Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 183, 15 May 1919 — Page 19
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GRAIN QUOTATIONS E. W. WAGNER A. Co.'S REVIEW CHICAGO, May 15. Cora is firmer on comparative light receipts and there Is some advance in cash article. Minneapolis claims In prices despite Canadian imports which has exercised little effect. Cash corn three cents higher. While some rains over the corn belt continued planting is making fast progress. Cash oats and corn mainly firm. Reports of 750,000 oats sold In all positions. New York confirms 250,000 oats taken (or export. The situation as a whole looks firmer bat the problem of price level and food leaders Ideas persist. CHICAGO GRAIN RANGE Furnished by E. W. WAGNEj & CO., 212 Union National Bank Build. Ing. Phone 1720. CHICAGO, May 15. Following is the range of futures on Chicago Board of Trade today; Open High Low Close Corn - May 172 177 172 175 July . 162 165 "161 164 Sept. .....155 157 154 156 Oats July ...... 66 68 66 68 Sept 63 64 63 64 . Pork . V July-.. 49.60 49.90 49.60 49.90 Lard JlllV . !?1 fiI 91 Qt; t OK 91 OK w ...... w . - V u J . U J Vl-Utl WA. W Ribs . July 27.55 27.77 TOLEDO SEEDS (By Associated Press) TOLEDO, O , May 15. Cloverseed Prime cash, $27.00; Oct., $19.85; Dec, $19.70. Alslke Prime cash, not quoted, Timothy Prime cash, old, new and May, $5.40; Sept.. $6.10; Oct., $5.80. (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, May 15. Corn No. 8 yellow, $l.761.76; No. 4 yellow, nominal; No. 5 yellow, nominal. Oats No. 3 white, 6969c; -Standard, oacguc; I'ork, nominal; Ribs,' $27.50 2S.5U; Lard, $33.55. (By Associated Press) (Owing to unsettled conditions curate quotations on wheat are ac-un-obtainable). CINCINNATI, O., May 15. CornNo. 2 white, $1.8401.85; No. 3 white, $1.821.84; No. 4 white. $1.781.81. Com No. 2 yellow, $1.8201.83; No. 3 yellow, $1.80 1.82; No. 4 yellow, $1.77 1.79. Corn No. 2 mixed, $1.81 $1.82. LIVE STOCK PRICES (By Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., May 15. Hogs Receipts, 9,500; higher. Cattle Receipts, 1,150; steady. Calves Receipts, 600; higher. Sheep Receipts,; 100; steady. - HOGS ,--Good to choice, 160 to 200 lbs., $20 83 20.90; good to choice, 200 to 225 lbs., TI20.8520.95; medium and mixed, 160 to 00 lbs., I20.85Q 20.95; tat hogs, $20.25 20.50; bows according to quality, $1519.75; good to prime, $20.90 (&21.00; bulk of sows. $19.0019.50; poor to best stags, 80 lbs. dock, $15.00 fe2'J 0 ); bears, thin sows and skips, no definite prices. CATTLP Kill-no Steers Krtra oo1. 1.300 lbs., and upward. $16.00(317.00: good to choice, 1,500 lbs., and upward, $15.00 17.00; common to medium, 1,300 lbs. and upward, $15.5016.50; good to choice, 1,200 to 1,300 lbs., $16.00 17.00; common to medium, 1,200 to 1.300 lbs., X15S-16.00: Rood to choice, 1,000 to 1,150 lbs, $14.5316.00; common lo medium, 1,000 to 1.150. lbs., $13 50 14.50; poor to good, under I. Q00 lt., $12.00 f?14 00; good to best yearlings,. $14.0015.00. Helpers Good to best, 800 lbs. and up. $14.00015.00; com: to medium, let no, ltt.oofil2.00; good to best, under 800 lbs!, $14.5015.50; common to medium, . under 800 lbs., $10.00 13.50. Cows Good to best 1,050 lbs. upward, $11.00 14.00; common to medium, 1,050 lbs., upward, $9.5010.50; good to best, under 1,050 lbs., $10.00 II. 50; common to medium, under 1,050 lb3.. ,$8.009.50; canners and milkers, JS0.C0140. upward, $1112.50; good to choice, Bulls Common to best. 1.300 lbs. under 1.300 lbs., $11.5013.00: fair to medium, under 1.300 lbs., $5.5010 50, common to good bolognas, $8.50 10.00. Ca'ves Good to choice veals, under 200 lbs., $14.50 15.50 ; . common to medium veals, under 300 lbs., $10.00 14.00; good to choice heavy calves, -w,!0.0012.00; common to med?um heavy calves, $8.009.00. Stockers and Feeding Cattle Good o choice steers. 800 lbs., and up. $13.0013.5O; common to fair steers, 800 lbs., and up, $12.00012.50; good to choice steers under 800 tbs., $12.50 fil350; common to medium, under 800 lbs.. $10.50 & 12.25; medium to good heifers, $9.0010.50; medium to good cows, $S.00D.50; springers, $9.00 & $11.00; stock calves. 250 to 450 lbs.. $913.00; western fed lambs, $18.00 down; western fed wethers, $13 down: bucks, per 100 pounds, $7.00 7.50; clipped stock, celling $2 to $3 per 100 lbs. lower than above quotations. SHEEP AND LAMBS. Spring lambs. $15.00 18.00. Good to choice sheep, $9.0010.00; common to medium sheep, $7.00gj $8.00; good to choice light lambs, $15.0015.50; common to medium lambs, $12.0014.50; western fed lambs. $16.00 down; western fed wethers, $11.00 down. : Corrected by McLean & Company, . Dayton, Ohio. Bell Phone East 28; Home, 81235. DAYTON, O., May 15. Hogs Receipts, three cars; market steady; higher; choice heavies, $20.5020.7S; select packers and butchers, $20.50 $20.65; heavy Yorkers, $20.50 20.65; light Yorkers $1919.50; pigs $18 $19; stags $1314.50; fat sows, $18.50 19.60; common and fair bows, $18 . 18.60. r Cattle Receipts, 7 cars; market, steady; fair to good shippers, $13.60 1 14.50; good to choice butchers $12$P 3.50; fair to medium butchers $9.uu P12.60; good to choice heifers, $12.60; choice fat cows, $10.0012.00; fair t
good fat cows, $7.00 8.00; bologna'
cows, 15.00 6.50; butcher bulls, $10.00 12.00; bologna bulls, $8.0010.00; calves, $10.0014.00. Sheep Receipts, light; market, steady. Sheep, 8.0010.00. Lambs, J10.0015.00. . (By Associated Press) CHICAGO. May 15. Hogs Re ceipts, 300.000; market mostly strong; big packers bidding 10 to 15 cents lower; pigs, strong to 25 cents high er; top $20.80; bulk $20.40 20 70; heavy weight $20.60 20.80; medium weight $20.3020.75; light weight, 120.1020.70; light lights $19.25 20.35; heavy packing sows, smooth $19. 7520.10; packing sows $1919.75; pigs $18.2519.50. Cattle Receipts 8.000; beef steers and she stock steady to 25 cents higher; bulls, calves and feeders, steady. Beef steers, medium and heavy weight choice and prime $16.75 19.25; medium and good $1417; common $11.75 014.25; light weight, god and choice. g$ 14.25; light weight, good and choice, 50 14.25; butcher cattle, heifers, $8.2515.25; cows, $8.1515; - canners and cutters $6.508.15; veal calves, light and handy weight, $13 14.25; feeder steers $10.25015.50; stock er steers $8.50 13.50. Sheep Receipts 13,000; market steady at yesterday's close; top wooled Colorado lambs $18.75; lambs, 84 pounds dpwn $13.75 15; 85 pounds up $13.2515; culls and common $10 13; springs $17 18.75; yearling wethers $12.2513.25; ewes, medium good and choice $10.50 12; culls and common $5 10.25. (By Associated Press) CINCINNATI, O., May 15. Receipts Cattle, 90; hogs, 6,000; sheep, 100. Cattle Market, slow; heifers, lower, others steady; butcher steers, extra, $14.50014.75; good to choice. $13.00 13.50; common to fair, $8.C012.O0; heifers, extra, $13.50 14.25; good to choice, $11.50 13.00; common to fair, $8.00 11.00; cows, extra, $11.00 12.00; good to choice. $9.0011.50; common to fair, $6.50(g)8.50; canners, $5.50 6.50; stockers and feeders, $8.00. 13.50;bulls, steady; bologna. $9.50 $11.50; fat bulls, $11.5012.50; milcb cows, strong; calves, steady; extra, $14.7515.00; fair to good, $13.00 14.75; common to large, $7.0012.00. Hogs Weak, 1525c lower; selected heavy shippers, $20.6020.75; good to choice packers and butchers, $20.5020.75; medium, $20.0020.50; stags, $10.00 13.75; common to choice heavy fat sows, $14.0019.75; light shippers, $18.50 19.75; pigs, 110 pounds and less, $13.0017.75. Sheep Steady; extra, $11.7512; good to cnoice, sii.oo(o!ll.7o; common to fair, $6.00 10.00; sheared, $4.00 10.00; lambs, steady; extra, $17.00; good to choice, $16.0016.75; common to fair, $13.0015.00; clipped lambs, $9.0015.00; springs, $15.0021.00. (By Associated Press) PITTSBURGH, Pa, May 15. Hogs Recepts, . 2,000; market lower; heavies, $21.00021.20; heavy Yorkers, $21.0021.20; light Yorkers, $21.00 21.20; pigs, $20.25 20.50. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 1,000; market steady; top sheep, $12.00; top lambs, $15.50. Calves Receipts, 130; market steady; top, $16.00. (By Associated Press? EAST BUFFALO, N. Y., May 15. Cattle Receipts 200; steady to strong. Calves Receipts 300; 25 cents lower; $6 16.25. Hogs Receipts 1,600; 15 to 25 cents lower. Heavy, $21.25 21.40; mixed $21.25 2LS0; yorkers $2125; mixed yorkers and rough, $18.50 19; pigs $2020.25; stags $1215. Sheep and Lambs Receipts 1,200; steady; lambs $1016; wethers $12 $12.60; mixed sheep $11.5012; yearlings $1014; ewes $511. 6,900 BALES OFFERED (By Associated Press) LONDON, May 15. The offering at the wool auction sales today amounted to 6,900 bales. The tone was steady and prices were unchanged. New Zealand's scoureds sold at 6s. PRODUCE MARKET (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, May 15. Butter Market Higher; creamery firsts 51 57. Eggs Receipts 34,791 cases; market higher; firsts 42 44; lowest 41. Live Poultry Market higher; fowls 34c. Potatoes Unsettled; arrivals, 48 cars; old stock sacked whltts car lots $1.802.00 cwt.; new stock, jobbing. Florida Spaulding Rose, ones $7.75 $8.50 bbl.; two $5.506.50.
LIBERTY BONDS (By Associated Press). , NEW YORK, May 15.Final prices on Liberty Bonds today were: 3 1-2 ......... .............. 98.80
1st 4 ....95.50 2nd 4 ............ 94.39 1st 4 1-4 ; 95.55 2nd 4 1-4 .........94.40 3rd 4 1-4 95.42 4th 4 1-4 . . . .tt. .... . . .... . .94.44 NEW YORK STOCK LIST By Associated ?ra NEW YORK, May 15. The closing quotations on the stock .exchange were: American Can, 55 1-4. American Locomotive, 78 1-2. American Beet Sugar,, 80 1-2. American Smelter, 78. Anaconda, 67 8-8. Atchison, 96 1-4. Bethlehem Steel, bid, 77 1-2. - Canadian. Pacific, 166 1-2. Chesapeake and Ohio, 66 Great Northern, pfd, 96. New York Central, 79 1-4. Northern Pacific, 95 3-4. Southern Pacific, 108 7-8. Pennsylvania, 46. U. S. Steel Com, 102 5-8. 1-2. BUTTER FAT QUOTATION Butter fat delivered In Richmond, is bringing 60 cents this week. - FRUIT & VEGETABLES (Corrected Dally by Eggemeyer's) 8ELLING PRICES Selling Price Effective May 14, 1919 Vegetables New cabbage, per lb., 15 cents; green beans, per lb., 25 cents ; cucumbers, each 8 cents, 2 for 15 cents; egg plant, per lb., 30 cents ; new spring carrots, bunch, 10 cents; asparagus, home grown, bunch, 10 cents; rhubarb, per bunch, 5 cents; cauliflower, small, per lb., 20 cents; cauliflower, large, per lb., 15 cents; leaf lettuce, per pound, 25 cents; head lettuce, trimmed, per lb., 35 cents. Tomatoes, per lb., 30 cents; Bermu da onions,, per lb,, 15c; leek, per bunch, 10 cents; parsley, per bunch, 15 cents. Mangoes, each, 8 cents; per dozen, 60 cents; Bweet potatoes, per pound, 12 cents; turnips, new, per pound, 10 cents; potatoes, old, per bushel, $1.75; young onions, 3 bunches for 10 cents; breakfast radishes, bunch, 5 cents; Home mushrooms, per pound. $1.00; new green peas, lb., 25 cents; garlic, per lb., $1.00. Jersey sweet potato plants, 65 cents for 100. Underlying the Southern Campaign Is the Main Idea, Which Is Not Farmers as It Should Be. This should be the slogan: ' "Stop growing cotton until every farmer has first raised food for his family." National Crop Improvement Service.! 6i A FTER that necessary f oundatlon is laid they can put in all the cotton that the remainder of - their acres will grow, and they ought to. "The South must feed itself first. It must raise corn, potatoes and hogs In abundance and have a surplus to sell. Then there will be no danger of raising an oversupply of cotton, for two very evident reasons: First, the farmer will be Independent because he will not be hungry and in debt and he can bold his cotton. Second, raising enough food will restrict the acreage automatically. After a man has raised his food he is entitled to all he can possibly make in raising cotton," says Mr. Frank Baackes, vice president, American Steel and Wire company. "Heretofore such movements have failed because the farmer either was not loyal to himself or he did not receive the support of the banker and the merchant, but now both bankers and merchants are In the game. Bankers have extended every cent of credit they can on cotton, and merchants realize that unless pyJlts are made in cotton, protfaefcon farmers cannot pay "The old method In tfce South was to keep (everybody indebted to the
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WHERE THE WILLARD-DEMPSEY FIGHT WILL BE STAGED
' "Kit, 32S Here are scenes of Bayview Park, Toledo, where Jess Willard and Jack Dcmpsey will battle twelve rounds Julv 4 for le Miscellaneous. Eggs, dozen, 45 cents; creamery butter, per lb., 68 cents; country butter, per lb., 60 cents. . A Produce (Buying) Country butter, per lb., 45 cents; eggs, per dozen, 40 cents; old chickens per lb., 28 cents; frying chickens, per lb., 40 cents. for a Reduction In the Cotton Acreage Being So Forcibly Impressed Upon the storekeeper and banker. The new method is to so conduct southern agriculture that farmers will be free from debt and add to the prosperity of their section by depositing their money in the bank and becoming free and Independent citizens. "The feeling is becoming very Intense, and any farmer who thinks that he can make a pledge to reduce his acreage and then increase it on the sly will be summarily dealt with by his more loyal neighbors. "In those counties having county agents nnd boards of agriculture the movement l;::s had smooth sailing, but where there is no organization it has been uphill work. "Cheap labor, both white and black, and that poorty housed, poorly fed. poorly clothed and poorly educated. has produced the most abundant and least expensive supply of clothing that the world has ever known. On the other hand, if we would exact a better living from the world in return for cotton produced, what must we do? The answer is simple. Produce all the corn, cats, hay, wheat, sirup, Irish and sweet potatoes, vegetables, pork, milk, butter, fruit and other products needed to properly nourish every person living on the farm for SG5 days in the year. "Each farmer should produce a small surplus of some of these things for the city people In the South. There is no other course possible. This done, grow cotton." All the new
, - : llifilil -StS-' heavyweight championship world. In a few days these scenes will chancre, for a eane of workmen Fruits. Grape fruit, each, 15 cents; Winesaps, per lb., 15 cents; Greenings, per lb., 15' cents; bananas, per lb., 12 cents; lemons, per dozen. 40 cents; oranges, per dozen, 50 cents; Florida oranges, per dozen, 40 cents; strawberries, per quart, 35 cents; celery California, per bunch, 25 cents; cocoanuts, each, 20 cents; kabl, 15 cts.; spinach, 15 cents. LOCAL QUOTATIONS (Furnished by Whelan) SELLING PRICES Buying Corn 1.75; oats, 72c; Rye, $1.35; Straw, per ton, $8.00. Selling Cottonseed Meal, per" ton, $67; per cwt., $3.50. Oil meal, per ton, $73; cwt., $3.75; Tankage, 50 per cent, per ton, 93; per cwt., $4.75; 60 per cent., $108.00 per ton; per cwt., 5.50. Quaker City Dairy Feed, per ton, $50; per cwt., $2.65; Schumaker Feed, per ton, $58; per cwt., $3.00. Salt, per bbl., $2.75; Hominy feed, ton, $72; cwt, $3.75; wheat Bran, per ton, $50; bran and shorts, mixed, per ton, $55; per cwt., $2.65; white wheat middlings, per ton, $58; per cwt, $3; barley feed, per ton, $65; cwt., $3.35; white rye middlings, per ton, $57; per cwt., $3.00 USED RFTY YEARS FOR CATARRH AT ALL DRUGGISTS TRACY'S SPECIAL FRIDAY & SATURDAY COFFEE Fresh roasted dally; a 45c value for -35 Peanut Butter, lb . . .28c Made while you wait OLEOMARGARINE 3Se Royal Brand, lb ...32 A-l Nut Margarine, lbr.... 34 FLOUR Carpenter's or Pride of Richmond. 24 lb.-sack S1.65 SALT t2 sacks ........ 5 MILK Wilson Tall cans 13S small cans four fr 25 25c Apple Butter .....19 25c Peach Butter 17 CRISC0,lb 31c EGG-LIKE 23 Campbell's Beans, 2 for... 25c MATCHES. 5 for v. . .24 PRUNES, large meaty, lb. 25 SUGAR 5 lbs. . . .49c SOAP Lenox, 10 for 55 Crystal White, 10 for -...59 American Family, P. & G. or Fels Naptha, 10 for ........... 33 TRACY" Tea and Coffee House
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i." '-inBri.i-.-air i-t i. BE Glimpses of Bay View Park. Tolef . will be on the job constructing a big arena for Tex Rickard. The promoter estimates that in about six weeks the arena will be ready and all will be set for the opening: round. Above, main macadamized load leading to the site. Toledo Yacht Club in the distance. Below, where rinsr for boxers will bo built. It will occupy the site now held by the baseball backstop. 500 lbs. Large Capacity Refrigerator $26 75
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