCE Butter. 35c; eggs, 30c; potatoes, 75c; old hens, 20c. Onions, yellow, $1.752.00 per 100 lbs.; white $1.75 2.00 per 100-lb. sack; onion sets, 15c per lb. VEGETABLES Wax beans, 20 cents per pound; asparagus, 5c bunch; new cabbage. So lb.; brussels sprouts, 35c; green beans, 20c per lb.; carrots, 3 to 5c lb.,; spring carrots, Sc bunch; spring beets 10c bunch; cauliflower 1525c head: cucumbers 510c; egg plants 15c:
kohlrabi 10c bunch; leaf lettuce 20r pound; head lettuce. 30c lb. trimmed; 20c per pound, untrimmed; French endive, 60c lb.; leak. Kc bunch: mushrooms, 75c pound; onions, 3 cents per pound; new potatoes, 6c lb., new Texas 8c lb; shallots, 8c bunch; young onions 5c bunch, 3 for 10c; oyster plant, 5c bunch; parsley, 5c bunch; mangoes, 5c each; radishes, 5c bunch; spinnach. 15c per lb.; toms, 25c pound; turnips, 3 to 5 cents per pound; water cress, 5c per bunch; artichokes, 20c each; celery, 8, 10 and 15c bunch: parsnips, 5c per lb.; potatoes. $1.00 1.25 per bushel; Jersey sweets. 10c per pound; rhubarb, 5c bunch: green peas, 20c lb.; kahl, $15c pound. FRUJTS Apples 3 to 8c per pound: grape fruit, 1015c: lemons 40c per doz.; bananas, 8c lb; limes 30c per doz.; pomegranates, 8 io 10c each; oranges. 40c to Oc doz.: pineapples. 20c each. MISCELLANEOUS Eggs,, 35c per dozen; strawberries, 30c per quart; butter, creamery. 52c; country, 43c per pound; sassafras, 5c 10c per bunch.
1242 JACKSON WOMEN REGISTER
CAMBRIDGE CITY, May 9. A total of 1,242 women have been registered in
Jackson township. The number refusing to be registered was 28. The
child's welfare regist ration will begin
May 20. This is not optional but mandatory. All chlldlren under six years
of age will be weighed and measured
and data carefully recorded. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Oldham, re-j cently married, were pleasantly surprised when the members of the Baptist Sunday school, of which Mr. Old-; ham is superintendent, visited their home and presented them with a number of valuable gifts. The occasion was enlivened with games and other forms of amusement. . . .Mrs. Willard Petro spent Tuesday in Richmond attending to business and visiting with friends Doctors W. R. Littell, J. N. Study, J. E. Wright and H. B. Boyd of this place attended the meeting of physicians held at the Commercial club rooms, Richmond, Tuesday evening Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Hicks spent
Sunday in Oxford. O., visiting their daughter Miss Helen, a student in the Oxford college Mr. and Mrs. Adam Bortsfield were the guests Sunday of j friends In Indianapolis. . .Mr: and Mrs. H. B. Miller went to Hollandsburg, O., Tuesday to attend the funeral of their niece, Mrs. Squire Chenoweth The marriage of John E. Henley of Dublin, and Miss Hazel Ohmit of Cambridge City, was solemnized by Rev. F. C. McCormick, Saturday evening. . . .Dan iel Chapman, W. I. Squier, C. S. Kitterman and W. B. Woodard attended a battalion meeting of the Indiana State militia at Newcastle Sunday afternoon. ... .Mrs. Nellie Jameson has returned to her home in Chicago, after a visit of several days with friends here and at Pershing .Mrs. Pearl VanBus-
kirk is the guest this week of her friend , Mrs. Nan Robinson at Weirton, W. Va Miss Julia Hogan, after a visit of several days with her aunt. Mrs. Julia Fraunberg, and other relatives and friends here, returned to her home in Dallas, Texas, Tuesday. Her brother, David Hogan, a former Cambridge City boy, holds a prominent position in the army at Camp Lawton, Okla Mrs. Lydia Huddleston has gone to Muncie to spend a week with her daughter, Mrs. Charles Gilmore.
Fourth street; James B. Littlejohn, ai Smith Tenth street: John Yesken-
ir-ir Ponnsvivania. Railroad camp cook! I
house; Domenico De Vincentis, 825 North Eleventh street; Frank Huggins, 226 North Fourth street; Douglas Robinson. 201 National Road; Pet
er Dyle, Kelley 'Hotel; Clarence L.' Mathews, Rural Route D; Domenico Lbbeamtr, Twelfjh and. North H streets; Harry Anos, Pennsylvania Railroad camp; Jesse Stewart, 108 South Sixth street; Louis J. Brown, 105 South Sixteenth street; Krzeamas Kolrzak, Pennsylvania Railroad camp; Leonard Armstrong, 203 North Fourth street; Joe Sockick, Pennsylvania Railroad camp ; Homas W.
Cheak, Rural Route D; Harold Perkins. 1206 Boyer street; John S. Moore. 226 South Ninth street; Dennis J. Broughal, Colonial building; Willis Sommerville, 726 South Ninth street;
Henry Meed Marshall, 402 . North Eleventh street ; Jack Procoppio,
Pennsylvania Railroad camp; Rudolph Schmidt, Pennsylvania Railroad
camp; Csiki Landor, 601 North Thir
teenth street; William Konigshanen, Pennsylvania Railroad camp; Elijah
Deese, 318 North Fourteenth street;
Francesco Lombardo, 1700 North F street; Dallas B. Wright, 1326 Main street; Charles T. Mitchell, 414 East Second street; William Newman, 600
North Nineteenth street; John Chad-.j
derton, Pennsylvania Railroad camp;
Verdie E. Dance, 620 South Seventh street; John Bencek, 307 North D street; William H. Geissberger, Pennsylvania Railroad camp; Leo W. Settles, 38 South Third Btreet.
WHITEWATER
' The Grange meeting will be held at the school house on he second week on Thursday and the fourth week on Friday. .. .Mr. and Mrs. Ira
Wright and family spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Parker Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Parker and family.
Mr. and Mrs. William Barton and family of Richmond and W. G. White spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. W.
R. Barton and son. Mrs. Tessa uiose and son, Marvin, were the guests in the afternoon. . .Mr. and Mrs. George
Weller and son of Richmond spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Dave Weller and son .... Mr. and Mrs. Moody Lamb and daughter, Ermer spent Saturday night and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. James O. Robertson and family Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Townsend and daughter spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Aus
tin... .Mr. and Mrs. Herman Thomas of Bethel and Mr. and Mrs. Grover; White and family spent Sunday with J Mr. and Mrs. Carrie White Misses'
Grace Bennett and May Parker were the guests of Edna Hill Sunday.... Mr. and Mrs. Herman Hill and family of Lynn and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Colvin and family of Arba spent Sundav with Mr. and Mrs. D. V.
Wright. Mr. and Mrs. Martin of.
Fountain City spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Burges .Mr. and Mrs. Bennie Butts and Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Stettler of Hollansburg motored to Indianapolis Sunday. .... .Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Henry and son, Willie,
spent Sunday in Collewitt, Ind Mr. and Mrs. Carrie White and Mr.j and Mrs. Will Hinshaw and daughter, Hazel. Miss Meridth Kerkly and Mrs. Sharp of Richmond spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Osro Blose and family Mr. and Mrs. Will Barton and family and W. G. White spent Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Blose and family.... The committee for gathering up flowers for Decoration are as follows: North, Ralph Roll and Forest Hill; east. Harold Blose and Donald Jennings; south. Rex Blose and Francis Wright; west. Pherby and Walter Mikesell, Denzil
Gray and Gayle Hunt. Bouquets, Mrs. Tessa Blose and Mrs. Bessie Alexander. Church committee, W. R. White,
J. O. Robertso.n Ray .Knoll, W. B
Bennett Miss Nina Blose who has been at the hospital has returned home.... Mr. and Mrs. John Hunt are spending a few days . with Mr." and Mrs. Ira Hunt and family of Richmond. .. .Donald Mutchner of Dayton and Chalmer Mutchner of Cincinnati were the guests of Mrs. Anna Mutchner Sunday. .. .Anges and Max Addleman are spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Addleman.... ..Mr. and Mrs. Eastman were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Levi Little and family Sunday.
Possibly the aviator is called an ace because he is the high card:
The scandal-monger as well as the flatterer is always sure of an audience.
BRIEFS
For Taxi, phone 2704.
Glen Miller Stock YardsMarket Every Day Call Phone 3744 SHURLEY & GAAR
NAMES OF 53
Continued From Page One. Williams, Sheffield, Ala.; Frank Smith, Coalport, Pa.; Arthur Allison, Massillon, O.; John L. Johnson, Mansfield, O.; Henry Jackson, Boston,
Ind.; Charley Rottman, Milwaukee,;
Wis.; James A. Hamilton, Alexander, Ind.; Chester R. Lamb. Eaton, O.; Goon Dat, Indianapolis, Ind.; John T. Howard, Kennard, Pa. Following are the names and last known addresses of all men who are classed as deserters who registered from Richmond: George Mann, 806 Sduth Eleventh street; Vasiley Ladutke, Pennsylvania Railroad camp r Alfred J.' Johnson, 217 North Fourth street; Charley Serke, 743 North Sixteenth street; Ernest Holstrom, Pennsylvania Railroad camp; Henry Neal, 318 North
Your bodily health to such a degree that you can't-afford to neglect them. What attention you THINK they need, my guaranteed work will make SURE. ' DON'T SUFFER PAIN When you have your teeth removed it is entirely unnecessary. Consider, the advantage of having this work done by a thoroughly tried and proven method by a dentist of experience. Our method of removing teeth is by the Somnoform method. Every Tooth Guaranteed
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Extracting 50c Full set of Teeth $5.00 up
Look for the Big Sign
p to
Free Examinations.
Jo Ac EUBALY SUCCESSOR TO DR. J. W. PRICHARD 715 Main Richmond, Ind. Open Monday, Wednesday and Saturday Evenings.
'. ti & HAnf ST. . BeiesresJSr
hi r
FRIDAY and SATURDAY Stylish COATS, SUITS and DRESSES at Reduced Prices
Incoming summer garments are forcing cut these beautiful models selling formerly at much higher prices. One look will convince the most skeptical they are worth much more than the low prices we ask.
TAFFETA SKIRTS $3.98
SILK CHILD COATS $4.75
Poplin Top Silk Petticoats $2.48
NEW SMOCKS $1.98
COATS'
$13.98
Special SILK COATS
SUITS'
Special SILK . SUITS
$17.50
DRESSES
$7.75
Special Gingham DRESSES
NO CHARGE FOR
FORMER VALUES $17.50 to $27.50 $13.50 FORMER VALUES $24.75 to $35.00 $17.98 $23.50 FORMER VALUES $15.00 to $19.75 SILK and SERGE $13.50 ALTERATIONS
Georgette WAISTS $3.98
WASH WAISTS 98c
CREPE DE CHINE WAISTS $1.98
GENERAL MERCHANDISE Butter Creamery wiinl milk extra
centralized extra, 4oc; do firsts
600 to 1.000 lbs.. $13.5014.25; fair to,4iy2; do seconds, 40: fancy dairy, 34,
mprilum vearlinzs. S9.7512.00.
Heifers and Cows Goou iu choice heifers. $11.50014.50; common to fair heifers. $9.00 10.25; fair to medium cows. $8.50 9.25; canners and cut$7.258.75. Bulls and Calves Good to prime export bulls. $12.0013.5; good to choico butcher bulls, $11.0012.00; common to fair bulls. $9.00 10.75; common to best veal calves. $9.00 $13.60; common to best heavy calves. $7 0011.00; stock calves, 250 to 450 pounds, $7.50 10.50;good to choice lights. $16.10 16.15. Stockcrs and Feeding Cattle Good to choice steers, 700 pounds and up, $10.00 11.23; common to fair steers, under 700 pounds, $9.00$10.00; good to choice steers, under 700 pounds, $9.50(&10.60; common to fair steers, under 700 rounds, $8.509 50; medium to good heifers, $7.509.00; medium
to good feeding tows, $7.co3s.su: springers. $7.008.GO. Hoss Best heavies. $17.85 17.90; medium and mixed, $17.S5; good to choice lights, $17.85 17.90; common to medium lights. $17.85; roughs and packers, $15.0016.50; best pigs, $18.001S.25; light pigs, $14.00 17.75; bulk of best hogs, $17.S3. Sheep and l-ambs Good to choice yearlings. $15.0018.00; common to fair yearlings. $13.00014.75; good to choice s?ieep. $14.0016.00; bucks 100 pounds. $10.0011.00; good to choice breeding ewes. $14.00 1G.00; common to medium spring lambs, $14.00 $18.0020.00; fair to best spring lambs $18(318.25. CINCINNATI. O.. May 9. HogsReceipts, 3.500; market steady. Cattle Receipts, 700; market slow; calves market weak. . Sheep Receipts none: market Blow. Lambs, market weak.
packing stock No. 1, 2Sc, No. 2. 24c
Eggs Prime firsts (loss off), 32c; firsts, 31c; ordinary firsts, 29c; seconds, 28,3c; goose eggs, 60c; duck eggs, 35c. Poultry Broilers under 2 lbs., 40 43c; fryers over 2 lbs.. 30c; roosters, lSc; culls, 10c; white ducks 3 lbs. and over 25c; colored do 30c; geese choice full feather. 20c; do medium, 18c; guineas $6 per dozen. Apples Pippins $5.50$6 per brl.: Ben Davis, $4.505.50; Ganos, $55.50
per brl, Jonathan $2.26260 per box. Baldwin $55.60, Greenings $66.60, Rome Beauty $67 per brl. Beets Home-grown $1501.75 per bush. Florida $2 503 per crate. Onions Yellow $1.501.65 per 100 lb. sack, white $l.501.75. Spanish $1.001.25 per crate.
Potatoes Wisconsin. $1.761.85 per 100 pound sack: Early Ohio, homegrown, $1.75 1.85 per 100 pound sack. Sweet potatoes Nancy Hall. $2.75 3.00 per hamper. JUNK (Prices paid by Sam Jaffe) No. 1 Rubber Boots and Shoes, 7 yac per lb. No. 2 Rubber Boots and Shoes, 43 4 Vic per lb. Automobile tires, 444c per lb. Inner tubes, 8lCc per lb. Bicycle tires, 3c per lb. Buggy tires. 3Vi4c per lb. Baled paper, 40c per hundred lbs. Country mixed rags, $2.30 per hundred pounds. Mixed iron. $1.10 per hundred lbs.
PITTSBURGH. Pa., May 9. Hogs Receipts. 1.500; market higher; heav
ies. $18.40$18.50; heavy Yorkers, $19.15$19.25; pigs. $18.75 $19.25. Sheep and Lambs Receipts. 500; market steady; top sheep, $14.65; top lambs. $17.C0. Calves Receipts, 100; market steady; top. $15.50 CHICAGO. May 9. Hogs Receipts, 32,000; market firm; bulk of sales, $17.73$1805: lights, $1760$1810; mixed, $17.40 $18.15; heavy. $16.70 $18.09; rough, $16.70 $17.00; pigs, $14.25 $17.50. Cattle Receipts. 13.000; market steady; steers, $10.00 $17.50; stockers and feeders. $8.75 $12.60; cows and heifers, $6.80 $14.10; . calves, $8.00&$14.00. SheepReceipts. 7,000; market steadv; sheep. $12.75$16.60; lambs, $15.60 $20.80. Australian women have discovered n plan whereby they knit two socks t. nnr.
Indianapolis Representative Sales
2 4 59 CS 70 3 2 10 25 3 8 10 4 4 3
1 1 1 3 26 4
HOGS 330 $15.00 127 17.85 201 17.83 236 17.S3 220 17.90 STEERS 453 10.00 900 13.25 1005 15.50 1294 16.40 HEIFERS 413 $ 8.00 665 10.50 602 12.50 950 13.50 COWS 585 $ 7.33 970 10.00 1000 10.50 1130 12.50 BULLS . 450 $ 8.00 1270 10.50 1720 11.25 1480 12.00 CALVES 410 $ 8.00 113 11.25 170 12.25 ..ISO 12.50
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?;nriro & &j? l J5f ' Iflf r - v H"s -v -" 1 v ,t: ' '''., , v " -f i - ,
DICKINSON TRUST COMPANY'S SAFETY DEPOSIT VAULT
ARE PA YABLE TO "BEARER" LIKE KEEP THEM SAFE
From Fire or Theft by placing them in our Fire and Burglar-Proof Vault The Best and Strongest in the City THE LARGE CIRCULAR DOOR SHOWN ABOVE WEIGHS SEVENTEEN TONS PRIVATE BOXES FOR RENT AT $2.50 PER YEAR AND UPWARD Come in and let us show you this "Modern Stronghold" &I!snintri Transit
FRIDAY & SATURDAY SPECIALS Groceries at Saving Prices. 5 lbs. Fancy Apples. 21f 3 lb. Can Monarch Coffee 75c
Large Can Apples IOC Extra Fancy Lemons, per doz 30
Can Lima Beans 10c 25c Can Sweet Beets 15c Fancy, Potatoes, peck 25c Per Bushel 95c 2YZ lb. Can Sorghum Molasses at 23c 10 lbs. Fancy Onions 15c Fancy Lettuce, lb 15c Large Can Sweetpotatoe3. . .15c 3 lbs. Turnips 10c R lbs. Dark Karo Syrup 43c Vi lbs. Dark Karo Syrup 13c 1 lbs. White Karo Syrup.. 15c Plymouth Rock Gelatine, 2 boxes for ...25c lb. Baker's Chocolate 20c 2 Cans Pork and Beans 25c Queen Olives, bottle 10c Two Large Cans Milk 25c Four Small Cans Milk 25c Calumet Baking Powder, lb. 20c Not-A-Seed Raisins, pkg 10c
LIBERTY MARKET Cor. 12th and Main Sts.
3 Bunches Rhubarb 10c Graham Wafers, lb 17c 5 Bunches Green Onions.... 10c Lux Washing Powder, 2 for.. 25c Evap. Apricots, lb 20c 2 lbs. Small Prunes 21c 2 Large Sacks Salt 15c 3 Boxes Morton Salt 25c 2 lbs. Impt. Beans 21c 2 lbs. Pink Beans 23c 2 lbs. Navy Beans 32c 2 Glasses Dried Beef 25c 3 lbs. Flake Hominy 25c 3 Rolls Toilet Paper 10c 3 Cans A. B. Hominy 25c Old Reliable Coffee, lb 25c Trocco Oleomargarine, lb.. .34c Large Can Apple Butter. .. .15c 5c pkg. Garden Seeds 4c 5 doz. Clothes Pins 10c 5 lb. Box Argo Starch 40c Butternut Crackers, lb 18c
ft
Summer Footuear
The weather is beginning to call for that light, cool footwear. We are ready with shoes and oxfords that both look and act the part and we are sure that you will be pleased with our selection. Everything that is new this year, is here, quality shoes all of them, but they are priced on the "Samples" plan. Just a little lower than anywhere else.
I A
