Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 89, 17 February 1912 — Page 6

PAOE SIX.

THE RICHMOND PAIXADIU3I AND SUX-TELEGRAU, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17, lSli.

A BASEBALL FEAST Many Diamond Stars Guests of Sporting Writers. 'National Nsws Aaaoclaltoo) PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Feb. 17. Many well known baseball celebrities are scheduled to attend the annual banquet or the Philadelphia Sporting Writers' association, which Is to be given Monday nljcht at the Hotel Walton. Governor John A, Tener of Pennsylvania, who was a mar player with several of the bin leu gut- teams before he abamloued the baseball diamond for the arena of politics, will be the guest of honor. AinoiiK the other guests of the evening will be Gurry Harrmann of Cincinnati. "Kid" Uleason, the old Philadelphia plujer who is to be assistant manager of the Chicago White Sox next hphhoii; John M. Ward, who has ucfpiired the Ikiston Nationals; Harry Wolverton. the new manager of the New York Highlanders; JatneH McAleer, the new president of the Boston Americans; Chas. EbblttHH. of the Brooklyn club, and "Topsy" Hartsel, the old Philadelphia American player who has signed to pilot the Toledo club this year. OFF FOR THE SOUTH. NKW YORK, Feb. 17. An Initial push was given the baseball season with the departure last evening of a bevy of Giant recruits for St. Louis enroute to the South. Only a few of the players began the trip here, the majority Joining the party at St. Louis today and by the time Texas is reached it Is expected that nearly the entire list of players reserved by the club will be on duty. The warmingup practice will be conducted at Marlln Springs. After leaving there a erics of exhibition games will be played through the South, the team -working its way northward in time for the beginning of the season in April.

T. P. A. Notes BY IV. . Q. The regular meeting of the board of directors will be held tonight. Several matters of importance arc scheduled to come up for the consideration of this august body and it is to be hoped there will be a full attendance. Saturday night. Feb. 24th, will be held the regular meeting for the month. Several matters of Importance are to como up and a full attendance la requested by President Harrington. James G. Martin, of Havana, master cigar fame, who has peddled cigars more years than some of us know about, has recently separated bis upper Up from the bunch of hah that had so many years graced it. Generally such actions are attended by more or less disastrous consequences as far as good looks are concerned, but the opposite effect is noticed in Jim's case. He has all the ear marks now of a prosperous broker on the New York Stock Exchange. Has it ever occurred to you what the chairman of the railroad committee might do? This is a very important office If the chairman so directs. First be ought to have a committee and one that will do things. Secondly he ought to look around for things to do. Is the time tables of the electric and steam Toads advantageous to making territory? Is flat wheeled cars on interurbans soothing to a tired traveling man's nerves? Are Richmond traveling men entirely satisfied with Richmond's street cars and their schedules. Are 11 our depot b satisfactory? My goodness how much work that committee could do if all irregularities were looked after. All of them would not be Temedied, but. the T. P. A. would be .recognized as a factor in the scheme Of things. Who Is going to Peoria? What would you think of paying our Secretary and treasurer one hundred dollars per year and send him as a delegate to the National convention ach year? "Shorty" Shreeve says take- it from mo our committee is going to give you the ticket that will be elected and officers that when wc elect them will at once begin to commence doing things. John High ley says. Watch us. The ticket we select will only touch the high spots in the runnlug and will get there by handsome majorities, and when the arrive stirring times will arrive simultaneously for Post C. Well here is waiting the committees reports next Saturday night at regular meeting. They say President Harrington is lated for a second term. The post would certainly make no mistake in electing our worthy president to succeed himself. Until the "dope" sheet Is public property this can be only a rumor, but the average member says let well enough alone, we have a good man In the harness, lets not change. Our president says "No! No! 1 don't want another term." Well our worthy president Is a Roosevelt Ian sort of a chap and we will take our chances on bis acceptance. Ditfoatton will bo caoy If Grape-Nats Is the food "There's a Resson

THE IMPERTINENCE

Turn on the Givers and Attempt to Dose Them With Their Own Medicine, and They Are Resentful and Offended. You Can Never Tell.

BY ESTHER GRIFFIN WHITE. There are always the superior ones who give advice. They may or may not be a member of your own family. All families, however, have the wise ones who seek to regulate the affairs of others. They may be uncles, aunts, cousins, brothers, mothers, fathers, grandsires or whatnot. But we all know them. They arc always kind. And tell you things for your own good. They never for a moment want to make you unhappy or uncomfortable but, on the other hand, are seeking your highest development. They desire to see you flower and blossom into that beautiful, perfect whole intended by your Maker. How sad it makes them to see you constantly doing the worst for yourself. If you would only take their advie they are positive they grandly know that you would attain to that pinnacle upon which you deserve to rest both by nHture and accomplishment and which thef incidentally occupy. You opine there would hardly be room on the pinnacle for both but they say there is always room at the top. That, you say, is an old saw. That old saws are merely the sops the wary throw at. the uncou. This isTme thing that grieves them the disposition to make light of every subject that is brought up. To turn'scrious discourse into a mockery and to jeer at your own immortal soul. You will never accomplish the dearest wish of your heart if you are not more serious, if you do not corral your wandering impulses, curb your tendency to levity, trim your emotional sails and nail down your flighty mental habits. "Yes," said the cynic, "I've been a victim all my life." "There's Maria, now," said the other person. "Maria always knows exactly the proper thing to do. Also to wear. The precise angle at which to pin your hair, the hirsute spot, to spear your j hat. Just what to say and at what tractonal part or a second, wnat win cure your indigestion and how to please and entertain the men. "If you remark that you don't care whether you please the men or not, and wouldn't take the trouble to be entertaining to save your soul, she at once launches into a long and eloquent diatribe on your duty, as a woman, to society, and how it. shows very bad taste and leads to the suspicion that you have not been a center of masculine attention to make these animadversions upon the men. Maria drives me to drink," said the other person. "Not half as bad," murmured the cynic, "as the man who tells you howto run your business. He can figure out your total profits on a piece of paper three inches long. He adds, subtracts, multiplies, divides by four and there you are your gross receipts at the bottom, your net on the other side of the sheet. All you have to do is to take his advice and you will be investing in diamonds, real estate, automobiles and European trips before the sun rises. "In the meantime," says the cynic airily blowing cigarette rings, "he gets sixty dollars a month writing insurance policies. "Then there are those people who want to save your soul," said the other person. "Yes," said the cynic, "they harry the life out of you about the Trinity, free will, the atonement and santiflcation. "If you tell them that your soul isn't bothering you as much as your ((nances and that you don't care whether you are saved by blood, fire or water, that all creeds look alike to you and, if you had your way, you'd throw 'em all on the rubbish-heap and start over again with the Golden Rule as a basis they howl atheist, in tiled, unbeliever and warn people against you as entertaining unsafe and heretical views that you are, indeed, a worthless, ungodly and dangerous person and not i fit to associate with." "Its just as impertinent to ask you If your soul is saved." said the other person, "as it is to ask if you rouge." "And that makes me think of Maria." she went on. "Maria rouges. But she thinks nobody knows it. They never do. Some day when Maria begins one of her 'my dear girl, disquisitions, I'm going to turn on her and tell h she looks like an Indian on the warpath." "No you won't," said the cynic placidly. "You never do. Nobody does. You rage and fume and foam at the mouth and build up delightful comedies in which you enact the cutting, sarcastic, biting role make the aptest and most skillful retorts from which you issue triumphantly and leave your advisor crushed and bleeding but it never happens. "Instead," grinned the cynic, "you agree and apologize and back-pedal and say you believe they're right and that they don't say so and that you never knew it looked that way and so glad to have had your attention called to the fact and that you never dream ed people thought that and that you're so glad you hare such a kind, disinterested friend and hope some day to be able to do a like service which is tactless and not well received and for which you at once apologize and retire genuflecting and thanking and saying how- grateful you are and hownice it is to know that people take an interest and so much obliged no, of course not I wouldn't think of being offended certainly I'll be up tomorrow you come down sure, I'll come up be sure and come down why I wouldn't think of being offended so kind of you well telephone when yon start er " "And thus you trail away." "Well, I've made up my mind," aaid the other person, "I won't tolerate Maria another instant just let her begin on me again I'll show her!

OF GIVING ADVICE

"The outrageous impertinence of these advice givers," continued the other person, "is only exceeded by their abominable complacence. Who are they, pray, anyway! Don't they know that the way they dress, do their hair, walk, talk, sing, swallow, dance and generally hit the high spots is just as offensive to the other person as the other persons divergations are to them? "Does it ever occur to them that they are, in addition, intolerable and maddening bores with their eternal advisings and bepreachments? That nobody, on the other hand, cares enough about them to inquire whether their souls are saved or not?" "Ah," cried the cynic, "you have touched on a phase that has always appealed to me. That is the reason I give these advise-obsessed ones so much lea way. "Does it not argue an intense interest in your fascinating personality to be made the target of so much admonition and advice? Does it not show that you are a center about which your world revolves that you are, without any desire or effort on your part, constantly in the spot-light of their regard that you concentrate everything to a point in your environ? "Indeed." went on the cynic, "1 should feel neglected, abused, if I was left adviceless and alone." "Don't you remember Maude Maddern," asked the other person, "and the lovely way she had of writing about resignation, soul-uplifts, bowing to the will of an inscrutable but ador ed higher power and doing good to your fellows? "How she preached death as a beautiful translation into another sphere, how we should never grieve for tbse we loved, how, indeed, grief was wrong, and obtruding it upon our friends selfish? How we should skip along singing and smiling and doing good and throwing our burdens into the offing?" "One of the sort who used to point to the "Don't Worry" motto on the wall when people began talking about their troubles and said she was sorry but had an important engagement dow n town and for you to be sure and come again." "Yes, that's Maude," said the other person, "And then when her husband died , she was inconsolable used toprostrate herself for hours on his grave and sorry as everyone was, wore everyone out with her insistence on her grief as the only overwhelming thing in the universe!" "Which only goes to prove that you can never tell." murmured the cynic. Sunday Services At the Churches 8t. Andrew's Catholic Fifth and South C streets. Mass at 7:30; High Mass at 9:43; Vespers, sernionette and benediction at 3 o'clock. Rev. Frank A. Roell, rector. St. Mary's Catholic Masses every Sunday at 7:00, 8:00, 9:00 and 10:30. Vespers and Benediction every Sunday at 3:00 p. m. Rev. J. F. Mattingly, rector. St. Paul's Episcopal Church Holy communion 7:30 a. m. Morning piayer and sermon 10:30. Sunday school 9:15. evening prayer and addres-j, 5:00. Holy communion, Thursday, and all Holy days 9:30 a. m. Evening Salvation Army Rhoda Temple No. 515 N. A St, Ensign and Mrs. Deuter, officers in charge of local cors. Services every evening by the Indiana Songsters Brigade. Sunday school 10:30 a. m. Sunday at 4:45 p. m. Ensign Munselle will lecture at the First Presbyterian church, also at the First M. E. church at 7:30 p. m. subject "Around the World With Gen. Booth," illustrated with 250 slides. Tuesday evening Feb. 20th the Ensign will lecture at Grace M. E. church. Subject, "From Bethleham to Calvary." Officers residence 245 South Third street.' South Eighth Street Friends Bible school 9:10. Meeting for worship 10:30 Prof. David W. Dennis will be present. Christian Endeavor meeting 6:30. Midweek prayer meeting Thursday evening 7:30. First M. E. Church Cor. Main and S. 14th St.. J. F. Radcliffe. pastor. Sunday school 9:15 a. m. Preaching 10:30 and 7:30 p. m. Junior League 2:00 p. in. Epworth League 6:30 p. m. The pastor will preach in the morning At night Ensign Munselle of the Salvation Army will g4ve his trip "Around the World" with General Booth, illustrated by stereopticon pictures. All are welcome to these services. North Fourteenth St. Union Mission Frank E. Kinsey. pastor. Sunday school 9:15. Morning meeting 10:30. Christian Endeavor 6:30. Special Evangelistic services in the evening at 7:30 -by the pastor. Prayer meeting Tuesday night. First Presbyterian Church Rev. Thomas J. Graham, pastor. At the 10:30 a. m. Sabbath service Dr. J. B. Koehne will finish his series of lectures here. Subject: "The Crucifixion." All these lectures have been good; most of them superb and stirring. :45 p. m. The revivalist of the Salvation army will have right of way in song, sermon and pictures. Sabbath school 9:15 a. ru. You are invited to the open church which attempts great things. Christian Science t Masonic Temple) Subject: "Soul." Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. Services at 11:00 a. m. Wednesday evening testimonial meeting at 7:45. Public invited. Reading Ask Your Avers Puis. Ayers Puis. If your doctor says this is all

room located at No. 10 North Tenth street open daily except Sundays and legal holidays from 9 a. m. to 12 noon,

I and from 1:30 to 5 p. m. West Richmond Friends At Earlham College. Bible school at 9 a. m. E. P. Trueblood, Supt. Meeting for worship at 10:30. Murray S. Kenwor- ! thy, pastor. Elbert Russell, college pas tor. Intermediate Endeavor at 2:15 I Prayer meeting Thursday 7:30. Wom en's Aid society Tuesday in girls dormitory. All interested are cordially invited to be present at every service. Second Presbyterian Church Rev. Thos. C. McNary, pastor. Preaching morning and evening. Sunday school 9:15 C. A. Reigal. Supt. C. E. 6:45. Frank Hale, Pres. Martha Washington Social and entertainment Wednesday evening 77:30 under the auspices ot the Woman's Missionary Society. Earlham Heights Presbyterian S. S. 2 o'clock. Public inviied. Mr. Taylor, Supt. Bible class open to all who may wish to come. Taught by the pastor. The Universalist Church Rev. Haywood will give, Sunday evening, the second in his series on "Psychotherapy." This lecture on "The Subconscious" will reveal by a number of striking examples the astonishing powers in every person's subconsciousness. This study will lay the foundation for psychotherapy making the science easy of oomprehension. Admission free. Masonic Temple, second floor, at 7:30. Doors open at 7. First Christian Church Cor. Tenth and South A streets, Samuel W. Traum, pastor. Bible school 9:05 a. m. Christian Endeavor 6:30 p. m. Preaching service and communion 10:30 a. m. Morning subject: "The Characteristics of the Ideal Life," being the second of a series on the sermon on the Mount. In the evening the Rev. F. M. Rains, secretary of the Foreign Christian Missionary Society will tell of his trip around the world. Mr. Rains will be remembered locally as one of the speakers at the Laymen's missionary rally some months ago. Bethel A. M. E. Church Rev. Geo. C. Sampson, pastor. Second quarterly meeting. Preaching at 10:4 a. m. by Rev. Ovalton at 3 p. m. by Rev. Geo. H. Butler followed by communion at 8 p. m. by Rev. Geo. H. Shaffer, P. E. Sabbath school at 2 p. m. A. C. E. at 7 p. m. All are welcome. United Brethren Eleventh and N. B. streets, H. S. James, pastor. Bible school at 9:.30 a. m. A. D. Craig superintendent, Rev. John A. Hawkins, D. D. presiding ejder will preach at 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Dr. Hawkins will also have charge of the communion service following the morning sermon. A cordial welcome to all. Reid Memorial Sabbath school at 9:15 a. m. B. B. Myrick, Supt. Hours of worship 10:30 and 7:30. Preaching by the pastor 10:30 a. m. Mr. H. H. Yohe speaks at 7:30 in the interest of the men and religion forward movement. Christian Union 6:45 p. m. Grace Methodist Episcopal Cor. Tenth and North A streets. Arthur Cates, pastor. Sunday school 9:15. Morning worship 10:30. Sermon by the pastor. Class meeting 11:45. Epi worth League 6:30. Evangelistic service 7:30. An Tuesday evening Ensign Munselle of Indianapolis, gives his illustrated lecture, "From Bethleham to ! Calvary." A district ministerial con vention convenes in this church on Friday. Bishop D. H. Moore of Cincinnati will be present and make the address in the evening. A cordial welcome to all. First English Lutheran Church Cor Eleventh and South A streets, E. G. Howard, pastor. Sunday school at 9 a. m. Foreign mission day exercises and offerings. Morning worship at 10 :30. Sermon, "Heathenism." Special music by the male chours. Every member is urged to be present if at all pos sible. Vesper service at 4:30 with ser mon and song. The W. H. & F. M. So. ciety will ho'd its regular monthly meeting at the home of Mrs. Lee B. Nusbaum, 110 North Eleventh street, Wednesday at 2:30 p. m. Mrs. Helen Beegle, traveling secretary of the general society is expected to be present and address the meeting. The special Lent services will open Wednesday with a service at 7:30 p. m. All members and friends are cordially invited. East Main Street Friends Meeting Truman C. Kenworthy, pa6tor. Bible school at 9:10. Meeting for worship at 10:30. Christian Endeavor at 6:30. Evening service at 7:30. Midweek meeting for worship fifth-day morning at 10 o'clock and in the evening at 7:30. Prayer and conference meeting. The Lookout committee will have charge of the Endeavor service. You are invited to be with us. For a sprain you will find Chamberlain's Liniment excellent. It allays the pain, removes the soreness, and soon restores the parts to a healthy condition. 25 and 50 cent bottles for ale by all dealers. BUYS FIVE HORSES George Dougan and Horace Iredell have returned frm Lexington. Kentucky, where they have been attending the horse sales. Mr. Dougan purchased five finely bred mares by the great speed sire, Walnut Hall, and Moko: one by Baron Wilkes, and one by Bernadotte. all standard and registered. The sales were very satisfactory to the sales company, something over four hundred horses being sold. H. H. Yohe of Indianapolis speaks to men, Sunday, 2:30 p. m., Y. M. C. A. Hear him. CARD OF THANKS. Mr. Matscholl and son desire to express their 'sincere thanks and appreciation to friends and neighbors during the sickless and death of wife and mother and also the many flowers were appreciated. A single Yarmouth fishing boat has landed as many as 200,600 herring. Doctor Headache. Biliousness. Headaches. Ayers POk. right, remember it! Ayers POls.

OUR TREES WHAT THEY LIVE Oil

BY PROF. J. F. THOMPSON. If the question were asked, "Where do plants get the food which sustains r&eir lives and which enables them to iacrease in sire, and which enables them to perform all plant activities?" It would not be at all surprising if nine people out of ten would answer, From the ground." This answer, even if wrong, would be quite natural, because plants have their roots in the ground, and farmers plant their seeds in the ground; and when their corn comes up, they cultivate the ground and fertilize it and keep the weeds down, because they are supposed to use up the food that is intended for the corn. Soil is spoken of as being fertile or sterlie referring to its ability to supply or not supply plants with food. We are told that if a piece of land is planted year after year that the soil becomes exhausted. What is meant by the soil being exhausted? Why, the natural answer would be that the plant food is all used up. Soil may be exhausted sure enough, but is it food that has been used up? There are some words that are used in such a loose way that nobody knows exactly what they mean and the word "Food" is one, and we need not be surprised that the meaning is obscure for even our old friend Webster did'nt seem to be perfectly clear in his mind as to plant food. He had the conception that most of us have as to the food of animals. He defines it in words that we have to look up i some other part of the dictionary. He substitutes such words as "Nutriment, Aliment, Victuals and Provisions." He also gives a quotation from Shakespeare which contains the word "Food" and then, having shifted the responsibility over upon the "Bard of Avon," he goes on to the definition of "Fool." We are surrounded in this world by two classes of matter which we call inorganic and organic. The first or the inorganic is matter that is very difficult to be changed into something else. Take for example, lead; it may be pounded into sheets or made into pipes or moulded into bullets; yet it remains lead; or take clay; it may be mixed with water, but when it settles, it is elay.or it may be burned, or moulded into vessels; but it is still clay; or take a piece of quartz rock; it may be broken to pieces or melted and made into lamp chimneys, but the pieces of rock or the chimneys are still quartz. Soil is mostly this kind of matter, it is sand or gravel or clay, no matter how many or how few crops are raised. They may be fertile or otherwise, but they remain the same kinds of soil. They are inorganic matter. The other kind, or organic matter is easily changed into something else; for example apiece of wood placed in the Are soon disappears as wood, or if an apple or a potato be allowed to decay, the results are not like the apple or the potato ; so every plant or animal at death soon becomes entirely different from its living form. Everything, or nearly everything, that is the result of a life process we call organic. Now if we say that food is anything that will sustain and continue life and then show what things do this, we will have a clear notion of what food is.

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If a wolf feed on a sheep, in the course of a few hours, the sheep is no longer sheep but becomes wolf, therefore, since the sheep becomes wolf so easily and quickly, it must be organic matter and since it sustains and continues the wold s life, it must be food. The sheep feeds on grass, which in a few hours ceases to be grass and becomes sheep, but since the grass, so easily and quickly becomes sheep it must be organic, but it sustains and continues the sheep's life and therefore is food, and, as far as is known, the food of every animal is organic material and so far as we know, it always has been. In another article, it was pointed out that trees are living beings and that the living matter in a plant cell is in no way different from that in an animal cell. Neither the microscope nor chemical analysis can show and difference. Now if the living matter, or that which gets the food, is the same and the food of animals is organic, then tne food of plants must be organic al

so, no matter what opinions we may have or have had to the contrary, and plants do not live on inorganic material any more than we do. Ther are some truths in botany that are as self-evident as some truths in mathematics. If two and two are ever four they must always be four or no dependence can be placed in arithmetic; so if living matter varies as the forms of life vary, or if it is not the same in all forms of life.then the study of biology is in vain. If the laws of heridity do not hold, not some of the time, but all of the time, farming would be poor business, for a man might plant com and get black berries or burdocks for his crop. "For of thorns men do not gather tigs, nor of a brambel bush gather they grapes.' Why? Because the laws that govern living things are certain. Now if plants live on organic matter or if the food of plants is organic where do they get it. As long ago as 1662, John Evelyn writing of English forests says: "From a number of experiments accurately conducted I am led to believe that all vegetables, from the hyssop upon the wall, to the cedar of Lebanon, receive their principal nourishment from oily particles incorporated with water." This shrewd observer and scholar, two hundred and fifty years ago, saw that plant food and animal food are the same, but he guessed at the source and missed it. Of course plants get all their water from the soil, but water is'nt food. It will prolong life a while but will not continue it. So it must be clear that soil is inorganic matter and has no food in it. To be sure we know that fertile soil has some decaying organic matter in it, but compared with what a forest or a field crop needs, this amount is quite insignificant. There is an organic matter in the air. John Evelyn thought there was and that the rains washed it into the ground so that the roots could get it. Sunshine isn't matter, at all so that there appears to be no food at all in a plant's surroundings, every thing is inorganic matter. It would seem, therefore, that there is but one thing left for a plant to do, to supply itself with food. office for rates and Stock Ins. Co. Indianapolis, Ind. by tit State of SURPLUS PAID IN $2S,0O0u0O sen the Insurance that Is in de-

LATE MARKET HEWS Furnished by A. W. Thomson Co, HitUe Block. Phone 2709. Correspondents, Logan and Bryan.

PITTSBURG LIVESTOCK PITTSBURG, Feb. 17 Cattle Receipts light; steers $7.65 7.85; batchers $5.80tr6.20. Sheep Receipts fair; prime $4.30 4.50. Hogs Receipts 10 double decks; yorkers $.40Ct6.7:; pigs $6.O06.20; heavies $6.75. Lambs $6.90. Calves Choice $9.00(3 9 50. JINCINNATI LIVESTOCK CINCINNATI, Feb. 17, Cattle Receipts 700; shippers $.V7. Sheep Receipts 200; extras $3 35. 6.75. Hogs Receipts 2,600; good to choice 6.35 6.40. Lambs $5.50. Calves $4.00. INDIANAPOLIS GRAIN INDIANAPOLIS. Feb. 17. Wheat 97c Corn 654c Oats 54c Rye 974 Clover seed $10.C0 Look 'em Over Lending Declers Advertise in This Column Regularly S. C. DUFF ORPINGTONS Eggs for hatching from the great winter layers, mated with two of the best male birds in country. Won first on Cock bird Richmond show. Cockerel is of even bstter quality. Zero weather egg record, from 16 hens: January 189. 15 days of February 105. Also have fine pen S. C. Black Minorcas. Eggs from above pens, $1.00 per 15 eggs. A. E- Sctiuti 420 WEST MAIN ST. Henry Stiens Creeper cl Csif Decks Ec;s ia Secsta HIGH BRED BUFF ORPHINGTON8 Eggs in Season. A few cockerels for sale. E. W. Ramler, 224 So. Sixth. eFOR SALEALL SIZES ' INCUBATORS ' manufactured by J. G. Hinderer. Box 225.. Factory 2128 Pitt SL, Anderson, Ind? v Use Globe and Parma SCRATCH FEEDS For Sale at 4 W. B. GARVER'S 910 Main SL Phone 2198. PRIZE WINNING BUFF .' LEGHORNS '; Bred and Owned by Mark W. Penned. Eggs in Season. ' 28 So. 19th Street, Richmond, Ind. a, 'Phone vour order now for eat. V; tings and baby chicks from White Plymouth Rock. The kind that lay in the winter. Fairview Poule- try Farm. k. k. no. 7. Phone 4033. BUFF ORPINGTONS PURE GOLD STRAIN Five birds on exhibition at Rich-' mond; 4 firsts. Silver cup in English Class. For sale at a bargain considering quality. " W. A. OLER, Dublin, Ind.