Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 140, 22 April 1920 — Page 10

PAGE TEN

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1920.

MARKETS

GRAIN PRICES CHICAGO, April 22. Grain tone uneasy, with suggestions of selling on bulges. Wheat and Rye news firm. Provision talk a bulge sale. Break in orn futures has unsettled cash corn buyers, otherwise small receipts are Indicated for April and May. Oats seeding looks further ahead in 70 of the belt than expected. Stock market chows rallying tendency but business sentiment is unsettled. Cotton was steady. Immediate grain problem is to provide buyers on the bulges. Overnight the situation contains the chance of another dip. The provision situation seems to be a weight on corn. CHICAGO GRAIN RANGE Furnished by E. W. WAGNER & CO, 212 Union National Bank Building. Phone 1720. CHICAGO, April 22. Following "is the range of futures on Chicago Board

of Trade today: Open High

..19C4 R198 Corn. ..164 168 ..151 155 Oats. .. 92 95 .. 73 75 Pork. Lard.

. . 19.25 19.05

Ribs,

May 17.75 . .

May May Sept. May Sept. May May

Low Close 194 "2 195 Vi

162 149 92 7

1666 154 94 73'4 35.35

17.85

Sheep Receipts, light; steady; - sheep, 5.00t?!9.00; $12.0015.00.

market, lambs,

(By Associated Press) CINCINNATI, O., April 22. Receipts Cattle 550; bogs 5,000; , sheep 100. Cattle .Market steady; butchers steers, good, to choice, $1214; fair to good $1011.50; common to fair, $79; good to choice $1214; fair to good $912; common to fair $6.50 19.00; good to choice $1011; fair to good $8.5010; cutters $6 8; canners $56; stock steers $7.50g)ll; stock heifers $6.508.50; stock cows $68; bulls steady; bologna $8.5010.50; fat bulls $10.5011.75; milch cows, steady $50125; calves steady; fair to good, $1718; common and large, $611. Hogs Steady, 25 to 50 cents lower; heavies $15.75 16 50; good to choice packers and butchers $17; medium, $17; stags $8'9; common to choice heavy fat sows $912.50; light shippers $16.2516.50; pigs, 110 pounds and less, $1015. Sheep Strong; good to choice light $12(S15.50; fair to good $912; common to fair $47; bucks $409; lambs strong, good to choice $1920; seconds $1517; fair to good $1819. common skips $1114; clipped lambs, $917; spring lambs $2026.

40c dozen; walnuts, 10c lb.; apples, tOc lb.; grape fruit, 5c to 10c each; oranges, 60c to 75c doz.; tangerines, 60c doz.; strawberries. 60c quart; rhubarb, 30c lb.; pears, 5c each; large eating apples, 5c and, 10c each; pineapples, 50c each; cocdanut, 25c each. Produce, Buying. Country butter, 50c to 55c lb.; eggs, 38c dozen; old chickens, 30c lb.; frying chickens, 30c lb.; turkeys, 45c lb.

(By Associated Press) CHICAGO, April 22 Wheat No. 4 hard, $2.75; spring, $2.80. Corn No. 2 yellow. $1.71(1.72. Oats No. 2 white. $1.01 1-21.02 1-2 No. 3 white, $1.001.00 1-2. Pork Nominal; ribs, $17.2518.00; lard. $18.75.

(By Associated Press) CINCINNATI, O., April 22 Wheat No. 1 red $2.93; No. 2 red, $2.91 2.93; No. 3 red, $2.872.89; other grades as to quality $2.552.86. Corn No. 2 white $1.831.84; No. 3 -white $1.801.82; No. 4 white $1.76 1.78. Corn No. 2 yellow $1.77 1.79. No. 3 yellow $1.741.76. No. 4 yellow $1.731.75. Corn No. 2 mixed $1.761.77. Oats Lower, $1.05l.O8.

(By Associated Press) TOLEDO, O., April 22 Cloverseed: Prime cash $25.50; April $28.50; Oct. $23.50; Dec. $22.50. Alsike: April. 30. Timothy: Prime cash, 1917, $5.35; 1919, $5.50; April $5.50; May, $5.45; Sept., $5.85; Oct, $5.65; Dec, $5.65.

(By Associated Press) CHICAGO. April 22. (United States Bureau of Markets Report) Cattle Receipts, 14.000; early beef steers, trade limited; few sales wheat to unevenly lower; demand seriously curtailed by shortage of stock and refrigerator cars for outbound movement of live stock and meat products; on account of demoralized trade conditions, some shipment to Chicago ordered stopped in transit; sh,e stock, weak to unevenly lower; bulls, steady to 25 cents higher;ealves, 50 cents lower; vealers, mostly $14.0014.50; feeder outlet narrow. Hogs Receipts 41,000; slow; 50 to 60 cents lower; top, $16.40; bulk, $14.3516.00; pigs.

50 Cents higher; mostly $14.7o15.75. Sheep Receipts, 10,000; slow; market about steady; choice wool lambs, $21.50; some held higher.

LOCAL QUOTATIONS (Furnished by Whelan) BUYING Oats, .95c; rye, $1.50; straw, per ton, $8.00; new corn, $1.60 per bushes SELLING Cottonseed Meal, per ton, $80; per cwt., $4.15; Oil Meal, per ton, $80.00; cwt., $4.25; Tankage 60 per cent, $118 per ton; cwt., $6.00; Quaker Dairy Feed, per ton, $56.00; per cwt., $2.85; Salt, per bbl., $3.00. Wheat bran, per ton, $60.00; cwt., $3.00; pure wheat middlings, per ton, $65.00; per cwt., $3.35; standard middlings, per ton, $61.00; per cwt., $3.15.

LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Richmond flour mills are paying $2.78 for No. 1 Red wheat; $2.75 for No. 2; $2.71 for No. 3; No. 4, $2.61.

MRS. WILSON'S SECRETARY MARRIED TO ADMIRAL HELM WASHINGTON, April 22. Miss Edith Benham, social secretary to Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, and Rear, Admiral J. M. Helm, senior member of the commission on navy yards, were married here yesterday at Miss Benham's home. Mrs. Wilson waas the only guest present except members of the bride's family.

Cambridge Trying to Lift .Self From Debt by Own Boot Straps, He Alleges Complaint for injunction against the town of Cambridge City, in an attempt to prevent issue of bonds to pay the town's debts, on a charge that taxes are now above the legal 2 per cent on 1919 valuation of tax du

plicate, $1,163,503, was filed Wednesday afternoon by Timothy J. Connell,; & cit-iZ6Q The plaintiff states that In 1918, Cambridge City was indebted to the extent of $30,000. and that in October, 1919, the town endeavored to refund a certain amount of its indebtedness by Issuing bonds, approval for issuance of which was given by the state board of ta,x commissioners. The town advertised for bids for the bonds, and J. W. Wilde company, of Indianapolis, bid par and premium

$376, while the Wayne Trust company bid par plus $100, it is alleged. The Wilde company afterwards refused to complete the contract, as did other bidders. After this, warrant was issued by order of the town council to Harry Backman, a trustee, to be paid out of the June tax collections, which, the plaintiff alleges, is illegal.

(By Associated Press) PITTSBURG, Pa., April 22. HogsReceipts 2,000; heavies, $15. 75 16.00: heavy Yorkers, $18. 00(ri 18.23; light Yorkers, $17.5018.00; pigs, $17.00

17.50. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 2.000; market, lower: top sheep, $15.00; top lambs, $19.00. Calves Receipts, 200; market, lower; top, $20.00.

TEXAS BISHOP NAMED ROME, April 22. Paul Joseph Nussbaum, bishop of the Corpus Christ!, Texas, diocese, was nominated titular

bishop of Gerasa at the Vatican today.

KANSAS GROWERS LOST' ON WHAT CROP REPORT (By Associated Press) TOPEKA, Kas., April 22. Kansas wheat growers raised their 1919 wheat crop at an average loss of 43 cents an acre, J. C. Mohler, secretary of the state board of agriculture announced today In a report compiled from questionnaires returned by 2,040 farmers on 491,062 acres. His figures show that it cost an average of $25.20 to raise an acre of wheat and that the

return was $24.77 an acre. The only gain was in the western division where there was an average profit of $1.89 an acre.

Murder, Is Simpkins Charge NEW YORK, April 22. An indictment charging first degree murder was returned by the grand jury today against Thomas W. Simpkins, itinerant printer, who, shot and killed Dr. James Wright Markoe, noted surgeon, during last Sunday's service in St. Georges Episcopal church.

POLES ATTACKED IM RH?' STOCKHOLM, April 22. Polish residents of Petrograti who ptu. ed in a demonstration on Russian Easter were attacked by Bolshevik troops and a number were killed and wounded, says a Ilelsingfors dispatch to the Tidningen. Numerous arrests were also made by the Bolsheviki, it is said.

INDIANA CHAPTER HEAD GREETS STATE D. A. R. WASHINGTON, April 22. "We bring you greetings from 3,500 loyal Indiana daughters," said Mrs. Frank Felter, of Huntington, regent of the

Indiana Daughters of the Revolution, in addressing the national congress Wednesday night and submitting her report on the Indiana chapters. "We learned how to work when the demands oT the war came and the women of Indiana are not forgetting the lesson of conservation taught during the past lew years"

JUDGE IN WHISKY TRIAL SCORES UNLAWFUL SEARCH MARQUETTE, Mich., April 22 Any search and seizure by federal prohibition agents that would amount to tresspass under constitutional law is illegal, Federal Judge Clarence W. Sessions stated Wednesday during the trial of the Scalcucci brothers, in connection with the Iron river "whisky rebellion." "A revenue agent could never invade my home or my premises without a search warrant unless I should give him permission," the judge declared.

"Richmond's" Last Voyage (By Associated Press) BOSTON, April 22. The wooden frigate Richmond, commissioned in Naval service In 1858, was making her last voyage today. She left here yes terday in tow on the final leg of her trip to Rockland, Maine, where she will be beached and burned for junk. For many years the old sailing ship was used as a receiving vessel.

German Fly Cops Catch 'Em BERLIN, March. 21. Detectives In an aeroplane chased and caught three money traffickers, who, with 11,000,000 silver rubles, were enroute to Frankfort by train The sleuths reached Frankfort before the train and ambushed the traffickers the moment they transferred the coins to accomplices.

Ireland May Become Dominion, Says Paper LONDON, April 22. England new Irish policy may be something broader than the exisiting home rule scheme and not unlike dominion home rule, gays the Daily Sketch. Sir Hamar Greenwood, recently named secretary for Ireland, and General Sir Cecil F. N. Macready, the newly appointed military commander there, are said to favor moderation and are making attempts to determine just what the Sinn Fein wants. A favorable atmosphere is being created and the government, the newspaper says, will "go farther to reach 'a settlement than is generally believed."

ORCHESTRA SAILS NEW YORK, April 22. The New York Symphony orchestra, under the direction of Walter Damrosch, sailed today for France on the steamer Ro-

chambeau lor an eight weeks' tour of j lly

tne continent. The orchestra will make its first appearance abroad at Paris on May 16.

roo.n not bkgiv to teix. ali, "I could not tell you all the benefits I had from the use of Foley's Honey and Tar," writes Miss Koae Florke, 209 Hawkins Ave., N. Braddock. Pa. "I had a cold in my chest and fearing It would cause pneumonia I tried Foley's Honey and Tar and It was not lonsr till I felt relieved. I hop others suffering from severe colds will try it." Many such letters have been writ

ten about this time-tried, reliable fam-

medicine for coughs, colds, croup.

whooping coufth. For sale by A. G. Milken &. Co., 630 Main St. Advertisement.

LEGION BAND WILL MEET; ALL URGED TO COME

All ex-service men who are musicians are urged to attend a practice meeting of the American Legion band to be held Thursday night at 7:30 in the Commercial club rooms. About 20 players have already reported to .Director Roland Nusbaum

ana it is nopea mat the new mem-1 bers who report Thursday night will ! bring the personnel of the band upj to at least 30 pieces. An effort will be made to develop! a band that will rank high among ex-j cellent Legion bands. i

Siuts Cleaned and Pressed $1.50 PEERLESS CLEANING CO 318 Main Phone 1493 Work called for and delivered

SPECIAL FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

Ladies' Brown and Black Kid Oxford, military heel; priced $5.00

TEEPLE and WESSEL

LIVE STOCK PRICES (By Associated Press) 1 INDIANAPOLIS, April 22 Hogs 'Beceipts, 9,000; lower. Cattle Receipts, 1,100, steady and weak. Calves - Receipts 1,000, lower. Sheep Receipts, 100, steady. HOGS. Good mixed, 140 lbs. up, average,

$15.5016; assorted, 140 to 225 lbs., average. $15.7516.25; assorted, 225

to 275 lbs., average, $15.2515.75; hogs weighing down, $17.2517.50; fat back pigs, $15.35 down; light pigs, $16.25 down; feeding pigs, $15.00

down; sows, according to quality, $11.0012.60; poor to best stags, 80 lbs. dock, $10.0012.75; sales in truck market, $15.5016.50. Best heavy, a year ago, $21.00; best

light hogs, a year ago. $20.85; most cf sales a year ago, $20.8021. CATTLE. Killing Steers Extra good. 1.000 lbs. and upward. $12.5013.50; good to choice, 1250 lbs. and upward, $13.00 13.50; common to medium, 1250 lbs. 511.7512.50; good to choice, 1100 to 1200 lzs., $12.00 13.00; common to medium, 1,100 to 1,200 lbs., $11.50 $12.50; good to choice, 1,000 to L100 pounds, $11.5012.50; common to medium, 1,000 to 1.100 lbs., $11.00G3!11.50; fair to good, under 1,000 lbs., $11.25(3 13.00; good to choice yearlings, $13.00 (14.00. Heifers Good to best, under S00 lbs. and up, $11. 50 13.00; common to medium, 800 lbs. up, $10.0011.50; good to best, under 800 lbs., $11.50tfr 13.00; common to medium, under 800 lbs., $9.00 11.00. Cows. Good to best, 1,050 lbs. upward, $10.50(5,12.00; common to medium. 1,050 lbs., $9.5010.50; good to best, under 1,050 lbs., $10.00; common to medium under 1.050 lbs., $8.50 $9.50; canners and cutters. $5.008.00. Bulls. Good to best, 1,300 lbs., upward, $9.50 10.50; good to choice under 1,300 lbs., $9.50(910.00; fair to medium, under 1,300 lbs.. $S.509.00; common to good bolognas, $8.009.00 Calves Good to choice veals, under 200 pounds, $17.001S.00: common to n:edium eals, under 200 lbs., $13fM6; good to choice heavy calves, $1012; common to medium heavy calves, $8 9.50. Stockers and Feeding Cattle Good to choice steers, 800 lbs. and up, $10.00 11.00; common to fair steers, 800

lbs., and up, $9.50(310.00; good to

choice steers, under 800 lbs., $9.50(3)

10.00; common to fair steers, under 800 lbs., $8.009.00; medium to good heifers, $7.008.00; medium to good cows, $6.00 7.00; good to choice milkers, $110.00135.0o; fair to medium milkers, $75.00100.00; springers. $7.50(9.50; stock calves, 250 to 400 lbs., $7.00 10.50. SHEEP AND LAMBS Good to choice sheep. $9.00 10.00; western fed lambs, $19.0021.00; good to choice lambs, $1819. common to medium lambs, $12.00 16.00; bucks, per 100 lbs., $7.008.00. Shorn stock valued about $2 a 100 pounds lower than wool stock. DAYTON MARKET Corrected by McLean & Company, Dayton, Ohio. Bell Phone, East 28; Home 81235 DAYTON, O., April 22 Hogs Receopts, 5 cars, 25 cents lower; choice heavies, $16.75; butchers and packers, $16.75; light Yorkers, $15.5016.50; heavy Yorkers, $16.5016.75; pigs, $14 15; choice fat sows, $1313.50; common to fair sows, $12.5013.00; stags, $8.00 10.00. (Keep out all light hogs under 150 lbs. so long as the strike embargo Is on.) Cattle Receipts, 8 cars; steady; fair to good shippers, $12.0013.00; good to choice butchers, $11.00(312.00; fair to medium butchers, $1011.00; good to choice heifers, $10.0012.00; fair to good heifers, $9.00 10 00; choice fat cows, $9.00 10.00; fair to good fat cows, $6.007.50; bologna cows, $6 8; butcher bulls, $9.0011; bologna bulls, $8.009.00; calves, $10 14.00.

(By Associated Press) EAST BUFFALO. April 22. Cattle Receipts 1,200; fifty cents lower. Calves Receipts, 2,500; $1.00 lower. Hogs Receipts, 4,800; slow, $1.00 $1.75; heavies. $16.0016.50; mixed. $17.50 18.00; Yorkers, light ditto, and pigs, $17.7518.75: roughs. $13.00 13.50; stags, $8.0010.00. Sheep and fambs Receipts 2,600; easier; wool lambs, $13.0022.00; clipped lambs, $12.0020.00.

PRODUCE MARKET (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, April 22 Butter market unchanged. Eggs: Receipts 28,530 cases; market higher; lowest 38; firsts 41422. Live poultry, unchanged. Potatoes, weak; receipts 16 cars, northern round white, sacked and bulk, $7(5)7.25; mixed red and white, and Wisconsin Bliss Triumphs, $6.90.

Fat

(By Associated Press) CINCINNATI, April 22. Butter

Steady. Eggs Firm; prime firsts 39; firsts 3836. Poultry Quiet; springers 55; hens, 34; turkeys, 40.

LIBERTY BONDS. (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, April 22 Prices on Liberty bonds today at 2:55 p. m., were: 3. 93.40; first 4, 85.20; second 4. 85.20; first 414, 85.40; second 4Vi. 86.00; third 4Vi. 91.00; fourth 44 86.00; Victory 3, 96.30; Victory 4 96.80.

NEW YORK STOCKS (Markets by ,E. W. Wagner 212 Union Bank Bide)

NEW YORK, April 22 American Can 40,& Am. Smelting 62 Anaconda 56 Baldwin Locomotive ...116 Pethlehem Steel, B 89 Chesapeake and Ohio . . 50 General Motors 280 Goodrich Tires 65 1 Mexican Petroleum 173 Pennsylvania 40 Reading 77 Republic Iron and Steel 99 Sinclair Oil 35 Stromberg Carburetor . . 79 Studebaker 107 Union Pacific 117i U. S. Rubber 100 U. S. Steel 98 Utah Copper 70 White Motors 55

& Co..

42 6314 57 118'4 90 52 295 65 175 40 78 100 35 81 109 118 102 9S 71'i 58

LOCAL HAY MARKET Steady No. 1 timothy, $30.00 33.00; clover, $32.00 33.00. (By Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS, April 22 Haystrong; No. 1 timothy, $39.0039.50; No. 2 timothy, $38.0038.50; No. 1 clover, $37.5038.00.

BUTTER QUOTATIONS. The wholesale price for creamery butter is 67 cents a pound. Butter fats delivered in Richmond, bring 65 cents a pound.

FRUIT & VEGETABLES Beets. 5c buncch; leaf lettuce, 30c lb.; head lettuce, trimmed. 30c lb.;

dry onions, 10c lb.; parsley, 15c

bunch; green mangoes, 8c each; garlic, 75c lb.; new cafibage, 10c lb.; celery 10c to 20c bunch; spinach 20c to 25c lb.; sweet potatoes, 10c lb.; rutabagas, 5c lb.; Spanish onions, 15c lbs.; shallotts. 10c bunch; white radishes, 8c bunch; red radishes, 15c bunch; Brussels sprouts, 40c quart; cauliflower, 20c to 30c lb.; cucumbers, 35c each: Irish potatoes, 10c lb., $6.00 per bu.; green peas, 30c lb.; parsnips, 3 lbs. for 25c; onion sets, white or yellow, 15c lb.; ripe tomatoes, 25c lb. Eggs, 45 cents per dozen; creamery butter, 75c to 78c lb.; country butter, 65c lb.; turkeys, 65c lb.; chicikens, 65c. Fruits.

, Bananas, 12 to 12c lb.; lemons, J

Good Old Fashioned Faith -That's What The World Needs Most

WHAT is the cure for the world's present troubles for unrest and envy and covetousness and fear? Legislation ? Industrial compromises ? Political readjustments ? We've tried them all, and they do not satisfy. We're hungry and thirsty for Faith. "The world needs a genuine religious revival," cabled the London financial editor of the New York Evening Post recently. And he added: "This is the view of hard-headed business men." What business men are now proclaiming the churches have always proclaimed. You must touch the spirits of men if you are to change their lives : only to the extent of their faith in each other can they work together. All remedies are makeshifts except the Golden Rule. Thirty denominations, knowing the need to be too great for any one denomination to meet alone, are cooperating in a nationwide campaign.

It is a campaign for deepening the spiritual forces of men ; for enlisting their hearts, and their pocket-books too. And every man and woman who loves America will be glad of a chance to help. For the hope of America is Democracy and the Founder of Democracy was the Founder of the Church. It was He who first called men sons of God, and so made all men brothers. Not as employers and errfployees, not as members of parties or sects, but as sons of God and brothers all let us work out our problems together. To strengthen the Church is our first great task; out of the Church flows Faith.

To bring men back to the mpiritual standard, to makeChnsili principle an impelUng force in the reconstruction of aociety and to teach men to think true and lire true iathe michty task to which the church ia called. RoantT LiWinto, Ckair'n Oen. Comm. Inttrchurck World

Movtmtnt

The only real and permanent solution of fhe vexinc problems which seem more acute than erer since the end of the World War is the application of the Gulden Rule. Joseph us Dikikls, Secretary 0 th A aw

United Financial Campaign

April 25th to May 2nd

(mi T

The spiritual side of man's nature has been too much neglected, and we oeed a new birth of righteousness that will restore the true relation between spiritual and mateerial things. W. B. Wnjoir, Secretary 0 Lobar

For our own sakes. for our children's sakes, for the nation s sake, let us business men get behind the churchesand their preachers! Lt us from this err day rive them more time, money and thought, for upon them the vsilue of all we own ultimately depends! Ross W. Basso. uimm Analyit

elNTERCHURCH Wrld Movement of Dforth sArmrica The pabHcatJan of Ma tdvortiaemeat tnath poMifts through the ooopmraMoa ot thirty daoomioationa