Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 96, 3 March 1919 — Page 12
PAGE TWELVE
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM MONDAY, MARCH 3, 1919.
ocal GRAIN QUOTATIONS E. W. WAGNER & COS REVIEW CHICAGO. March 3. The grain market awaits the hog price. Many locals expect an upturn if the hog price Is retained for March but there are no details. Some kind of a report is expected over night France plans to reduce cost of living. Argentine news suggests no grain exports of consequence to arrive in Europe before June. Strike continues. Washington news suggests economy problem to bring sales on bulges. Chicago corn stocks are very small and this creates a somewhat tight market. The forecast is for unsettled and colder. Cash demand everywhere dull. CHICAGO GRAIN RANGE Furnished by E. W. WAGNER & CO., 212 Union National Bank Building. Phone 1720. CHICAGO, March 3. Following is the range of futures on Chicago board of Trade today
Open High Low Close Corn Mar. .....13214 133 1314 133 May, .....125 126 125 126 July .....121 122 121 122 Oats Mar 57 57 57 67 May 69 59 59 69 July 68 59 58 58 Pork May 41.30 41.80 41.30 41.37 Lard May 25.30 25.60 25.30 25.45 Ribs 5-Iay ......22.92 23.10 22.80 22.97
CHICAGO. March 3 Corn No. 3 yellow $1.321.33; No. 4 yellow, 11.2801.28. Oats No. 3 white, 58 69; Standard 6859. Pork Nominal. Pigs 2425. Lard ?25.75. TOLEDO, O., March 3. Cloverseed ; Prime cash, $25.40; March, $25.00; April, $20.75. Alsike: Prime cash and March, $17.00. Timothy: Prime cash, eld $4.50; new $4.57: March $4.57: , Apr. $4.62; Sept. $4.52; May $4.65;t October $3.37. LIVE STOCK PRICES 'INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., March 3. J logs Receipts, 3,000. Cattle Receipts, 1,500. Calves Receipts, 400. Sheep Receipts 100. ' HOGS Good to choice, 160 to 200 lbs., $18 di 18.10; mixed and medium, 160 to 250 lbs., $18.00018.25; good to prime, weighing down to 150 lbs., $18.25 18.35: fat back pigs, under 130 lbs., $17.25 down; feeding pigs, under 130 $16.00 down; cows, according to quality. $13.00016.50; milk of sows, $15.00016.00; poor to best stags, 80 lbs. dock, $12.00017.00; boars, thin bows and skips No definite prices. CATTLE Killing Steers Extra good, 1,300 lbs. and upward, $18.50019.00; good to choice, 1,300 lbs., and upward. $18.00 018.50; common to medium, 1,300 lbs. and upward, $16.50017.60; good to choice, 1,200 to 1.300 lbs.. $17.50 18.50; good to choice, 1,000 to 1,150 lbs., $15.00016.00; common to medium 1,000 to 1,150 lbs.. $13.50015.00; poor to good, under 1,000 lbs., $12.00 14.50; good to best yearlings, $15,000 $16.00. Good to choice, 160 to 200 lbs., $17.50 250 lbs. up, $17.75018.00; fat hogs, up, $11.50012.25; common to medium 800 lbs. up, $9.00011.00; good to best under 800 lbs., $11.00014.00; common to medium, under 800 lbs., $8.50011. HeifersGood to best, 800 lbs. and up, $12.00013.00; common to medium, 800 lbs. up, $9.00 011.00; good to best, under 800 lbs., $12.00014.00: common to medium, under 800 lbs., $S.5011. Cows Good to best, 1,050 lbs. upward, $11.00013.50; common to medium, 1,050 lbs., upward, $9.00010.00; good to best, under 1,050 lbs., $10.00 $11.50; common to medium, under 1,050 lbs.. $8.6009.00; canners and cutters, $6.507.50. ' Bulls Common to best, 1,300 lbs. upward, $9.50011.00; good to choice, under 1.300 lbs., $10.00012.00; fair to medium, under 1.300 lbs.. $8.5009.60; common to good bolognas, $8.0009.50. Calves Good to choice veals, under 200 lbs., $17.00 18.00; common to medium veals, under 200 lbs., $10.00 016.00; good to choice heavy calves, $10.00011.00; common to medium heavy calves, $6.0009.00. Stockers and Feeding Cattle Good to choice steers. 800 lbs., and up, $12.25013.00; common to fair steers, 800 lbs., and up, $11.00012.00; good to choice steers under 800 lbs., $12.00 012.50; common to medium, under 800 lbs., $10.00011.00; medium to good heifers, $9.00010.00; medium to good cows, $7.0008.50; springers, $8.00 9.00: stock calves, 250 to 450 lbs., $8.00010.00. SHEEP AND LAMBS. Good to choice sheep, $8.0009.06, common to medium 6heep, $5.00 $7.60j-good to choice light lambs, $16 017; common to medium lambs, $10 15; western fed lambs, $18 down; western fed sheep, $11.00 down; bucks, per 100 pounds, $7.0007.50. PITTSBURGH, March 3 Hogs Receipts, 3,800; market higher; heavies, $18.00018.25; heavy yorkers, $18,000 $18.25; light Yorkers, $16.50 0 17.00; Diss $15.75016.25. Cattle Receipts, 1.200; market active: steers $16.75! $17.50; heifers $12.0013.50; cows, $11.00013.50. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 2,500; market active; top sheep $14.40; top lambs $19.00. Calves Receipts, 1.900; market, active; top, $19. CINCINNATI, O., March 3. HogsReceipts, 8,500; market strong; packers and butchers $17.00018.00; common to choice $12.00016.50; pigs and lights $10.00016.25; stags, $10,000 $11.50. Cattle Receipts 2.500; market steady; steers $7.00016.50; heifers, $6.50013.50; cows $6.00011.50. Calves Market, strong, $7.00017.75. Sheep Receipts, 200; market strong $5.00 011.00. Lambs Market, strong, $12 017.00. CHICAGO, Mar. 3 Hogs Receipts. 25,000, market active, fully 15 to 25c higher than Saturday. Bulk of sales $17 60017.90; butchers $17.70017.95: lights $17.00017.75: packing $17.00 $17.65; throw outs $16.25016.85; pigs,
and Joreion
w good to choice $14.2515.25. Cattle Receipts. 11,000; good and choice beef steers and she stock, 25 cents to 40 cents higher; canners and cutters, steady; bulls and feeders, 15 to 25 cents higher; calves, steady. Beef cattle, good, choice and prime, $16.7520.25; common and medium, ?10.8516.75; butcher stock, cows and heifers, $7.50 15.75; canners and cutters, $6.00 7.50; stockers and feeders good, choice and prime $11.4015.00; Inferior to common and medium, $8.25 11.40; veal calves good and choice $17.00017.50. ' Sheep Receipts, 6,000; market uneven, 25 cents to 50 cents higher; quality average low. Lambs, choice and prime, $19.1519.35; medium and good $18.0019.15; Culls $15.0016.25; ewes, choice and prime, $13.0013.35; medium and good $10.7513.O0; culls $5.509.00. PRODUCE MARKET CHICAGO, March 3. Butter Market Higher; creamery firsts 4456. Eggs Receipts 13,020 cases; market lower; firsts 39; lowest 38. Live Poultry Market higher; fowls 31; springs 31. Potato Market Lower; receipts F6cars; Wis., Minn, and Mich, bulk, $1.551.70; do sacks $1.6001.70. NEW YORK STOCK LIST NEW YORK, March 3. The clos ing quotations on the stock exchange were: American Can., 46. American Locomotive, 67. American Beet Sugar, 73American Smelter, 67. Anaconda, 60. Atchison, 92. Bethlehem Steel bid, 64. Canadian Pacific, 163. Chesapeake and Ohio, 59. Great Northern Pfd., 94. New York Central, 73. Northern Pacific, 93. Southern Pacific, 102. Pennsylvania, 44. U. S. Steel Com., 94. LIBERT v BONDS New York Final prices on Liberty bonds today were: 3. 99.30; 1st 4, 94.20; 2nd 4, 93.50; 1st 4, '95.00; 2nd 4Vt, 94.00; 3rd 4, 95.28; 4th 4, 94.S0. BUTTER FAT QUOTATION The Western Ohio Cream company is paying 61 cents for butter fat delivered this week. LOCAL QUOTATIONS Buying Corn, $1.40; oats, 60c; r: i 1 7. . cwnn. T n fi.iii, Qua", jci iuu, 91. vis. Selling Cottonseed meal, per ton. $67.00; per cwt, $3.60; tankage, 50 '-er cent, per ton. 593.00; per cwt.. $4.75; 60 percent, $103 per ton; $5.50 cwt.; Quaker dairy feed, per ton, $52, per cwt., $2.75; linseed oil meal, per ton, $75: per cwt., $4.00; salt, per bbl., $2.75. FRUIT & VEGETABLES (Corrected Dally by Eggemeyar'a) 8ELLING PRICE VEGETADl.ES New cabbage, 10c lb., green beans 30c, cucumbers, 30c; egg plant, 25c pound; carrots, 5c pound; spring beets, 5c pound; cauliflower. 15c lb.; cucumbers, COc; egg plant, 30c pound; kohlrabi, 10c per Dunch; leaf lettuce. 25c per lb.; head lettuce, trimmed, 35c pound, untrlmmed 25 cents pound: leak, lCc a bunch; Bermuda onions. 15c per lb.; parsley, 5c a bunch; mangoes, 8c each; tomatoes, hot house grown, 35c lb.; Jersey sweet potatoes, 10c lb.; turnips, new, 5c pound; potatoes, old, $1-75 bu.; young onions, 5 cents a bunch; breakfast radishes, 5c bunch; button mushrooms, $1.00 a pound; cranberries, 35 cents a pound; sprouts, 35c straight; parsnips, 6c lb.; Black wainuts. 10c pound. $3.50 bu.; straight; Malaga grapes, 50c pound; pumpkins ana squashes, 2c to 6c per pound. Miscellaneous Eggs, 42c; butter, creamery, 60c; country, 47c lb. Produce (Buying) Country butter, 40c lb.; eggs 35c dozen; old chickens, 22c pound; fry chickens, 24c pound. Fruits Grape fruit, 10c. 15c and 18c; bulk King apples, 10c lb., or $1.75 per basket; Jonathan apples, 10 lb. straight; bananas, 10c lb.; lemons, 40c dozen; limes, 50c dozen; oranges, 60c dozen; strawberries, 75c quart; celery, California, 25c bunch; fresh pineapple, 50c each; cocoanuts, 20c each. Y. M. C. A. Basketball Five Goes Under to Boy Scout Quintet Outclassed completely the Y. M. C. A. basketball team was defeated Saturday night at the "Y" by the well organized Boy scout basketball five, 28 to 3. The teamwork of the Boy Scout team was the feature of the game. Craig and Ball were the chief point getters for the Scout lineup. The line ups were as follows: Boy Scout Craig, Ward, Harkin3, Wilson, Walls and Ball. Y. M. C. A. Turner, Lahrman, Schumaker, Davis, Martzal and Stanley. Action Deferred in Fixing Minimum Price for Hogs (By Associated Press) It was said at the food administration today that no action was expected for a day or two In the matter of fixing a minimum price for hogs. The present minimum price of 17.50 a hundred pounds, which expired Feb ruary 28, at midnight, will be contin ued it was explained, until announcement of a decision by President Wilson regarding existing embargoes on pork affecting neutral and other countries.
LYNCH WILL FIGHT TWO BRITISH CHAMPS
Joe Lynch, American bantamweight boxer, has agreed to meet Tommy Noble again in a twentyround bout in London. Noble is the British bantam champ. Lynch outpointed him a short time ago. Jimmy Wilde, English flyweight champ, has agreed to fight Lynch in London March 31. Joe Lynch, above, Schedule for State Tourney at Lafayette THURSDAY Afternoon. 2:00 Winner at Richmond vs. winner at Bedford. 3:00 Winner at Indianapolis vs. the winner at Vincennes. 4:00 Winner at Frankfort versus winner at Anderson. Night. 7:30 Winner at Bloomfield vs. winner at Huntington. 8:30 Winner at Columbus vs. winner at South Bend. FRIDAY Morning. 9:00 Winner at Greencastle vs. winner at Rochester. 10:00 Winner at Lafayette vs. winner at Martinsville. 11:00 Winner at Kendalville vs. winner at Gary. Afternoon. 1:00 Winner at Franklin vs. winner at Crawfordsville. 2:00 Winner at Newcastle vs. winner Logansport. 3:00 Winner at Brazil vs. winner at Kokomo. 4:00 Winner at 2 p. m. vs. winner at 3 p. m. Evening. 7:30 Winner at 4 p. m. vs. winner at 7:30 p. m. 8:30 Winner at 8:30 p. m. vs. winner at 9 a. m. SATURDAY Morning. 8:00 Winner at 10 a. m. vs. winner at 11 a. m. 9:00 Winner at 1 p. m. vs. winner at 2 p. m. 10:00 Winner at 3 p. m. vs winner at 4 p. m. 11:00 Winner at 7:30 p. m. vs. winner at 8:30 p. m. G. R. Ogden, of Shmnston, AVALON FARMS HOG-TONE
SS'qfl 'ipfv''- - . try
best medicine I ever used. I have two pig3 4 months and 3 days old that weigh 360 pounds, one 6 pouncb heavier than the other. They are 100 pounds heavier than my neighbor's 2 of the same litter and feed.
This is the esperience of a typical user of Hog-Tone. There ore hundreds and hundreds of letters on file at tho Aval on Farms Company's office from nearly every state in the Union, all telling of big improvement in hogs and in hoe profits through the use of Hog-Tone, the scientifically prepared Hog Conditioner, Fattener and Worm Remover. Hog-Tone is sold on IT COSTS YOU 60 DAYS'
AVALON FARMS HOG-TONE JE LIQUID HOG FATTENER. CONDITIONER AND WORM REMOVER FOR ALL YOUR HOGS FOB SALE BY MEM (Go WEELAM
THE FEED MAN 31-33 South 6th Street.
and Tommy Noble. Afternoon. 2:00 Winner at 8 a. m. vs. winner at 9 a. m. 3:00 Winner at 10 a. m. vs. winner at 11 a. m. Night. 8:00 Winner at 2 p. m. vs. winner at 3 p. m. SECTIONAL TOURNEY Richmond. j (Sixteen Teams.) FRIDAY Morning. 9:00 Hagerstown vs. Greentown Township (1). 10:00 Richmond vs. Farmland (2). 11:00 Connersville vs. Cambridge City (1). Afternoon. 1:00 Modoc vs. Economy (2). 2 : 00 Fountain City vs. Stoney Creek (1). 3:00 Brookville vs. Milroy (2). 4:00 Moscow vs. White Water (1). Night. 7:30 Ridgeville vs. Liberty (2). 8:30 Winner 9 a. m. vs. winner 10 r. m. (1). SATURDAY Morning. 8:00 Winner 11 a. m. vs. winner at 1p.m. (2). 9:00 Winner 2 p. m. vs. winner at 3 p. m. (1). 10:00 Winner 4 p. m. vs. winner 7:30 P- m. (2). Afternoon. 2:00 Winner 8:30 p. m. vs. winner 8 a. m. (1). 3:00 Winner 9 a. m. vs. winner 10 a. m. (2). Night. 8:00 Winner 2 p. m. vs. winner 3 p. m. (1). Officials (1) Roy Thurman, (2) William Webb. The regular inauguration of an aerial mail service has made necessary a weather forecast especially for the guidance of aviators. W. Va., says: "I have used 56 days and I think it is the El 63 days Free Trial under a n absolute money-back guarantee. Come in the store and tell U3 how many hog3 you have in your herd and we will give you enough Hog-Tone to treat all of them 60 days. You don't have to pay for it unless you are absolutely satisfied. The decision is left entirely to you. NOTHING NOW TO TRY TREATMENT OF Phone 1679
PROSPERITY SEEN
BY TOBACCO MEN GEORGETOWN. O., March 3. These truly are bonanza days In the white burley tobacco growing regions of southern Ohio and northern Kentucky and southern Indiana. Garages, garrets of homes and every available building have been turned into warehouses for the preparation of leaf tobacco for marketing . The excitement of speculation is comparable only with the bonanza days in western mining camps when new finds of ore thrilled the prospectors. The war that made the wrist watch and cigarette respectable has made the tobacco grower rich. In Brown county, which is famed as the place of discovery of white burley tobacco, and of which Georgetown, the boyhood home of Gen. U. S. Grant, is the seat of government, such "good times" were never before known. With less than half of the 1918 crop marketed, it is . estimated that the amount paid in cash for tobacco is equivalent to $40 for each of the 25,000 men, women and children in the county. The tobacco prosperity Is not confined to Brown county, but is equally prevalent in the other Ohio counties of Adams, Clermont, Warren, Butler, and Greene, and in northern Kentucky counties of Bracken, Mason, Lewis, Campbell, Harrison, Pendleton and Fleming. Several counties In Southern Indiana are also benefited by the high market. Not only is the price of white burley tobacco soaring, but the dark leaf is also bringing before unheard of prices. The dark leaf Is grown in many sections of Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana. AGREE ON JEWISH NATION. WASHINGTON, March .President Wilson told delegation of the American Jewish congress he felt the Allied and American nations were agreed that in Palestine, should be laid the formation of a Jewish commonwealth.
olthouse's 5th Msfc
IS OFFERING THOUSANDS OF VERY ATTRACTIVE
Don't miss these Rug Values $22.00 Rugs, size 9x12, sale at 16.50 $35.00 Brussels Rug, size 9x12, sale at 25.00 $40.00 Brussels Rug, size 9x12, sale at 30.00 $55.00 Wilton Velvet Rug, a bargain at $40.00 $60.00 Axminster Rug, bargain at 45.00 $85.00 WTilton Rug, a bargain at.. 62. 50 One lot 36x72 Grass Rugs special $1.98
SALE OF STOVES
$110.00 Peninsular Combination (JJQI OfT coal and gas Range, now tpOJL.dt) $95.00 Pen. Combination coal fl?7" ff and gas Range, now P I ItUU $90.00 Pen. Combination coal and gas Range at 66.00 1 lot of 6 Pen. gas Ranges, each.. 35.00 1 lot of 12 Pen. gas Ranges, each 20.00 Coal and Wood Ranges at equal bargain prices
BABY CABS $55.00 Baby Carriage, a wonderful value now during this sale 44.00 $50 Baby Carriage, sale price 40 t $45 Baby Carriage, sale price 36 $32.00 Baby Carriage, sale price 25
HOLTBOUSE 4
Country Gentlemen Have You a Plentiful Supply of
FRE
WATER FOR THE FARM and COUNTRY HOME A Modern Water Supply System is no longer considered a luxury, but a necessity. Pure, fresh, cool running water, whenever, and wherever needed For the house, the live stock and f ire protection. I can design for you a water supply system adaptable to every requirement of complete water service, regardless of location of source of supply. Come and See Me for Particulars Charles
Johannin
1 1 th and Main Sts.
SALE OF KITCHEN CABINETS
.'sa r? on
Sale "l
One lot of Cabinets, to One lot of Cabinets, to One lot of Cabinets, to One lot of Cabinets, to Other Cabinets up to
BEAUTIFUL WALNUT DINING ROOM SUITE ON SALE This nine-piece Dining Room Suite in genuine Walnut, a very attractive Suite, regular mOOC ff price $277.00, now during sale. ... . pO.U 1
530 Main Street
SH
Richmond, Ind. FURNITURE VALUES
&ie OldVNew
V vva close at . . . close at . . . close at . . . close at . . . '. . . . $25.00 $27.50 $30.00 $35.00 $48.00
