Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 213, 19 July 1918 — Page 10

PAGE TEN

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. FRIDAY, JULY 19, 1918.

MARKETS

WAR NEWS AFFECTS CORN MARKET

CHICAGO, July 179. Cheering -war news and favorable weather gave a decided advantage today to the bears In com. Liberal receipts tended also to pull down prices. Profit taking by shorts brought about rallies, but the effect failed to last Opening prices, which varied from unchanged figures to c lower with August $1.65 to $1.666. and Sept., $1.66 to $156. were followed by a moderate upturn and then by material breaks all around. Oats weakened with corn. Strength in Winnipeg, however, acted as something of an offset. After opening unchanged to lower with August 72 to 72', the market hardened temporarily, but later underwent a general sag. Firmness In the hog market was reflected by provisions. Sellers were scarce.

$18.40; lights $18.20018.60; butchers, $18.15018.56; packing $17.2518.00; rough $16.7517.15; pigs $1717.50. Cattle Receipts 7,000; market, good cattle steady, others dull and unevenly lower Including butchers strong. Calves Strong. Sheep Receipts 8,000; steady market. Lambs Mostly 25c lower than high time yesterday.

EAST BUFFALO. July 19. CattleReceipts 700; steady" to 25c lower.

Calves Receipts 1.200, easier, $7.00

018.25. Hogs Receipts 1,300; active and strong; heavy $18.7519.00; mixed, $19.00019.10; Yorkers, light Yorkers and pigs. $19.10019.15; roughs $16.25 16.60; stags $10.0012.50. Sheep and Lambs Receipts 200; steady and unchanged.

20,000 Porto Rican Workers Are to Be Brought to the U.S. I Ky Associated Press) ' WASHINGTON, July , 19 Twenty thousand workers have been enrolled in Porto Rico by the United States employment service and will be brought to this country at an early date, an announcement today said. The Porto Rican workers. will be given employment by the war department at wages prevailing in the districts where they

Ware Bent. They will be put to work in

the south because climatic conditions there more nearly resemble the climate of the island.

GRAIN QUOTATIONS

CHICAGO. July 19. The range of

futures on the Chicago Board of Trade follows: No trading in wheat. Corn j , Open. High. Low. Close. Aug 155 156 1514 152 Sept 156 156 151 153 Oats Aug 72 72 70Vi 70 Sept 70 hi 71 69 4 69 Lard July r... 26.15 Sept. 26.20 26.30 26.20, 26.22

TOLEDO SEED PRICES. TOLEDO. O., July 19 Cloverseed, prime cash, $16.50; . Oct.. $14,171-2; Dec, $14,071-2; Mar., $14.30. Alslke. Oct., $12.60. Timothy, prime cash, $4.20; Sept., $4.80; Oct., $4.40; Dec, $4.40; Mar., $4.55; Apr.. $4.50.

CHICAGO. July 19. Wheat No. 2 Ted. 2.23 2.24. Corn No. 2 yellow, nominal; No. 3 yellow, $1.65 $1.67; No. 4 yellow, $1.691.G1; Oats-No. 3 white, 77 78; standard, 7878. Pork Nominal. Ribs $24.1224.52. Lard, $26.00.

PRODUCE MARKET

CHICAGO, July 19. Butter market unsettled; creamery firsts, 3844c. Eggs Receipts, 8,560 cases; market lower: firsts, 3738; lowest, 35. Lie Poultry Market lower; fowls, 29c; springers, 35. Potatoes Receipts, 53 cars; market unchanged.

NEW YORK STOCK LIST

NEW YORK, July 19. The closing quotations cn the stock exchange were: American Can, 4 3-4. American Locomotive, 68 1-4. American Beet Sugar, 68. American Smelter, 79 1-8. Anaconda, ex-dlv., 57. Atchison, 85 3-4. Bethlehem Steel, 83 3-4. Canadian Pacific, 148 1-2. Chesapeake and Ohio, 57. Great Northern, pfd, 90. New York Central, 72 3-4. Northern Pacific, 88. Southern Pacific, 83 7-8. Pennsylvania. 43 7-8. U. S. Steel Com, 107 3-8.

CINCINNATI, July 19. Wheat Local prices for wheat will be computed on the zone basis of $2.38 Baltimore for No. 1 red winter wheat and its equivalent, less the export rate from point of shipment to Cincinnati. The price basis for No. 2. red winter wheat will be 3c a bushel below No. 1; No. 3 wheat will be. 4c below No. 2. Grades below No. 3 will be dealt in on sample. No. 1 red winter, track $2.23 2.21 No. 2 red winter, track $2.22 2.23 No. 3 red winter, track $2.002.19 Officially reported sales, 19 cars. Corn. No. 2 white, $2.00 2.05; No. 3 white $1.95(52.00; No. 4 white, $1.801.85; No. 2. yellow, $1.801.85; No. 3 yellow, $1.7501.80; No. 4 yellow, $1.65 1.70; No. 2 mixed, $1.701.75; ear corn, white, $1.90 2.00; yellow, $1.65 01.70; mixed, $1.601.65.

LOCAL QUOTATIONS

(Corrected Daily by Omer G. Whelan) Paying Oats, 65c; ear corn, $1.60; rye, $1.35; straw, $6.00 a ton. Selling Cotton seed meal, $58.50 a torr, $3.00 a cwt.; tankage, $92.50 a ton, $1.75 a cwt; oil meal, $63.50 a ton, $3.25 a cwt.

FRUIT & VEGETABLES (Corrected Dally by Eggemeyer) SELLING PRICE

ENTIRE U. S.

(Continued From Page One. while defending himself on the west or will he, on the other hand, slacken his hold ? Will he- attempt a counter manoeuvre? We have arrived at the moment when the manipulation of the French divisions is going to be decisive and in that game we may believe that the last word has not been said." Col. De Thomasson writes that common prudence dictated that General Ludendorff should keep forces in reserve to parry a thrust on the right flank. By the resistance which the French met, he adds, it will be known if this elementary precaution was taken. It may be asked, he concludes, if the infatuation which seized Ludendorff after a long series of successes has not led him to make fatal blunders.

G. 0. P. TASK TO

Continued From Page One. of both houses of congress present and voting on all war measures, the Republicans have furnished 76 per cent and the Democrats 74 per dent of the total war support." "The Republican party stands today for three things," Mr. Hays said. "First, to use every possible means to win the war now. "Second, for a peace with victory and never a peace by a compromise bargaining of principles which would violate American rights, interests and honor, and make of our sacrifice a sacrifice to be made again by our grandchildren. "Third, for a sane preparation now for a solution of the problems imheasurable in their complexity and magnitude which will come after the war. We are as un-prepared for peace as we were for war. Every country except America is preparing for peace.

LIVE STOCK PRICES

INDIANAPOLIS, . Juy 19 HogsReceipts 7.500, steady. Cattle Receipts 750, unohangrd. Calves Receipts 450, lower. Sheep Receipts 300, steady. Siters-H ;n:t cr". r-.-tf tv-. ,7,C(j and up, $17.00017.85; good to choice steers, 1.300 and up, $16.50 17 25;

good to choice steers, 1,150 to 1,200,

$16. 00 0 16. K0; good to choice steers,

600 to 1.000 lbs.. $13.50 14.25; fair to

medium yearlings, $9.7512.00.

Heifers and Cowg-Good to choice

heifers, $12.0014.50; common to fair heifers, $9 OOtfj 10.75; good to choice cows, $11. 13. 00; fair to medium, $9.50010.25; canners and cutten, $7.6009.25. Bulls and Calves Jond to prime ex

port -bulls. $11.50 12.00; good to

choice butcher bulls. $11.00 1150; common to fair bulls, $9.00010.76; common to best veal calves, $17.00; common to best heavy calves.

$8.60013.50; stock calves, 250 to 450

pounds, $10011.50; good to choice lights, $16.1u 16.15. Stockers nnd Feeding Cattle Good to choice steers, 700 pounds and up, $11.00012.00; common to fair steers. under,700 pounds, $10.00011.00; good to choice eteers. under 700 pounds, $11.00012.00; common to fair steers, under 700 pounds. $9.00010.50; medium to good heifers, $8.50010.00; Medium to good feeding cows, $8,000 P. 60; springers, $S.OO09.6O. Hogs Best heavies, $18.25 0 18.35; medium and mixed, $18.25 & 18.40; good to choice lights, $18.40018.50; common to medium lights, $18.35 $18.40; roughs and packers; $18.25 $18.40; light pigs, $18.00; bulk of sales, $18.25018.40; best pigs. $18.00018.25; common to choice, $16.30016.75. Sheep and Lamos Good to choice yearlings, $14.00015.00; common to fair yearlings. $11.00013.75; good to choice sheep, $11.25012.50; bucks, 100 pounds, $9.00010.00; goo to choice breeding ewes, $14.00015.00; good to choice spring lambs, $17.00 17.75; pood to choice wool lambs, $16.00 19.00; common to medium lambs, $14.00016.75.

CINCINNATI, O., July 19. HogsReceipts 6,600; market strong; packers and butchers $1S.3518.50; pigs and lights $17018.50. Cattle Receipts 900; steady market; steers $8016.75. Calves Market steady. Sheep Receipts 3,400; steady market. Lambs Steady.

PITTSBURGH. Pa., July 19. Hogs Receipts 2.000; market steady; heavies $18.50018.65; heavy Yorkers, $19019.10; light Yorkers $19.10019.15; pigs, $19.10019.15. Sheep and Lambs Receipts 200; market steady; top sheep $13.00; top lambs $19.00. Calves Receipts 100; steady market; top $18.00. U.S. BUREAU OF MARKETS. Chicago, July 19. Hogs Receipts 16,000, generally 10 to 20c higher than yesterr.'r: bi'lk of sales $17.50

VEGETABLES Wax beans, 2 cents per pound;

i asparagus, &c Duncn, new caDDage, 1 5c pound; green beans, 5c pound;

spring carrots, & cents per tmncn; spring beets, 6c bunch; cauliflower.

15 0 25c head; cucumbers. 10c; egg

plants 20 0 25c; kohlrabi, 10c bunch, leaf lettuce, 15c per lb.; head lettuce, trimmed, 30c a pound; untrimmed, 20c a lb.; leak, 10c bunch; onions, new Burmudas. 8c lb.; young onions, 5c bunch; 3 for 10c; oyster plant, 5 cents bunch; parsley, 5c bunch; mangoes, 2 for 5c; radishes, 5c bunch; spinach. 15c lb.; home grown tomatoes, 15c lb.; turnips, new, 8c lb.; water cress, 5c per bunch; artichokes. 20c each; celery. 8. 10 and 15c bunch; rotatoes. old. $2.00 per bushel; rhubarb, 3 bunches. 10c ; groen peas. 15c pound; Swiss Chard, 5c bunch; Shives, 10c bunch; new potatoes, 75c peck; green

corn, Home grown, 40c dozen.

FRUITS Calif, cherries, 60c lb.; watermelons $1 each; peaches. 10c lb.; sour cherries, 26c qt.; apples, old, 5c each; grape fruit, 10015c; lemons 35 cents per d02.; bananas, 10c lb.; limes, 50c per doi.; oranges, 40c to 60c doz.: plneappies, 30c each; new apples, 12 c lb.; red raspberries, 30c quart; berries, 40c a quart; dewberries, 30c a quart; gooseberries, 18c per quart; black raspberries, 30c a quart; hucklecurrants, 30c quart; apricots, 25c a pound; Cal. Canteloupes, 16 0 20c each; cocoanuts, 15c each; California plums, 20c pound; Goose plums, 15c quart; Honey Dew melons, 50c each. MISCEI.LANE.OUS Eggs; 40c per dozen; butter, creamery, 53c; country, 42c per pound. PRODUCE (Buying) Butter, 32c; eggs, 32c; old chickens, 20c; frys, 35c lb. .

GENERAL MERCHANDISE CINCINNATI, O.. July 19. Butter Creamery whoio nalik extra, 46c; centralized extra, 45c, do firsts, 42c, do seconds, 41c; fancy dairy, 38c; packing stock. No. 1, 32c; No. 2, 29c. Eggs Prime first (loss off). 36c; first, 35c; ordinary first, 33c; seconds, 30c; duck eggs 36c. Poultry Broilers 1 lbs. and over, 33c; do under 1 lbs., 30c; fowls 4 lbs. and over, 28 c; do under 4 lbs., 28 c; rosters, 19c; hen turkeys, 8 lbs. and over, 27c; toms 10 lbs. and over, 27c; culls, 10c; white spring ducks, 2 lbs. and over, 30c; colored do 28c; white ducks, old, 3 lbs. and over, 25c; colored do, 23c; geese, choice full feather, 14c; do medium, 12c; guineas, $6 per dozen. Apples Ben Davis. $4.5007.00; Ganos. $5.0007.00 per brl. Onions Texas No. 1 yellow, $1,400 $1.50 per crate; Bermuda white, $1.75 02.00 per crate; home grown, $1.40 $1.60 per bu. PotatoesShipped red, $3.7504 25; do white, $3.5003.75 per bbl.; homegrown, $404.50 per bbl. Tomatoes Tennessee, 75c1.50; per 4 basket crate; home grown, $2.50 3.00 per bu.

U. S. FIGHTERS

Continued From Page One. ranks. Northwest of Chateau Thierry, American officers in the evening had

their headquarters on ground held by the Germans in the morning. Immense stores were taken in the Soissons region. Even airplanes could not be gotten out of the way. American troops in the Soissons region alone took 4,000 prisoners, 50 cannon and 1,000 machine guns with prisoners and guns yet to be counted. Large numbers of prisoners were taken also near Chateau Thierry as well

as guns and supplies, while the French made important captures all

along the line. The French encounter

ed strong resistance at Courchamps,

but broke through and took 18 guns

ALLIED DRIVE

Continued From Page One.

having been slung back with a rapid

ity that seems like disorganization, the fighting qualities of the enemy troops must be considered as good as could be desired by the German high

command. So far as reports tell of the situa

tion, the German advance from Dor-

mans to Rheims has come to a halt.

This is the situation likewise east of

Rheims.

naming operations are reported on

the Montdidier, Noyon and Woevre

front and also along the British lines.

JUNK (Prices paid by Sam Jaffa) No, 1 rubber boots and shoes, 7c pef lb.; No. 2 rubber boots am! shoes, -t 4c per lb.; automobile tires, 4c per lb.; inner tubes, 816c per lb.; bicycle tires, 3c per lb.; buggy tires, 304c per lb.; baled paper. 40c per hundred lbs.; country mixed rags, $2.30 pet hundred lbs.; mixed iron, $1.00 per hundred lbs.; heavy brass copper from 13018c per lb.

Skiddaw is the not inappropriate name of a village in England that has only a slnele inhabitant

Heirs Sue Father to Set

Aside Deed to Property

EATON, O., July 19 An action to set aside a deed and for partition of

realty has been filed in common pleas court by Leroy Beasley and Edna Ayers against James and Mabel Beas

ley and Christian and Paul Beasley,

the latter two being minors. Plain

tiffs are children of the late Elizabeth Beasley. James Beasley was her husband. Plaintiffs allege their "father

obtained from their mother a deed to

a little more than an acre of land in Harrison township, while Bhe was ill, and at a time when she was incapable of knowing what she as doing. On this alleged ground plaintiffs seek to have the deed bet aside and the real estate partioned.

Indianapolis Representative Sales

2 2 48 61 10 9 12 19 5 6 14 4 2 6 12 12 2 1 1 1 1 2 10 9 3

H03S 45 $15.50 405 16.85 , 287 18.25 180 18.40 191 18.50 STEERS 768 $10.00 853 11.50 927 13.40 974 15.25 HEIFERS 758 $ 7.25 . .. 755 10.00 732 11.00 1025 13.50 COWS 643 $ 7.25 898 8.50 955 . 10.00 1075 11.75 BULLS 550 $ 7.00 .750 8.50 710 9.00 : 1170 10.00 CALVES .335 $ 9.50 188 13.00

158 16.50) . 170 17.001

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Excepting one emergency garage which will haul in disabled cars after 6 p. m. and on Sundays and Holidays Wffi US (SHcns3dl cnmi (B IP KIo (Except Saturday Evening) AradL All IB)ay Sundays axmdl IHIoladlays, tairtSng MdDimday, JK&ly

yv July 21st Will Be the Last

Day of Sunday

And this is the last week- of night service

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A GARAGE CENTRALLY LOCATED WILL BE MAINTAINED FOR EMERGENCY REQUIREMENTS, TO HAUL IN DISABLED CARS AFTER 6 P. M. AND ON SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS. No service will be rendered other than hauling in your car and the following day you may have the car removed to any service station you desire. Garages as Provided by Law Must Keep in Charge Thereof a Flight Attendant. Consequently You Will Be Able to Store Your Car as Usual Don't misconstrue this, the night man at all garages will take care of letting you in and out of the garage you are accustomed to storing your car with, so you will not be inconvenienced by the new closing order. But there will not be any work done on your car during the closing hours designated.

Motorists! Remember! Get your Accessories and other equipment wiile tHe undersigned nouses are open Because you won't be able to purchase a drop of Oil or Gasoline eitner, after closing hours (Signed) HUB GARAGE STANDARD OIL CO. McCONAHA GARAGE NATIONAL GARAGE LEE, THE TIRE MAN BETHARD AUTO AGENCY CHENOWETH AUTO CO. PIEHL TIRE & SERVICE CO. OVERLAND-RICHMOND CO. WEBB-COLEMAN CO. GRIM AUTO CO.

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