Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 312, 12 November 1921 — Page 10
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, 1ND., SATURDAY, NOV. 12, 1921. Markets GRAIN PRICES Furnlahed by E. W. WAGNER & CO, 212 Union National Bank Building CHICAGO. Nov. 12 Grain markets Impressed by chance of enormous new wheat loss in southwest and signs of small receipts. Kansas complaints are increasing. Alarming southwest reports may drift In at any time. Modern Miller report confirms the general fears of southwest Kansas City news suggests one of the worst crops starts in Texas, Oklahoma. 60 of Kansas and some of Nebraska forecast is for
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rain or snow. Other friendly factors of today is talk of a wheat visible decrease. Liverpool up near lc and Argentine up 2'ic. Markets may continue firm over Monday. RANGE OF FUTURES Furnished by E. W. WAGNER & CO., 212 Union National Bank Building CTTTCAGO, Nov. 12. Following is the range of futures on Chicago Board
"i i raae today:
Open High Low Close Wheat T)c 1.054 1.09V4 1.054 1.09 V4 May ....1.11 1.13V3 liqi; i.i3 Rye May 82? .8514 .82 4 M Corn 46 .4714 .48 . .46 Mav 52 .53V4 .52 .53 Oats Tjp- 32 .32 .32 .323. May 37 .37 .37 ' .37 Lard May ....8.95 8. 85 Ribs May 7.50 7.50
CBy Associated Press) CHICAGO. Nov. 12. Wheat No. 1 hard. $1.10. Corn No. 3 mixed, 44 444; No. 2 yellow, 48fi 48',4. Oats -No. 2 white, 35fi36; No. 3 white. 32'434. Pork, nominal; ribs, $6 7.75; lard, $9l5T9.03. (By Associated Press) TOLEDO. O., Nov. 12. Clover seed - Prime cash, $12.15; Jan., $12.35; Feb., $12.35: March, $12.25; Dec, $12.25. Alsike Prime cash, $10.40; Feb., $10.85; March. $10.85; Dec, $10.55. Timothy Prime cash. $2.90; Jan., $2.95; Feb., $3; March, $3.05; Dec, $2.92 U. (By Associated Press) CINCINNATI. O., Nov. 12. Wheat -No. 2 red, $1.22 1.24; No. 3 red, S1.181.21; othr grades as to quality, $ 1 .10 1.17. Corn No. 2 white, 5K 52: No. 3 white, 47W48; No. 4 white, 4647. Corn No. 2 yellow, 52 53; No. 3 yellow, 49 50: No. 4 yellow, 47 48. Corn-No. 2 mixed. 50.51. Oats - Steady. 33 38: rve, steady; 72 74; hay, steady, $16 22. INDIANAPOLIS HAY (Tv A snrietfod Pr--ss; INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. 12. Haytimothy. $17iai7.50: No. 1 clover, $16.5017 50. LIVE STOCK niiCES (By Associated Pres.O TNPIANAPOLT?. Nov. 11. TToes Tte-' r
oi); lower, r'alves -Receipts. oo: low-; 75 cents higher; fat yearlings quoted t. sheep p.eceipts. COO: un"hanged. . 25 cents higher; matured fat she Bo,r'l:r.lbS..,,P::::, - 5S!o-k. steady to 25 cents higher; feed-Miv.-i ami assorted J60 to er lambs zo to 40 cents hieher. 2:5 lbs T 2." fi T 50 j .
'tnnrl hoRs. 22.i lbs. up . . . . Yorkers. l."0 lbs. down... 'lood pigs Sows afi-ordina: to weKiht Most of heavy sows Sales in truck market ... Most sales of Iioks a year ago Cuttle K1IUNC, ST?: K R.J Good to choice. 1,300 lbs. "P Common to medium. 1,300 lbs. up Good to choice. 1,150 to 1.2T.0 lbs Common to medium, 1.150 to 1.250 lbs Good to choice, 900 to 1.110 lb? Common to medium, POO to 1.100 lbs Uoorl to best under 900 lbs Poor to mcduhn. under 900 lbs flood to best yearlings... HKIKEKS Cood to best . Common to medium. 500 lbs. up Good to best under Soo lbs. Common to medium under S00 lbs COWS !ood to best 1.050 lbs. up Common to medium, 1.05O lbs. up Cood to choice, under 1.O50 lbs 7S down 007' "ift 15. in 00 . s no oorr 50r Oft To OOtt 7 50 9 00 7 00 S 50 fi 00 I 7 00 j I? oo s no 6 00 'if i no ? oo t 50 :: 30 ft- t oo 0Tj. t 2.-, Common to fair, under 1.050 lbs 3 00 If 50 Poor to good cutters " snw ;t Oo Poor to good canners.... i iuyj 2 &u BPLIS flood to best butchers.... 4 2oii) 4 50 Good to best. 1.300 lbs. up. 3 50y) 4 00 Good to choice, under 1.300 lbs &0 4 23 Common to medium, under 1.300 lbs 00' 3 50 Common to good bulogua o 00ii 3 30 CALVES Good to choice veals, under 200 lbs 11 00'fli 12 00 ('oinmon to medium veals, ' under 200 lbs S 00 10 00 Good to choice heavy i-alves 6 00 7 00 Common to medium heavy calves 4 00 5 50 STOCKICP.S & K?:?:i'lNG CATTLE Good to choice steers, SuO lbs. and up 5 75 6 50 Common to fair steers, SOO lbs. up 5 00 5 50 Gooil to choice steers, under 800 lbs 5 00 6 00 Common to fair steers, under 800 lbs 4 50 5 00 Medium to Rood heifers.. 4 boi 5 50 Medium to tfood cows.... 3 60 4 60 Stock calves. 250 to 400 lbs. '. 5 00 6 00 aivr Sheep and Lamb. Good to choice liffht sheep 3 00 3 50 Good to choice heavy sheep 2 5OC0 3 Common to medium sheep 1 00 ti 2 Stockers fc breeding ewes 1 00'm 4 Selected light lambs S 25(05 8 Fair to best mixed lambs 7 00 j' 8 Good to beet hevay lambs 7 50 fix' 8 All other lambs 6 00'u) 7 00 2 00 4 00 8 50 8 00 8 00 7 00 2 50 Bucks. 100 lbs 1 00 DAYTON MARKET Corrected by McLean & Company, Dayton, O., Bell Phone, East 28. Home Phone, 81235. DAYTON, Ohio, Nov. 12 Hogs Receipts, four cars; market, steady; choice heavies, $7.25; butchers and packers, $7.25; heavy Yorkers, $7.25; light Yorkers, $7.007.35; choice fat sows, $6.50 7; common to fair, $5.50 6.00; pigs, $6.507.00. Cattle Receipts, eight cars; market 15c lower; fair to good shippers, $6.50 f? 7.00; fair to medium butchers, $6.60 6f8.00; good to choice butchers, $6.50 7.00; good to fat cows, $5.0005.50; bologna bulls, $4.00 5.00; butcher bulls, $4.506.00. Calves, $6.00 Sheep Market, steady; $2.003.00. 10.00. Lambs $5.00 7.00. I
(By Associated rs) CINCINNATI, O., Nov. 12 Cattle receipts 300; hogs receipts 3,500; sheep receipts 150; cattle market steady; good to choice $6$8; fair to good $5 $6; common to fair $3.50$5; heifers, good to choice $5$7.50; fair to good ?4$5; common to fair $S$4; cows, good to choice $4$4.50; fair to good $3.25$4; cutters $2.75$3.25 canners $1.50$2.50; stock steers $4 $4.50; stock heifers $4$4.50; stock cows $2.50$3.50; bulls steady: bologna $3.50$4.50; fat bulls $4.50$5; milch cows steady, 30$1; calves steady; good to choice $11$12; fair to good $9$11; common and large $4$8; hogs 15c lower; heavies $7.50; good to choice packers and butchers $7.50; medium $7.50; stags $4S5; common to choice fat sows $5$6; light shippers $7.85: pigs, 110 pounds and less $6S$8.50; sheep steady; good to choice lights $33.50; fair to good $2$3; common to fair $1$1.50; bucks $1.50; lambs steady; good to choice $9;$9.50: seconds $6$7; fair to good $7.50 $9; common to fair $3 14.
EAST BUFFALO. Nov. 12. CattleReceipts, 650; steady. Calves Receipts, 250; steady; $57i 13. HogsReceipts, 2,400; steady; heavy, $7.50 If7.75; mixed, $7.758; Yorkers, $8 8.35; light ditto. $8.25 fi 8.50; pigs, $8.50; roughs, $6.50 6.75; stags, 5. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 2,200; steady; lambs, $45110; few, $10.25; others, unchanged. (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Nov. 12 Cattle Receipts. 1,000; compared with a week ago, good and choice light and me dium weieht steers and yearlings. 25 to 40 cents lower; short fed and heavv steers. 50 to 75 cents lower; common classes and westerns, 25 cents lower; fat she stock, 25 to 40 cents lower: bulls, canners and cutters mostly 2i cents lower; veal calves mostly $2 lower; heavy calves, 50 to 75 cento off; stockers and feeders, 25 to 50 cents lower. Hogs Rececipts. 5.000: largely in to 15 cents higher than yesterday';, average; mixed up most: few late sales weak; hold over liberal; 150 pound hogs, $7.40; litjht liehts, up to ,JnA.T.V '. uum -8a i"n.4ir, pisf. sieaay 10 strong; Duiii j desirable, SS.OO. Sheep Receipts, 1.000; today's receipts mostly packers direct: few on j sale but steady prices compared with a week ago; best fat lambs, steady to 00 cents higher: in between. 5 Oto iBv Associated Pre..) PITTSBURG. Pa., Nov. 12 Hogs Rerpints 3.000; market lower; heavies $7.40.7.50; heavy Yorkers $7.908; light Yorkers $'8.25. Pigs, $S8.25. Sheep and Iambs Receipts 350; marKet, steady; top sheep $0; top lambs, $9.2o. Calves Receipts market, steady; top, $12. CO; PRODUCE MARKET (By Assoelated Press) INDIANAPOUS, Ind., Nov. 12 Butter Fresh prints, 4345c; packing stock. 15 20c. Eggs 53 55c. Fowls 44 lbs. and nr. 23c: under
t no-i r. 00 4V2 lbs. 17 21c; springers, 2 lbs. and ooirio 00 j 0v-er is 20c: under 2 lbs., 24c: legfi no ft 6 r.o i liorns, i920c; roosters. 1012c;
fciags, i.-jc; 01a toms, L'iKSUc; young toms. 32 35c; capons, 38 40c; young hens. 3235c; squabs, 11 lbs. to doz.. $5; young guineas. $7.50 a doz.; old guineas, 2 lb. size, $5 a doz.; rabbits, drawn. $j.50'J doz.; spring ducks. 4 i lbs. and up, 17 20c; squabs, 1720c; Seese, 10 lb?, up, 11 14c. I EGGS (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, Nov. 12. Eggs Firm, receipts, 14,102 cases; fresh gathered extra firsts, 63 67c; fresh gathered firsts, 56 62c. fliy Associated Press) CINCINNATI, Nov. 12 Whole milk creamery butter, extra, 48c. Eggs Prime firsts, 60c; firsts, 57c; seconds, 40c. Poultry, broilers, 26c; springers, 15c; hens, 21 25c; turkeys, 32c. Tiy Associated Press) CHICAGO. Nov. 12 Butter market higher; creamery extras, 43c. Eggs Receipts 6.010 cases; market higher; lowest, 43 47c; firsts, 53 55c. Live Poultry Market unsettled: fowls, $132tc; springs, 19c; turkeys, doc; roosters, loc. Potatoes Firm; receipts 175 cars: total U. S. shipments, 1,247; Red River Ohios, $1.55 1.70 cwt.; Northern whites, bulk, $1.752.10; sacked, $1.70 Lit. CWt. (By Associated Press) NEW YORK STOCKS CFSy Associated Press) NEW YORK, Nov 12 American Can 31 Am. Smelting 40 Anaconda 4384 Atchison 864 Baldwin Locomotive 95 Bethlehem Stel, B 58 Central Leather 30 4 Chesapeake & Ohio (bid) 55 C. R. I. & Pacific 32 Chino Copper 26 Crucible Steel 65 Cuba Cane Sugar 7 General Motors WVz Goodrich Tires 32 Mexican Petroleum 114 New York Central 72 Pennsylvania 36 Reading 70 Republic Iron & Steel 50 Sinclair Oil 23 Southern Pacific 78
'ELEVEN MEN IN EVERY PI AY" ic ct na tsi
rrn a 11 t tai u Just what has put Centre college, tiny institution in Danville, Ky on a par with Harvard and the other famous institutions in Southern Railroad is7: s C ,1 1 . 1 .-.,.'. oiuutjuaivt-r 1074 ' Union Pacific 1:; U. S. Rubber 4?i?; U. S. Steel Utah Copper r.6'. ' " i LIBERTY BONDS i fF.y Associated Press) I NEW YORK, Nov. 12. Final prices on Liberty bonds today were as follows: 3Vs First 4 (bid Second 4 First 4U Second 4'i . Third 44 ... $;'-,-j; J 04.70 !'4.:m 04. 7J 96.40 94 So 09.74 9.71 Fourth 41 '4 Victory 1 Victory 4 RICHMOND MARKETS (Furnished by Whelan) BUYING Oats 30c; rye, SOc; corn 45c; straw fS per ton. SELLING Oil meal, per ton. $52.50; per hundred weight, $2.65; Tankage, 60 percent, $55.00 per ton; per cwt., $2.85; bran, per ton, $23.50; per cwt., $1.25. Barrel salt, $3.25; standard middlings, $27 per ton, $1.50 per cwt.; rve middings, $26 per ton, $1.40 per cwt. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET n'chmonrt flour milts are paying $1.05 for No. 2 wheat. LOCAL HAY MARKET Steady; No. 1 timothy. $15; clover, $16; heavy mixed, $I415. PRODUCE BUYING Country butter, 30c lb.; eggs, C2c dozen; chickens, 18c a lb.; fries, ISc. 18c. BUTTER QUOTATIONS The wholesale price for creamer butter Is 45 cents a lb. Take Bizzaro Divorce Case Under Advisement The divorce suit of Chester Bizzaro against Josephine Bizzaro, on a statutory charge, was taken under advisement by Judge W. A. Bond after trial Saturday. Frank Russo was named as co-respondent. Bizzaro, who testified through an interpreter, said Mrs. Bizzaro left him Sept. 9 of this year and went to New York City, taking with her his pay check for one week. Bizzaro, who claims to be a worker at the Pennsylvania roundhouse, said he was making $90 every two weeks, and that he turned the entire sum over to her to run the house. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ford. 2024 North E street, a son, William Perry Ford. Mr. and Mrs. Olin W. Scott, Richmond, boy; Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Mason, Cambridge City, girl; Mr. and Mrs. James William Wilson, R. R. A, boy, Mr. and Mrs. Burt L. Johnson, Williamsburg, boy. nininiHiimnmiiitHniiiniiinniliniiHinnniiniiiiiiHiniiiiiiiiniiiiiniimiinillK f BIRD SEED IN BULK I All Varieties 1 I OMER G. WHELAN I 5 The Feed Man 1 s 31-33 S. 6th St. phon 1c679 1
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MtiN liEHINU THE GUN the gridiron game? Two things. Charlie Moran, their coach, and the system he has terfected. That system is "eleven men In
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NCE NOTED FOET OF CHEROKEE NATION
GRASS VALLEY. Calif. A low and I unpreposessing i own hand in n
tree, planted by his jam the grandson of Chief Ka-nun-ta-half-abandoned cenie-1 cia go and Princess Sehoya. Sly
lery in this California mininc town ! marked on every side by- the foot-' I . . ..,.. tur- juii'-Uiiiru-, 1U11IIS lilt' solitary identification of the grave of John Rol!in Ridge, the remarkable man of Cherokee blood, whose writ ings of a half century ago were doclared by high authorities to shew the fire of ac tual genius. Recently a small party of Ridge admirers sought out this neglected grave and while grouped around it the poem "Mount Shasta." written by the light of a miner's candle after tlie author
had toiled long hours in the" placer. I ,K'S' 1,1 18'6, at the age of 40 yearswas read. The peroroation of "Mount I hp an(1 1he ,ree whicb e had
Shasta" regarded by many as Ridge's! masterpiece, is as follows: "And well I ween in after year: how, In the middle of his furrowed track the plowman. In some sultry hour, will pause and wiping From his brow the dusty sweat, with I t T I v lil. Gaze upon that hcarv peak. The herdsman oft will rein his charger in the plain and drink Into his inmost i the i, au. limitv; And little children, playing on the green, shall Cease their sport, and, turning that mountain to Old, shall of their mother ask: "Who! made it? And she shall answer "GOD" How the blood of an Indian Princess of the far-distant Cherokee nation days in Georgia, co-mingled with a new England Puritan maid to produce the ing the above lines, is disclosed to! he who cares to delve into history of the family. His Biography The clue is a stained and forgotten book, modestly lettered, "John R. Ridge's Poems," the foreward of which contains a brief biography of the author, the following being an excerpt: "I am just a little less than a halfblood Cherokee Indian. My father was John Ridge, a chief and notable man among the people of that nation, both before and after their forced migration. My mother was Sarah Bird It's Time to Insure DOUG AN-JENKINS CO. The Best Place to Trade After All AcK WPrnDn wrtuMmuuuituitmiiHutiiuimMrnimfMHiiimHiumifiimMnTmTijmfmtunnti s s I Home-Made Potato Chips I Fresh Daily STERLING Cash GROCERY f 1 A. R. Bertsch, ProD. 1035 Main St. 1
Briefs
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ni? mxTrrop WORK FOR THAT END In group above are: Charlie Moran. at right, and his chief aides. "Chief" Myers, athletic director, at left, and Line Coach ThornhilL Below: Captain Armstrong. every play." And this teamwork is shown clearly in "Bo" McMillan's action in refusing the captaincy again this year after leading the eleven last year. "One of the other boys has it coming to him this year," said McMillan, and promptly voted for Bob Armstrong, who now leads the team. Centre's success began when Moran became its coach in 1917, although the war drew interest away from the grid game and thereby prevented Centre from winning notice until 1919. when it won it3 nine games, piling up 478 points to its opDonents' 23, N'orthrupt. native of New England. I Indian name is Yellow Bird. In the wake of the fir.t gold rush in 1S50, John Rollin Ridge, came to California from Arkansas, a highly ed ucated stripniing of twentv-three. Al j ready many poems and other writings naa flowered from his pen. In California he became a journalist of the ola school ponderous, caustic, belligerent He served here and there as editor, conducting in turn several of the foremost papers on the Pacific coast of that day. dipping meanwhile into polipiamea several years previously became his monument. The ancestry of Ridge runs back in a direct line to the sevpntppnth rentury, when the Cherokees and their allied tribes were very numerous and powerful in the south, centering In what is now the state of Georgia. Among the Cherokees there was a Princess Sehoya. a proud and beautl . . - ' " -' - ' j mi gin, witn a slight intermingling of i Scotch blood, dating back to an early ,ml-u "duc'- neuoja. ieu m love Wlt a young plebian Ka-nun-ta-cla-ge. I or 1 ne uion wio wains Dy .Mght, I and the two eloped. Attains High Honors. The Lion, however, having taken his wife's civilization name of Ridge, thanks to the Scotch trader, was in time accepted as the ruling chief of the federated Cherokee nation. As such he acquired some education, became an orator and was widely known as a man of peace. But in time disquieting rumors came Farm Sale Calendar Tuesday. Nov. 15 Paul J. McPherson sale of registered Holstein cattle at farm, one mile south of New Paris on Cedar Springs road VIGRAN'i Ladies' Short) Chocie of any Dress in our store up to $50.00 values at $15.00 BOSTON STORE Quality First COAL You'll Need It This Kind of Weather MATHER BROS. Co. BUY SUGAR at E. R, BERHEIDE Phone 1329 244 S. 5th St Free Delivery
from Washington that President Monroe had lost patience with the tribe and was about to send an army to overrun and disperse the nation. This started Chief Ridge posthaste to Washington to plead for one more chance. Monroe had heard such pleas before and was obdurate. When everything else had failed, Chief Ridge dramatically offered his oldest son, John Ridge, Jr., as a hostage and pledge that the Cherokees would maintain the peace. President Monroe accepted and the 15 year old Indian boy was sent from Georgia to Washington as the hostage. Instead of ordering the Indian youth confined in prison, Monroe directed that he be sent to a missionary school at Cornwall. Conn., to be educated. Time passed and the Indian lad had become a man. He belonged to the ruling family of the Cherokee federated nation and he fell in love so that when he finally returned to Georgia he was accompanied by a trim Puritan maid, formerly Miss Sarah Bird Northrupt. then Mrs. John Ridge. It was from the union of John Ridge and Sarah Bird Northrupt that John Roblin Ridge, the poet, was born In 1827. Long agitation for the removal of the tribes beyond the Mississippi finally culminated in their being transported to what is now eastern Oklahoma. Then John, the father, and Sarah Bird Northrupt-Rldge died and her son joined the gold rush to California.
Requests All Three Charges Heard Against Small Dec. 5 (By Associated Press) WAUKEGAN, 111., Nov. 12 Requests that all three preliminary motions in the embezzlement case against Governor Small be heard on Dec. 5, were made today by attorneys for the governor and the' state's attorney's office of Sangamon county. In event that the indictments are sustained, they asked that the trial be started at the earliest possible date. Dec. 28 is being considered as a possible date for opening the trial. News of the Counties GREEN'S FORK, Ind., Nov. 12 A farewell missionary meeting will be held for the Rev. and Mrs. Earl Baldwin, at the Friends church, here, Monday night. The Rev. Baldwin was formerly a pastor of the church in Green's Fork, but is soon to leave. ALL USE IT
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Wesleyan M. E. Church Announces Sunday Program Following is an announcement of the revival services to be held at the Wesleyan Methodist church, Sunday: 10:30, love least; 11 o'clock, sermon on divine healing, by Evangelist W. W. Stephenson; 2 o'clock. Bible school; 3 o'clock, sermon by the Rev. Stephenson; 7:15 o'clock, song praises services; 8 o'clock, preaching by the evangelist. Revival services will be held at 7:30 o'clock each night of next week.
Light, Backus to Attend National M. E. Conference Dr. Somerville Light, district superintendent of the M. E. church, and Rev. A. H. Backus, pastor of Grace M. E. church, will attend a national M. E. conference next week at Detroit. Business in connection wiUi the centenary movement and payment ' of subscriptions will be discussed. Funeral Arrangements MRS. ELLEN OWENS Mrs. Ellen Owens. 57 years old, died at her home, 32 North Tenth street. Friday morning at 3 o'clock. She is survived hv her hnchan.i William B. Owens, two daughters Marjory and Helen, one brother, Patrick Fitzmorris, one sister, Mrs. Marv Reed, all of this city. Funeral services will be held Monday morning at the St. Mary's church at 9 o'clock. Rev. Cronin will officiate and burial will be in St. Marv's cemetery. Friends may call at anv time. MRS. REBECCA W. MILLER. Mrs. Rebecca W. Miller, SO years old, died at hfr home, 318 North Eighth street, Friday afternoon ht 2:45 o'clock. She is survived by one son, Edear E. Miller, and one grandson. Earl Miller. She is the widow of the late David A. Miller and mother of Fire Chief Miller. Funeral services will be held Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock, at the home. Burial vriH be in the Earlham cemetery and friends may call at anytime. An expedition is being organized t search for the lost gold mine of Lost river in the Mackenzie river country, where nuneets as bis as walnuts -were once found. IN THE FALL
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