The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 303, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 15, 1909 Page: 7 of 8
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THE OKLAHOMA STATE CAPITAL, THURSDAY MORNING APRIL 15, 1229.
Page Seven.
.. The World of Sports ..
MM
GUTHRIE PUTS UP
A SNAPPY GAME
BUT TIMELY HITTING BY VIS-
ITORS AND GOOD SLAB
WORK BY BANDY WON.
J
■
jOCALS SHOW BETTER FORM.
With the Exception of Two Bad
Innings for Guthrie, the Game
Was Replete With Snappy
Playing—Some Brilliant Field
Work.
1
Bandy, p. .........
Total M B 9 27 18 1
Bcoro by Inning"! R H E
Guthrie 110000000— 2 10 2
Okla. City ...2 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0- B 9 1
Summary—Earned runs: Guthrie 1;
Oklahoma City 4. Two base bits: An-
derson, Price. Throe bane hit*. Kilsey.
Double plays: Rapps to I). White; White
to D. White to Rapp*. Htoien bases;
Burnett, Dpwnlng, 1>. White. Struck
nut: By Nelson 1; by Gelst 1; by Bandy
Bases on balls: Off Nelson 8. Wild
pitch, Bandy. Sacrifice hits: Rapps.
Umpire*: Harlon and McCllntock. At-
tendance, 450. Time of game, 1:30.
FAST AMERICAN
LEAGUE GAMES
Guthrie showed better speed In the
game yesterday with Oklahoma City, al-
though the game went to the visitors.
The locals had two bad Innings. In
the first the Mets clouted out three
safe ones nd trotted three men vross
the pan. In the fourth, a walk and a
bad error by Price, who put stilts under
a third threw, let In another run. Aside
from these two heart-breaking bungles,
the gamo was a good exnlbltlon ol ball
on both sides.
Guthrie had the better of hits by one.
fj'iit they were not bunched, while Ok-
lahoma City made six of the nine they
m t in two Innings.
Go wan. in the center grden for Guth-
rie, made a couple of sensational dives
and Waring did a star base running
stunt between first and second, by
which he wlgVc.l Norman Price cross
the initial : -k k in the second
Bandy, wh « twirled for the visitors,
was strong throughout In pinches und
kept the hits well scattered. Kelsey did
the star hitting for the visitors, making
one of the two swats that he tabbed
a three-bagger with two men on oases.
Patterson was the heavy slugger of the
local nine, his hitting being one of the
failures of the game.
Nelson done good work In the box f>>r
the locals except in the first and fifth
Innings. In the first he w«? hit hard
end In the fourth he weakened and got
wild and was replaced by Glest, who
r?iade good from there out, allowing the
visitors to la/id on him seriously only
In the sixth, after which he settled down
and they were unable to make anything
out of his curves.
DETROIT TAKES PITCHERS
BATTLE FROM WHITE SOX
TO OPEN.
THE NATION AE
LEAGUE OPENS! provisions
DAILY MARKETS OF THE WOULD
FURNISHED BY ASSOCIATED PRESS-FULL WIRE SERVICE
BOSTON MADE IT A
FEST ON PURPORTED
PITCHING WONDER.
Wheat Reaches High Mark for the
J Season Yesterday.
CORN AND OATS SHARP.
CINCINN'TI CROWD FEATURE
Pittsburg Made Timely Hits and
Won—Overall Did Customary
Trading in Wheat Pit Excited,
Terminating Exceedingly Bull-
ish—Corn Tops Two Cents Up.
But Provisions Were Unusually
Weak.
COTTON FINANCIAL
Spots Were Firm and Higher at j Unsettled Day for the Barons of
New Orleans. j the Stock Exchange.
RING MODERATELY ACTIVE i RUSSIAN WAR HAS EFFECT
Advance of Six to Nine Points 0111 Reports of Unproflcious Crop
Good Buying Orders With Lit-
tle Say on Heavy Selling.
Conditions Had a Counter Ef-
fect on Stock Exchange The
LIVESTOCK
Market Takes a Decided Drop To-
day With Light Receipts.
HOGS ALSO DROP LOWER.
Sheep Remain Steady With G,000
Receipts St. Joseph Market
Shows Similar Tendency With
CHICAGO, April 14.—Wheat for May
Stunt of Pitching a Shut Out I delivery sold on the board of train- u>-
otu 6 , day at $U'y per bushel while the July
Game for Chicago Cubs.
MULLIN'S ONE-HIT GAME
St. Louis Crowds Large and Game
Exciting, in Which St. Louis
Makes Costly Errors—Powell's
Out-Pitching Lost.
tim
follows.
GUTHRIE.
Players—
AB
R
H
PO
A
E
Cowan, cf
... 4
0
1
3
0
1
Burkett, ss. ...
... 4
0
1
2
1
0
patterson, rf. ..
... 4
1
3
0
0
Anderson, 3b. .
5
0
1
3
2
0
N. Waring, c.
4
0
0
2
1
0
Price, lb
.... 4
1
2
10
0
1
Brown, 2b
.... 3
0
1
0
2
0
'ttliecler. If. ...
..... 3
0
0
3
0
0
Nelson, p
2
0
1
0
3
0
Gelst. p
1
0
0
0
2
0
W. Price
.... 1
0
0
0
0
0
Total
...Is
3
10
27
11
2
OKLAHOMA
CITY.
Players—
AB
R
11
PO
A
E
Emery, 3b. ...
f
1
1
0
0
1
Dillon, If
.... 4
0
2
3
0
0
Rapps, lb
.... 3
0
0
is
2
0
Downing, cf. •
5
1
1
1
0
0
McCllntock, rf.
.... 4
0
1
0
0
0
D. White. 2b.
4
0
0
4
4
ft
White, ss
.... 3
2
1
0
2
0
Kelsey; <•
.... 4
1
2
4
2
0
detroit 2; chicago 0.
DETROIT, Mich., April 14. In the
opening game here today Chicago was
beaten by the American League cham-
pions 2 to 0 in a pitchers' battle. De-
troit bunched two hits, a double >
Moriarity and a single by Mclntyrc,
around Parent's erro in the fifth, and
scored the two runs of the game right
there. Cravath was the only mail to
make first base for Chicago! He
walked in the secon^ and got a sin-
gle In the eighth.
The score:
Detroit 000 020 OOx-2 4 1
hlcago 000 000 000—0 1 3
Batteries—Mullin and Schmidt;
Smith and Sullivan.
Summary: Two-base hit—Moriari-
Sacrifice hit—Schmidt. Stolen
base—Cravath. Double play—Mullin,
Bush and Rossman. Base on Bally
Off Mullin 1 First base on errors-
Detroit 2. Struck out—By Mullen F.
by Smith 3. Umpires O'Loughlin and
Kerin.
st. louis 2; cleveland 4.
ST. LOUIS. April 14—Opening the
eason here today with Cleveland, be-
fore of the largest crowds that has
ever witnessed a spring game. th« St.
Louis baseball team went down to
defeat by a score of 4 to2. Powell, with
the exception of the fourth Inning,
pitched excellent "ball. Both teams
played fast' ball.
The score:
Louis .000 010 100—2 8 3
1'1 ,1 "00 400 OOO—4 6 1
Batteries—Powell and Crigcr; Joss
and N. Clarke.
Summary: Two-base hits—Jones,
Ferris, Hoffman, Lord. Sacrifice hit-
Turner. Double plays—Wallace. Wil-
liams .Jones; Wallace, Jones; Turner.
Lajole, Stovall (2). Base on balls-
Off Joss 1. Struck out—By Powell
4. by Joss 1. Umpires K5k. rldan and
Perrlne.
boston 9; philadelphia 5.
BOSTON, April 14.'—Th< maj^n
league bast ball season opened here
today with a 0 to u victory for the
Boston team over the Philadelphia
Nationals. The visitors, with Coval
ski in the box, started out well and
scored two runs in the opening In-
ning. Boston solved the big left
bander's delivery in the fifth inning,
however, scoring eight runs on eight
hits a base on balls and a wild pitch.
The score.
Boston 000 080 Olx—« 18 3
Philadelphia 200 Oil 100—5 10 0
Batteries—Mattern, Ferguson and
Smith; Covalskl. Moran and Dooin.
's mix—®J1M asuq-o.uj, :.£uBiuuing
Magee, Dooin (2), Ferguson, Dahlen,
Bates. Home run—Dahlen. Sacrifice
hits—Doolin. Covalskl, Grant. Base
on balls—Off Ferguson 3. off Moran 1.
Hit by pitcher—By Ferguson. Knabo
by Mattern, Dooin. Struck out—b
Ferguson 5. by Covalskl 1, by Moren
Wild pitches—Moren 2. Balk—
Mattern. Umpires Rigler and Truby.
CINCINNATI, 0; PITTSBURG. 3.
CINCINNATI, April 14.—The largest
iT!>wd that ever witnessed the lnaUgu
ration of a baseball season in this city
was out to sen the Cincinnati and Pitts-
burg teams play this afternoon. The
Plttsburgers secured a lead In the first
Inning and won 3 to 0: Seore:
Cincinnati 000 000 000—0 R l
pittsburg 10n 100 001—3 4 2
Batteries—Fromme and McLean; Cam-
nitz and Gibson.
Two-base hit—Paskert: Wagner. Three
base-hit—Miller. Sacrifice hits—Fromme,
Wagner.. Sacrifice—Clark. Stolen bases—
Mowrey, Camnltz. Base on balls—Off
Fromme 3. truck out—By Fromme r,: By
Camnltz 4. Umpires O'Bay and Emaile.
new
spots \\
NOTES OF SPORTS
NO GAME.
NRW YORK. April 14 Brooklyn-New
York game postponed: rain.
CHICAGO. 2 ST. LOUIS, 1.
CHICAGO. April 14.—As usual Over-
all today pitched the opening game and
with perfect support Chicago won, 3 to
1. a wild throw by Byrne after he had
made a great stop, started the locals.
Score: R H E
Chicago 00000201 *— 3 9 0
Louis ....00000001 0— 1 3 2
Batteries—Overall and Moran); Lush
and Bresnahan.
Summary—Two base hits: Sheckard,
Hoffman. Three base hits: Zimmer-
an, Chance. Sacrifice hits: A. Hoff-
man. Stolen bases: Cnance. Byrne. Bases
on balls: Off Overall 1; off Lush 2. Hit
by pitchers: Bryne. Struck out. By Over-
all 7; by Lush 4. Passed ball: Moran.
Wild pitches: Overall 2. Umpires—Klem
and Kano.
HIGH SCHOOL PRELIMINARY.
option touched 1.184, both figures being
new high marks lur the season. The
market closed strong at net gains for
the day of 1 to 1 jfc. Corn and °ata also
made sharp galtis, closing quotations on
the form or being up i to 2c and on the
latter half to one cent above the prev-
ious close.
Extreme nervousness marked trading In
the wheat pit and prices moved over a
wide range. There was no indication
early In the session that the market
would continue its record breaking per
forma nee of the last two weeks, but on
the contrary the climax to the sensa-
ional upturn In irrlcea seemed to have
cen reached at least for a time. Owing
o a decline of 1 to 1; at Liverpool the
uarket here opened weak with prices un-
hanged to 5 and —c below the closing
of Hie preceding day. Initial quotations
May were $1.27 to 1.27J and on July
ll.lugto $1.16.
long on short buying.
Several of the leading longs in the May
delivery bought freely early in the session
which caused considerable buying by
aborts. This resulted in May advancing
to 1.28 and July to $1.17. Much of the
demand for July was based on unfav-
orable crop reports from Missouri. Con-
tinued udgent demand for the casn
grain at advancing prices was respon-
sible to some extent for the fresh bulge
in May. During the greater part of the
day a very nervous feeling was manifest-
ed with the May delivery show-In* the
greatest buoyancy. This was pai tl\ .if
counted for by a falling off in primary
mary receipts and by statistics which
showed a marked decrease in exports
from the United States during March.
TURNS BULLISH.
Sentiment in the pit became exceed-
ingly bullish in the final hour and
shortly before the closing Mnv roHe
$1.2'. . while July advanced to $1.1*1. There
was' some re-actlon from the top on
profit Hiking, but tho close was <-x.'!toil
>tn.l Strong with May at *1.2*1 nU July nt
CORN GOES SKYWARD.
Advull' i-s nf one to two cents miirkefl
the i-ash grain aggregated Clo.nnO bush-
l-a-llng In tlie corn market, rush prices
were up ! In 1 rent ami total sales of
Ihe cash svaln aggregated 21",0H0 bu.
, the day May sold between S6J and
ORLEANS, April 14.—Cotton j
?re flriu |c higher low ordinary i
G 0-16c. nominal ordinary 7 |c. nominal:
good ordinary S if-ltio low middling 'J 710c, 1
middling 10c: good middling 10j|c: midd-
ling fair lo'jc: fair lljc nominal.
Receipts 7,474 bales; stock 211,741 hales.
Sales on the spot 2,SOU bales; to ar-
rive 1,200 bales.
Futures opened steady at an advance of
6 to 9 points on good buying orders from
outsiders. During the entire session tlu-
ring was moderately active and "frer-
lnga from realizing longs were well taken
care of. At the highest prices sagged a
little under rather heavy selling out,
but at no time did they threaten to go
below yesterday's closing.
In the afternoon session prices
up a few points again. On the
the tone was steady and prices i
net advances of 11 to 15 points
lows: April P.nsp nominal: 'May
Juno 10.12 c; July 10.06c; Oct. 9.90
9.93C.
Money Rate Touched Two andj Light Receipts - Markets Close
One-Half.
Steady.
picked
closing
Dec
ST LOUIS COTTON.
ST. LOUIS, April 14.—Cotton steady,
middling 9|c: sales none: receipts 2S8
bales: shipments 278 bales, stock 44,7b>-"
bales.
GALVESTON COTTON.
GALVESTON, Tex , April 14.—Cotton
steady 10 1-lGc.
NEW YORK COTTON.
NEW YORiK, April II.—Cotton spot
closed uiet 10 points higher, middling up-
lands 10,45c: middling gulf $10.70c. sales
300 bales.—Cotton futures closed steady.
Closing bids: April $l0.1le. May 1< .1J
June 10.13: Julv 10.11: August 10.0«: Sep-
tember 10.00: Oct. 10.00: Nov. 9.9S. Dec.
Jan. and March 9.9G:
NEW YORK, N. Y , April 14 - There
was a notable lack of animation ir
the stock market today, showing i
stage resembling apathy at times. J
large proportion of the dally opera
tioim at the present period are sup
posed to originate within the wall
of the stock exchange amongst th«
professional room traders, it 1b ap
parent tbat Increasing attention Js
given by the stock room operators
to grain crop conditions.
The advices from the spring wheat
region today were of unpropituous con-
ditions for seeding owing to Ihe in-
clement weather. The sensitive con-
dition of the wheat market In its
highly speculative state emphasizes the
effect of news of the crop in that mar-
ket and by reflection in the stock
market.
Some slight unsettlcment in the
opening dealings were due to fears of
the effect of the Turkish troubles
Buying of stocks in London soon
overcame those depressions. Fresh ad-
vices were brought about at new
points, and this served to offset the
effect of the weak stocks and to keep
I tone unsettled.
The New York money rate on call
loans touched 2 1-2 per cent.
Bonds were Irregular. Total sales
par value, $4,160,000.
United States 2's coupons and the
3's advanced 1-3 per cent on call.
HITY, April 14.—Receipts 11,.
er. Top |7.20 bulk JC.S
.">'117.15: packers and bi
light
Sheep-
Iambs i
wethert
CHICAGO LIVESTOCK
(ASSOCIATED PRESS.)
I1CAGO. April 11. -The followin
today's market.
Cattle receipts
kei 10 lower, li
steers $4.10 'a f
@6.80; stoekers
cows and heifer.
7.o0: Hogs, receipt:
market 10c lower,
Jim Stewart and Ed Casey have been arranged a schedule calling for 120 games,
jimiched to box at Bridgeport, C onn., w|th May 6 and Sept. 11 as the opening
April 28. and closing dates.
The Memphis team made n nice show- President Drey fuss of the Pittsburg
intr against the big leaguer J during the pp-ates says the "Black Hand'
681.
MORE CHANCES FOR FARMS.
state of
CHICAGO PRODUCE.
(ASSOCIATED PRESS.)
CHICAGO, III . April 14.—The dairy an 1
vegetable cash market closed as follows:
Butter steady, Creameries 22®>28
It has been deckled that th
Oklahoma will lease over a million J dairies 10#25.
acres of school laml which under the) Eggs steady, firsts 101: prlmo first
Logan County AthTetes Preparing
for Norman Meet.
<?"!. LOUIS PROVISION*
ST. LOUIS, April 14.—Flour—Higher;
red winter patents $G.50@7.00; extra
fancy and st.Might $5.5o(g«.35; hard winter
clears 94.30flH.7U:
Timothy M-t il $2.25@8.35.
Corn meal $3.30.
Bran—Higher, sacked east track $1.27®
Hay—Steady: timothy $10.00(516.00;
prairie $9.60011.00.
Whiskey $1,381.
In n Cotton ties 80c.
Bagging 7 l-l<Jc.
Hemp twine 7c.
Pork—Steady, joblng $10.G2|. _ «
Lard -Higher: in-line steam $10.0."><§/10.1j.
Ury salt meats—Higher. boxed extra
shorts $10.00; clear ribs $10.23. short clears
Bacon—Strong: boxed extra shorts 11c:
clear libs lUc short clears 11|c.
Receipts- Flmir <5,000: wheat 9,000: corn
7" 000- oats ::2,400.
" l.ipments-Flour 9.000: wheat 44,000:
•, r,s,i)00: oats 10,700.
practice game*.
Jem Drlscoll, who is in London, says
that he has no Intention of settling In
Amerca as reported.
him no worry, but Bonus Wagner's
hand" has his gont.
The Mets will start
sixteen men.
the season with
I
AI HuekcnborgT
[o( hester manager
arlor In Rocheste
the old Boston and
has opened a billiard
\7fclv Lander, lightweight champion of
Canada, and Jimmy Potts of Minneapolis
will meet at Calgary, April
Catcher Jack Warner, one of New
■York's leading pioneers. Is working hard
to givo Galveston a winning ball team.
The Mets pitcher who was lost has
showed up. His last name Is Watson. He
came from Austin.
The uniforms of the Oklahoma City
leaguers have arrived.
Muskogee seems to be after blood this
year; no old times stuck this year.
McP<
Under conditions pointing to the banner
" year no old timers stuck this year.
Kip Selbach, the old major leaguer, is 8eaBor of Texas League was opened
on the water wagon. He has retired from j,-riday, t continue until Sept. fi. The
the game and purchased a spring water nrP lined up for the opening garner
plant. ns follows: Oklahoma CUy ;at Dallas,
— - Bhrevepont at Ft Worth, San Antonio at
The Ohio und Pennsylvania league has Galveston and Waco at Houston.
Drink the BEST
WHISKEY
. i,,«A,« «« ■ Thouaar
OLD JOEL recUJlec
I pou.idei
O Whiskey ffiJJ
aiji s . A old Ucj
r *1 i'2
i Full
Qiu
Expve«
Preps
By
Ord*v n t
B Quarts
Or Morn
whisKEf
•iliTBHsltlW
Thousands c.f people
ar« turulug away from
rectllled and com-
pou.ided goods. Why
rink inferior whiskey
you can get line
liquor, properly
dl.Htliled and aged, and
guaranteed by us under
pure food laws.forthe
name price by taking
up our
SpiMiai Int. oductory
OFFER
FREE
With each
order we
send free
a y ->ttle of fine wine,
g a:,., and corksorew.
Our Choice
Ftl-TEIJSTCIWfc
lli
SAMPLE THIS WHISKEY AT OIR RISK
«lve It a good teat; if not the BEST and most
satisfactory — send back what's left and get your
mono v. All goods shipped in plain boxes.
Oners.
Free
iTKu'Llst and Special •
D.FELTENSTEIN
31 B AD Edmond Street, ST. JOSEPH. MO.
The preliminaries held at the race
track Tuesday afternoon were as fol-
lows:
Mile—Doye, Feeze, Hall; time 5 min-
utes 20 seconds.
100 Yards—Try band, Tom Lowery
Marsh, Kimberly, Cameron; time 1<1
seconds.
EHscus—Frary, Lambert, Mosher;
distance, 96-6.
The blue team of the seniors had-
ing from the start.
First Quarter—Tom Lowery, Darius;
time 58
Second Quarter—Dick Lowery, Cam-
eron.
Third Quarter—Trayband,
Hammer—Frary, 120-9;
| 118; Lambert, 97-7.
Half Mile—Doye, Trayband. Mosher
! Mitchell, Feeze. Hall, Cameron.
Cameron did not finish tie; half
mile. In the hammer it wan a sur-
prise to all; it was thought that M -
Peak would win, he having won the
meet at Norman last year.
In the high jump Dick and Tom
Lowery tied at 5 feet, and Trayband
third.
220 Yards—Trayband, Tom Lowery.
Mosher, Marsh.
Shot Put—Frary 38-6, Lambert
34-f; W. Mosher, 35-4; H Mosher
Running Broad Jump—Frary, 18-9
Lowery, 17-6; Cameron, 17.
440 Yards—Trayband, Barnes, Mo
sher; time 55 seconds.
Pole Vault—Dallman, Underwooc
Axtele; height 9-9.
SOLVE THE CRANBERRY PROBLEM
The new method of cranberry culture
recommended last year by Professor
H. Whltson, which Involves sanding the
beds, better drainage and clean cultlva
tlon Is now practically solved, accord-
ing to the annual report of the Universi-
ty of Wisconsin Agricultural Experiment
Station. The insects which injure the
cranberry have been studied In co-oper-
ation with federal invu*tlgators and
methods of controlling developed.
cl icago provisions
I - son AT ED PRESS.)
CHICAGC, 'pill 14.—The provision
quotations wei is follows:
Flour easy, No. 2 rye 79@S0; Fee
Mixing barley iEft 63; fair to choice malt-1
ing Flax seed No. 1 southwestern
*1.563;" No.' 1 Northwestern $l.ti6if; Tim-
otliy seed $3.70@3.80. dover $9.60: Mess
pork, per bbl. *18.10®18.13; lard per 100
lbs. $10.;?2i; short ribs loose $0.30; short
clear !-ides, boxed $9.62K89.7ii.
OKA IN STATISTICS.
Total clearances of wheat and flour
were equal to tB.OOO bu. Exports for the
week, as shown by Hradstreet s were
1 to 191,00 bu. Primary receipts were
recently enacted school land sale law
will be sold, and upon which there Is
no preference right claim. In round
numbers there are one million and fifty
thousand acres of this land, the major
part of which is located in counties on
the western part of the starte.
The state school land department has
mavle no official ruling in regard to the
re-leasing of this great tract of land,
but it is expected that, at the conclu-
sion of the session of the board, next
Thursday, an official announcement
will be made along the linos stated in
the foregoing paragraph.
The recent legislature provided fo
of the school lands and th
land department of Oklahoma is pre
paring to carry out the provisions of
the act with the greatest possible dis-
patch but it will take at least
months longer delay before the lands
have been actually placed on the mar-
ket.
The 1,000,000 acres, which will be
leased, is practically all located in the
western part of the state becausq of
its peculiar location and condition, but
little of it has ever been occupied other
than as grazing ground, regardless of
the fact that hundreds of thousands of
acres is excellent farm land. None of
It has ever been umler lease to an ex-
tent that there are any who have what
Is known as preference rights.
As a result of this and the fact that
there will be almost, If not quite, a
year pass before there is a sale If the
state is to get any benefit It must b<
from the leasing of the land. The
school land department can see no rea-
son why the leases should not be made
and a saving made of the rental mo-
ney, notwithstanding the fact of the
sale law. Leases will be made subject
ourse, to the sale of the land be-
fore the expiration of the lease.
I cheese steady, daisies Wfl'i. twins 15J
0i lti young Americas 15J: long horns 1&|0
111.
Potatoes steady, choice to fancy $1,050
1.0S, fair to good $1.00(0.1.03.
Poultry steady, turkeys 17, chickens 15c
prings 15.
Veal steady, 60 to 601b wts. 6J: 60 I
5 lb wts. Sj: to 110 ((?10i.
stimated at 16,000, mar-
sves 480®>7.10; Tcx.is
5; Western steers $1.10
m'd feeders $3.50<? :i.W;
$2.00^5.90; calves $r,.(iOrfi)
stlmatc^i at 30.000
35; mixed
Bht
•00fl7.15:
• 10(g)7.5 ,
25, pood to choice heavy
.90ft6.70, bulk or B
celpts estimated
eady, native $3.66
rough $7.10w
7.25ti7.50, pigs
I7.30fa7.40; Sheep
17.000, market
western 3.65(J?
arlings $6.r>fr7.l5, lambs, native,
Wfi.HO, western $5.i"0(f? 8.30.
ST LOUIS LIVESTOCK.
April 14.—Cattl
native
• -Hocplpt«
Market
Bblppln-i and
iscd beef and
steers under
ST. TXMTIS,
3.100 Including
steady to 10c lower
export steers $fi.25tfi:7.?->: di
butcher steers $4.(WfiT,.50
l.ooo poun;ds $.': :>o«6.26; stoekers ar
fpwlim 13.75®:..'-'.'.: con nd liclffrn W
cannery V-W' - bull*
r,.in® 7.75: Tmciw and Indu
steers $-1.00^* 6.4(1
, and heifers $2.75<??
"iVfigs—Itecelpts 9.300. Market 1" • lnwet
plCS and UelH- *4.S0 T.1S: pai-KWi 710(3
7.30. butchers and best henvy •
Sheep—iRecelptr 1"00. Market strong
native muttons *4 50^6.50: lambs ^ $6.o^
culls and bucks $3.50f?5.50: Btoc.cers
$4.00(05.00.
SOUTH
rereipts
Hogs-
lower: t«
Siiee|>-
1(^7.00.
elpts
vith —bu. the
vls-
WTCHITA. Kns.. April
celpts 500. Market steady
fi.00: cows and heifers $2
$4.00(9 6.25.
top $6
bulk
There has been secured by a
stnte puip company an option
>rds of sunken pine piling
lbmergcd in the Kideau river
ack of Kingston,
York
ALFALFA IN ALFALFA COUNTY.
"Alfalfa! That's the stuff, and we
raise it, too, down In our country. And
li icertainly Is looking lino just now,"
Sc. spoke J. G. Fowler of Yewed, Okla.,
who was on the market yesterday with
one straight car of hogs and one mixed
load.
"And our county certainly comes
honestly by her name. For If there
ever was an Alfalfa county it Is ours
down in western Oklahoma. Each year
adds a good many more acres to the
premier crop of our section. In fact, I
ild not be at all surprised to see^
fully half of the cultivated lan l of my
part of th* state yielding alfa«fa. I
think I can safely hay that the alfalfa
acreage of Alfalfa county has doubled
In the past two years.
"The average yield is< a ton per acre
for each of three cuttings. Just now
the farmers are getting $12 a ton for| KANflA8 oiTY.
all they can haul to market. The b'g un,.hanged to 3<- hlgl
alfalfa mills at Cherokee have been a — - - #1
remarkable stimulus to the spread of
the crop. One mill has been In oper-
ation for several years and now one
of the flour mills Is putting In a plant.
"Wheat, too, Is looking fine in our
section. The acreage though is being
cut down every year by the sowing of
alfalfa and the substitution of corn.
The 1909 corn crop Is going to be large,
that Is the acreage. Old corn seeni-s
plentiful and the farmers who have It
are fattening their hogs while the
prices are good. Cattle are scarce but
what there are wintered in good con-
dition.
'The most remarkable thing about
our country, it seems to me,
ST. JOS CATTLE.
T. JOSEPH. April '! rattle
i market steady to 10c lower:
WICHITA LIVESTOCK.
Market 10c. lower
$6.7006.90.
f KANSAS CITY RRAIW~|
Apr
"Is
cider a soft drink?"
when It's hard."—Kansas City
bu., compar
Jing day a .
ible supply of v 'ieat I" the United States.
Estmiatud receipts for tomorrow, wheat
Hi cars: corn 43 corn, oaU "7 cars. Hop
10,000 head.
DAILY MOVEMENT Of PRODUCE
Klovrr- Receipts 34,SOU: shipments W.ODO.
Wheat Receipts 31.2 l: shipments
Corn—Receipts 13«.30li: shipments
I (;U Receipts 2*7,100: shipments 144.001).
Itvf. Receipts 2,000. shipments
Barley—Receipts" 46,500: shipments 13,
500.
CAR I/)T RECEIPT
Wheat 5 cars with one of contract grade
Corn 4.1 ears, with 2 of contract grade
Oat ST cars: Total receipts of wheat at
Chitago, Minneapolis and Dulnth today
were 751 cars, compared with 171 cars
last week and 101 cars the corresponding
day a year ago.
NEW YORK PROVISIONS
NEW YORK, April 14.—'Flour Receipts
ti,30<>; exports *,30<i: firmly held with a
moderate local trade.
Whete—.Receipts 1.200. Exports none,
spot strong. No. 2 red $1.39 elevator: No.
2 red $1.40 fob. afloat: No. 1 northern
Duluth $1,371 fob. afloat; No. 2 hard win-
ter $1273 fob. aftoat There was a sharp
opening break In wheat today Influenced
Dy lower cables but the market promptly
recovered and f- r the lAlahee of the
day was very flrni. Bull support and
commission house buying were features.
Receipts were light: Northwest seeding
backward and cash wheat still strong,
just at the close realizing developed but
last pri« *'s were nevertheless i/c higher.
May closed $1.33|: Jul $1 :
<61:14*: closed $1.31$: Sept $1.14J®1.16|,
closed $1.16.
Sugar—Raw steady: fair refining $3.42:
j centrifugal 96 test $3.92: molasses sugar
li 17- rwflned stei'dy.
In th
rapid incr
When I w
paid l-
usual prict
luari
will l
tivitv
hetni
■ Stock Journal
Wichita l i
changed
mixed
alfalfa
elpts
WICHITA GRAIN.
WICHITA,
April 14-—AVh<
2. $1.41 J: No. 3. $
irs. No. 2 white
kansas city tggs.
LOGAN COUNTY MARKETS
CORRECTED DAILY BY GUTHRIE DEALERS
GEAIN QUOTATIONS.
MODEL ROLLER MI LLC.
Corn meal
Bran, ppr lOOlbB
White shorts per 100 lbs
Corn chops, per 100 lbs
Flour
Com, per bu
Wheat, per bushel
Lint
Lint
Lint
Lint
Lint
COTTON.
otton, good middling
otton, strict middling
•otton, middling
otton, strict low,
otton, strict good ordinary
VEGETABLES.
Texas strawberries, per crate •
Florida tomatoes, fresh, per crate,.. 3
Texas Bermuda onions per lb
Texas new cabbage
Colorado potatoes, y«r bu
Mlnaesota Red river Early Ohio seed
potatoes -
1.40
livestock.
GEO. M. FRA-ZIKR.
Hogs, heavy
Ilogs, light,
feed stuff.
E. E. TALLMAN.
Oats, per bu
Kafrtr corn, per bu
Millet, per bu
Cane, per bu.
Alfalfa seed, per bu
Alfalfa meal, per cwt
per cwt. ..
3d
per
cwt.
Hay, prairie, per ton,
Hay alfalfa, per ton,
.1200
. 1. 20
. 1.35
. 4.00
. 7.60
. 12.00
FRUIT.
DAWSON & McELHENNEY.
Kansas apples
Ban anna, per lb
Oranges, per box, .,
Lemons, per box, ..
*rape fruit.
8.50
S 60
4.25
poultry.
WILBUR COMMISSION CO.
Springs -
Hens and pullets, 09
Old cocks, —• *15
Young cock* 3)
Guineas, per doe *-20
Young turkeys 12&
Tom turkeys, old 10
Ducks, F F.
Geese, F. F. 05
Cull poultry, half price
Rggs, ascs Included 4.7!
FURS AND HIDES.
SOUTHWARD & JOHNSON.
Green salt cured No. 1,
Green salt cured No. -
Green No. 1,
Green No 2
Bull.. If !>• NO- 1 a"4 No' "
Ury No. 1 flint
Glue
Hog pels
ilorse hides, No. 1,
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Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 303, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 15, 1909, newspaper, April 15, 1909; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc127132/m1/7/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.