Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 98, 6 March 1915 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 1915
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Stock Quotations and Market News Leased Wire Report. Edited by A. D. Cobb, Agricultural Expert.
GETS RECORD PRICE FOR VALUE OF CORN Albert Hindman cried the sale of John Eliason on his farm near Centerville crossing, when seven hundred bushels of corn brought 99 cents a bushel, the highest price paid for corn in many years. Twelve bushels of seed corn sold at $2.25 a bushel. Clover seed of the little red variety brought $9.50 a bushel. The cattle were extra good and brought good prices. A 3-year-old steer, weighing 1,400 pound 3. brought $95. One Shorthorn cow sold for $85. the balance of the cows selling at an average of $75. Hogs were off as to price, bringing $10 less a head that hogs sold for at sales a year ago. Good brood bows sold for $20 to $25. ' $10,000,000 SNOW FALLS IN KANSAS TOPEKA. Kan., March 6. In the days when wheat was worth on an average of 60 cents a bushel, a sixinch snow in March was regarded by F. D. Coburn as worth $1,000 to the "farmers of Kansas. "If that estimate, fits that case, a ten-inch snow like the present one, covering every inch of the state, and with the present price of wheat and prospects for continued good prices, this snow is a $10,000,000 affair," J. C. Mohler, secretary of the board of agriculture, said today. Mr. Mohler is Coburn's successor and for twenty years was his assistant. Live Stock Sales HORSE AND MULE Firty horses, 10 mules, I. G. Johnson, 1 mile south of Lynn, March 10. GENERAL STOCK Horses, cattle, sheep, hogs; March 11, Irvin Doddridge farm, one mile northeast of Brownsville. GENERAL STOCK Sixteen hogs, 7 horses, 9 cattle; March 9, Harve E. Bell farm,, four miles northwest of Eaton. DUROC HOGS Forty-six head, 10 horses, 22 cattle; Daniel & Markey. March 11, three miles southeast of Eldorado. HORSES Fifty head; Taube's barn, Richmond, March 13. ADD STOCK , .6. . 6. . 6. . 6. .6. .6. .6 GENERAL STOCK Forty-nine hogs, 17 cattle, 4 horses, March 17, John Copeland farm, 1 mile south of Hagerstown. HORSES-r-Five head, George Study farm, 3 miles north of Williamsburg, March 10. HORSES Thirty head, Haskett & Henley; Lewisville, March 15. NEW YORK EXCHANGE STOCK QUOTATIONS Furnished by Carrell & Thompson; 1. O. O. F. Building Phone 1446. American Can 28 Amalgamated Copper ... 55 American Smelter 63 American Beet Sugar ... 40 U. S. Steel 45 Utah 53 Atchison 95 St. aPul 87 V2 Great Northern pfd 115 Erie 22 Lehigh Valley 134 N. Y. Central 84 Northern Pacific 1034 Pennsylvania 1054 Reading 145 Southern Pacific 84 i Union Pacific 119 27 54 63 40 44 52 95 87 V4 115. 22 134 83 Ms 102 105 M 145 84 119 CHICAGO PRODUCE CHICAGO, March 6. Butter' Receipts 6,200 tubs, extra firsts 2829. Eggs: Receipts 9,800 cases, firsts' 19!i. Live Poultry: Chickens 15c; springers 16, roosters 11. Potatoes: Receipts 32 cars: Wisconsin white 3135, red 3035, Michigan white 3037, red 3537. CINCINNATI LIVE STOCK CINCINNATI, O.. March 6. Hogs: Receipts 1,800, market stead, common to choice, $5.255.85, stags $5.00 4.75. Cattle: Receipts 100, market steady, calves slow $7.00 10.00. Sheep: Receipts 100, steady, $5.00 6.60, lambs steady. CHICAGO LIVE STOCK UNION STOCK YARDS, III., March 6. Hogs: Receipts 10,000, market 10c higher, mixed and butchers $6.606.95, good heavies $6.45 6.92, rough heavies$G.156.40, light $l.506.97, pigs $6.3536.90, bulk of sales $6.75 6.90. Cattle: Receipts 200, market steady, beeves $5.75 9.15, cows and heifers $3.508.00, stockers and feeders $4.50 6.40, Texans $6.157.40, calves $6.50 10.00. Sheep: Receipts 2,000, market steady, natives and westerns $4.75 7.90, lambs $6.509.75. PITTSBURG LIVE STOCK PITTSBURG, Pa.. March 6 Cattle: Supply light, market steady, choice steers $8.658.75, prime steers $8.40 8.70, good steers $8.008.40, tidy butchers $7.75(0:8.25, fair $7.007.50, common $6.00(36.75, veal calves $11.50 U 12.00. Sheep and lambs: Supply light, toarket steady, prime wethers $7.50 t.75, lambs $7.009.85. Hogs: Receipts 10 carloads, market fairly active, prime heavy $7.00, mediums $7.25 7.30, heavy yorkers $7.25 7.30, light yorkers $7.1007.15, pigs $7.00, roughs $6.006.20, stags $5.00 5.50, mixed $7.O07.10. INDIANAPOLIS LIVE STOCK INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., March 6. Hogs: Receipts 2,500, market 1015c higher, best hogs $6.757.00, heavies $6.807.00, pigs $6.006.50, bulk of
Bulletins on Live Stock
CHICAGO. Receipts Hogs 10,000 ; cattle 200; sheep 2,000. Market Hogs, 10c higher; cattle, steady; sheep,' steady. INDIANAPOLIS. Receipts Hogs 2,500; cattle, 50; sheep, light. Market Hogs 10 to 15c higher; aattle steady; sheep, steady. PITTSBURG. v Receipts Hogs, 10 cars; cattle' light; sheep, light. Market -Hogs fairly active ; cattle steady ; sheep steady. CINCINNATI. Receipts Hogs, 18,000 ; cattle 100 ; sheep 100. Market Hogs, steady ; cattle, steady ; sheep steady.
WHEAT CLOSES $141 AS SHORTS PURCHASE CHICAGO, March 6 There were gains of 2 to 2c in what today, corn was up to c and oats were Vz to Id higher. Cash transactions were 20,000 bushels of hard winte? wheat to exporters, 30,000 bushels of corn, with 25,000 bushels to exporters, and 205,000 bushels of oats with 175,000 bushels to exporters. Duluth reported 200,000 bushels of wheat sold to millers, St. Louis 100,000 bushels of wheat to exporters, and Winnipeg 100,000 bushels for export.. Around the bottom prices reached an excellent demand developed from shorts, and with, the export sales reported, prices advanced. Hog products were up sharply. The Michigan report from 250 correspondents said wheat did not sufer in February, while 172 said it did. Shorts were the principal buyers. May wheat closed at $1.41, July $1.15, September $1.07. sales $6.857.10. Cattle: Receipts 50, market steady, choice heavy steers $8.008.50, light steers $7.508.00, heifers $6.357.25, cows $5.506.25, bulls $6.257.00, calves $6.00 10.25. Sheep and lambs: Receipts light, market steady, prime sheep $5.00 6.00, lamb3 $8.759.50. NEW YORKPRODUCE NEW YORK. March 6. Dressed poultry, dull; chickens 1227, fowls 1318. - Live poultry, Irregular, chickens 13 16, fowls 18, roosters 10V213. Butter, easier, creamery firsts 26 29 cents. Eggs, steady; white fancy 2324. CHICAGO CASH CHICAGO, March 6 Wheat: No. 2 red $1.421.44, No. 2 hard AZVz 1.46Vi. Corn:. No, 4 white 7070V2 No. 4 yellow 6970V2- . - Oats: No; 4 white 55.:: r : CHICAGO PROVISIONS AND GRAIN PRICES WHEAT May 141 Closo 141 115 197 73 75 56 51 $17.62 $17.97 $10.50 $.10.73 $10.00 $10.37 July 116 September 106 CORN May 72 July 74 Va OATS May 5G July 51 MESS PORK. May $17.50 July $17.87 LARD. May $10.52 July $10.70 MBS. May $10.00 July $10.32 TOLEDO GRAIN TOLEDO, March 6. Wheat: Cash ! $1.421.42, July $1.17. Cloverseed: Prime cash, $8.62, March $8.47, April $8.07. Alsike: Prime cash and March $8.65. Timothy: Prime cash, March and April $3.10. RICHMOND MARKETS GLEN MILLER PRICES HOGS. Heavies $6.25 Heavy yorkers $6.50 Light yorkers $6.25 Pigs $5.75 Sows $5.00 and $5.50 Stags $5.00 and $5.50 CATTLE. Best steers $7.00 Good cows $5.00 and $6.00 Bulls . $4.50 and $5.00 Canners $2.50 ind $3.50 Calves $9.00 for Saturday delivery GRAIN MARKET (Corrected dally by Richmond Roller Mills. Phone 2C19.) v Bran per ton, $30; wheat, paying $1.40, oats paying 50c, corn paying 75c rye paying 85c, oats paying 65c, middlings per ton $32. PRODUCE (Corrected dally by Gu Cooper Old chickens dressed, paying 18c; selling. i5c. Young chic'- s dressed, paylPT 18c; sc'!in- 23c.
!!!l!ilSeii:illill!i!!!!ll!illl!:!l!!!i I Attention, Farmers! 1 $10 in Gold Free f II For the best ten ears of corn any color. Prize awarded Saturday, H jj May 1st. CONTEST OPEN TO ALL. Bring in your corn at once, jj Farm Improvement Go. 1
Phone' 2566;-
Country butter, paying 18c to 25c; selling 25c to 35c. ' ' Eggs, paying 15c; selling, 20c. Country lard paying lie: selling 15c Creamery butter, selling 38c. FEED QUOTATIONS Timothy hay, paying $18. Rye straw, paying; $7. $ Wheat straw, paying $6. I " ; Oats straw, paying $7. Oats, paying 52c. " New corn, paying 75c Red clover seed, paying $7.50. Red clover, selling $9.009.50. Timothy seed, paying $3.25 bushel Timothy seed selling $4.00 bushel Bran selling $29 ton. Middlings, selling $30 ton. Salt, $1.40 barrel. Clover hay, $14. COAL PRICES Quotations corrected daily by Hackman, Klefoth & Co. Anthracite nut. $8.60; Anthracite No. 4 ard egg, $S.35: Pocahontas lump or egg, $5.75; Pocahontas mine run, $4.50; Pocahontas slack, $4.00; Jack 6on lump or egg, $5.75; Winifred, $4. 75; Jewel. $5.25; Tennessee. $5.50; Hocking Valley, $4.50; Indiana, $3.75; coke, $7; Winifred Washed pea. $4.00; nut and slack, $3.00. HORSE MARKET. Prices corrected by Jones and Mings. Telephone 1439. Draft mares, 1400 to 1500 lbs, $175 to $250. Draft Geldings, 1400 to 1600 lbs, $175 to $200. Farm chunks, 1200 to 1400 lbs, $150 to $200. Express chunks, 1050 to 1200 lbs., $125 to $1.75. ; ' - Drivers. $75 to $150. ' Plugs. $40 to $100. " ! ; Representative Sales At Indianapolis No. Av. ' Price. 20 48 ... $4.50 6: 96 ... 6.25 47 93 ... 6.40 10 108 - ... 6.50 59 212 80 6.85 56 162 ... 6.90 50 178 ... 6.90 57 172 ... 6.95 CATTLE. Steers. 3 853 $6.50 2 970 6.75 3 1006 7.35 3 1120 8.00 Heifers. 6 698 6.25 6 826 6.50 2 805 6.75 5 812 7.00 3 570 7.50 Cows. 3 793 4.25 2 1065 5.00 2 1150 5.75 4 1252 6.25 2 1140 6.50 Bulls. 1 1040 5.30 2 1570 5.75 3 1170 6.00 Calves. 3 176 8.00 10 144 9.50 7 151 10.00 9 146 10.25 4 142 10.50
IF YOU HAD A NECK AS LONG A3 THI8 FELLOW, S3RE THROAT tons i line WOULD QUICKLY RELIEVE IT. 2Gc. and 60c. Hospital Size, ft M-L. DRusaisv. OSTEOPATHIC Physicians Dr.E. E.Townsend Dr. Florence Roades Rooms 3, 4, 5 and 6 Murray Theatre 'Bldg. Phones Residence 1278; Office 1396. Dr. Roades makes a specialty of diseases of women and children. Room 313 Colonial Bldg. j
ALL 1 1 I I way! I DOWN
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BAPTIST LECTURER SPEAKS HERE FRIDAY .Next Friday evening, Rev, Bruce Kinney, D. D., of Topeka, Kansas, author of the mission study text book, "Mormonism, the Islam of America," and ' general superintendent of the Western District of the American Baptist Home Mission society, will give a lecture on, "The Pith and Pathos of the Frontier," in the First Baptist church. The lecture will be Illustrated with views of some of the most Interesting scenes of our western country. This will be a chance for the Increasing number of Americans who want to see, America first. - Dr. Kinney Is reputed to be an eloquent and exceedingly Interesting speaker. He will be the guest of Rev. W. O. Stovall, pastor of the church, while in the city. There will be no charge for admission. PRODUCE WAR SPREADS (Continued from - Page One.
of it now. I got the lettuce on McLeland's. recommendation because I wasn't known, but ' McLeland didn't make any profit on it because I bought direct for cash. "Thursday night a grocer called me up at 7:20 o'clock and asked me what I had in stock. I told him what I had and asked him to come to the store and look it over. He replied that if he met me on the street he would bust me in the face. I told him I only weighed ninety-eight pounds and he would have to run some to catch me." H. V. McLeland said today he sold 800 bushels of potatoes yesterday and he has no intention of raising the price for some time. "All of the grocers seem to be in a good humor today," Mr. McLeland said. "I see the ones who are bucking raised their prices from thirty-nine cents to sixty cents a bushel." Sugar went at the ten cent stores for five cents a pound. It was sold only in limited quantities and after other purchases had been made. Bananas can be purchased at ten cents a dozen at almost all of the groceries, and since this price was set yesterday by the Kresge store. - , Met All Competition. Bananas cost, figuring in the waste, about nine and one-fourth cents a pound. Sugar can be purchased wholesale for about five to five and one-half cents a pound In quantities. The prices on cranberries were lower than wholesale. The five and ten cent stores were selling cranberries for five cents a quart and Mercurio met competition by selling for four cents. Farmers on city market told Market Master McKinley they would rather sell their produce fast than take It home. They were reluctant about coming down in price to meet the stiff competition. The price cutting war has opened up a new market. The market is in the homes of citizens. Thjnp wtlich wejrf purchased in limited quantities a few weeks ago when "company" came, are now served bountifully every day. Lettuce is one of these items of produce and it Is estimated that almost three times as much lettuce was consumed in the city last week than in weeks before the war opened.
THE old Olympic Game promoters were great for what we call "form." Symmetry , proportion, soundness snd proper balance out-bid bulging muscles for favor yes, and out-won, too, just as they will today. Mere bulk never was synonymous with endurance and the truth of this statement drives home with a bang, when you apply it to tires.
"F thiclr, heavy tires were
tiro construction, we could wipe out of existence a Goodrich Research and Test
Department employing seventy people. We would take off the road a battalion of ten automobiles, that run twenty-four hours a day and every day in the year, grinding tires of all makes to pieces, just for the sake of information to us and eventual economy to the user cf Goodrich Tires. There is where we learn to cut out of a tire the material which gets the user nothing. Of course, when we stripped tire price lists of their padding fictitious values we expected rivals to say we had stripped our tires.
Note the following table of comparative; prices on non-skid tires. Columns headed "A," "B," "C and "D" represent four highly-advertised tires:
Goodrichj OTHER MAKES Size Safety l, ii Tread "A" j "B" I "C" I "D" 30x3 5 9.45 '10.5510.95 116.35 '18.10 30x3y2 12.20 13.35 14.20(21.70 23.60 32x3V2 14.00 15.40 16.30)22.85 25.30 34x4 20.35 22.30 23 80 31.15 33.55 36X4V2 28.70 32.15 33.60 141.85 41.40 37x5 33.90 39.80 41.80 j 49.85 1 52.05
If you are charged less for any other make than Goodrich, they are taking it out of the tire; if you are charged more, they are taking it out of you.
Goodrich
Skunk Has Defender in Center Township Walter S. Commons Proves Odoriferous Animal Best Friend of Farmer- Kills Insect Larvae, Ground Mice and Other Pests Worth Whole Flock of Birds.
The despised and odoriferous skunk has at last found a stout champion in the person of ex-Senator Walter S. Commons of Center township. The skunk family, merits the kindly consideration of mankind, Senator Commons says, but Instead the skunk has been the object of relentless persecution. "Due perhaps to a bad market for raw fur making materials there has been very much less skunk killing during the past season than formerly," Senator Commons said. "And as a beneficient result observing farmers will notice in old clover fields and sodded fence rows hundreds of diminutive holes. This is the work of the harmless but disrespected skunk. With unfailing accuracy this useful little animal punctures the soil immediately over a grub or some other insect GARFIELD EVENTS IN NEWSY BRIEFS The Garfield school council held a busy session last Thursday. The physical education committee recommended setting the date of the field meet for May 15, the purchase of supplies for spring games, and putting the playground in readiness for use. The recommendations were approved and the committee ' was directed to consider a contest of the girls in the program of the field meet. The social education committee recommended a number of meetings in connection with the mothers committee of the school, and also the holding of a bazaar some time this term. The decoration committee requested the school board to have the soil about the tower prepared for the planting of ivy vines. The general exercise committee requested the principal to ask the school board to permit a trial of the single session plan of school, beginning at eight and running through with only a short lunch period at noon. Rev. H. C. Harmon spoke to the pupils at chapel yesterday morning emphasizing the need of preparing now for future usefulness. The orchestra played two numbers. The pamphlet detailing the plan and scope of the school is expected to be off the press sometime next week. " j Keep Your-Bowels Regular. As everyone knows, the bowels are the sewerage system of the body, and it is of greatest importance that they move once each day. If you bowels become "constipated, take a dose of Chamberlain's Tablets just after supper and they will correct the disorder. Obtainable everywhere. adv.
The Goodrich Tire,
like the trained
athlete is all brawn and muscle no fat
IT was their only "come-back." They had to say that, in stripping down prices to the. point where they were fair to dealer and consumer and left no room for injurious price-cutting tactics, we had stripped our tires of some quality, too. THE Goodrich Tire, like the trained athlete, is all brawn and muscle no fat. It represents an achievement the ability to cut out the extra costs of manufacture, the extra costs of labor, of extra, needless material, and to give you the best, long-mileage, high-standard tire in the world. There are padded tires as well as padded price lists. Don't pay for padding. Now don't forget this we are talking in the main about Goodrich Safo4y Tread Tires, for they represent ninety per cent of our factory output for resale. Furthermore, while we have put the padded prices on smooth tread tires on the run, the evil of padded prices on non-skid tires still is in evidence, as shown in table below : THE B. F. GOODRICH CO., Akron, Ohio
the last word in Famomm Condrich SaUty Trmmd
larvae that infest the soil near the surface. Ground mice are a special relish for this industrious little animal, although additional skill is required to capture such prey. "The skunk's propensity for poultry snatching is unduly emphasized by those selfishly interested in- the slaughter of skunks for their fur. Fifty years' experience convinces me that a skunk den is rarely established in close proximity to farm buildings. "One skunk is worth, a whole flock of birds and yet only In recent years a grand old man, the late Senator Powers, was disgracefully ridiculed by men of statesmanship and learning because he dared to propose protection for one of agriculture's most useful conservators, the skunk. Farmers as a whole do not appreciate the importance of
TYROLIAN PLAYERS TO VISIT RICHMOND German Alliance to Bring Oberammergau Singers for Concert. The German Alliance announced today that steps had been taken to bring the Oberammergau troupe of players here soon, probably on March. 18. Onefourth of the proceeds of the concert will be given to relief work in German. "Z widerwurz'n" Is a provincial Bavarian play, with folk songs scattered throughout, is one of the several playets which the troupe presents. It is not known which of the plays the company presents, will be given here. In Cleveland, Pittsburg and other big German centers where the troupe has appeared, the press has extolled the excellent music which it offers the audience. The singing of the members of the organization is rated excellent. It interprets the German "folk songs. Instrumental numbers are also given. Los Angeles is canning lima beans with much success. The enterprise was initiated last year. Noticennfinrun Hokendauqua nCUIVIGI! All former members of Hokendauqua degree" team are requested to meet at the Wigwam Sunday morning, March 7, 1915 at 9 a. m. to prepare for degree work to be given by Hokendauqua team at Fountain City, Indiana on next Thursday evening, March 11, 1915. M. Brece, Team Captain. standard bytokichall athmr nonikida or judged Tires
ni. ! r s mt 1 h
protecting Insect destroyers and I wis!
that Is just now afforded by unfrozei ground ana many busy larvae hunt era at work." How to Conquer Rheumatism at Your Own Home. If you or any of your friends suffei from rheumatism, kidney disorders 01 excess uric acid, causing lamenesn, backache, muscular pains, stiff, painful, swollen joints, pala In the llmbi and feet; dimness of sight ltchlna skin or frequent neuralgic pains. I invite you. to send for a generous Fres Trial Treatment of my well known, reliable Chronicure, with reference and full particulars by maiL (This It no C. O. D. scheme.) No matter how many may have failed in vnn. m let me prove to you, free of cost, thai rheumatism can be conquered. Chronicure succeeds where nil oi.a fails. Chronicure cleanses the blood aua removes the cause. Also for weakened, run-down system, you will find Chronicure a uiosi. causiaciory general tonic that makes you feel that iifo fa ing. Please tell your friends of this liberal offer, and send today for large free package, to MRS. M. SUMMERS. t. wasmngton Avenue, Soutn NOTICE. Notice is herebv eivon in th. .m. zena of the cltv of township, Wayne county, state' of Indiana, and all othr ' j .i. "i" undersigned, being duly qualified acwiu.ne io jaw. win make application to the board of commissinnoK Wayne county, state of Indiana, at the mrju. ic6uiar session or said board, commencing on the first Mnnrf9V April, 1915. for the renewal of my license to sell Intoxicating liquors at retail with permission same to be drunk upon the premises where sold in accordance with the provisions of an act of the general assem bly or me state or Indiana, approved March 4, 1911. and all other laws of the state of Indiana now in force in relation to such business. The precise description of the room ana premises wnere I desire to sell such liquors pursuant to such renewal license, as aforesaid, is as follows: Being the ground floor room of the one-story buildine located at ih west corner of North Eighth street and r ore ayne avenue. In the Third ward of the city of Richmond, nf the almvo named township and county, and described and bounded as follows, towit: Commencing at the intersection Of the West line of nrth VitxKth street with the north line of Fort Wayne avenue, and thence north with the west line of Xorth Eighth street, a distance or fifty feet and five inches; thence westwardly with the south line of the rieht of wav of the Pittshiirc Cincinnati. Chicago & St. Louis Rail way company, tmrty-three feet and One inch to a wall- thn nnthn-l. wardly, meeting the west line of Wash ington avenue as vacated at right angles at a distance of eighteen feet: thence soiithwpstwardlv fiftv-fivo fr.et to the place of beginning: the same be ing a room as aoove described being iour-siaea, eacn side or wnicn is of different length, and fronting for said distance of fifty-five feet and five inches on said North Eighth street, and knnvn and dpsipnatpH n hpinp - - - - n Number 502 North Eighth street: the same being a part or the southeast nnarter of section fhirtv-two township fourteen (14), north, range one lij wesi. WILLIAM H. THOMAS. NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ES TATE BY ADMINISTRATOR. State of Indiana, County of Wayne, ss: In re Estate of Anna W. Whitman, deceased. In Wayne Circuit Court, January Term, 1915. Notice of Sale of Real Estate by Administrator. The undersigned, Gideon W. Neff. Administrator, with the will annexed of Anna M. "Whitman, deceased, hereby gives notice that by virtue of an or der of Wayne Circuit Court of Indiana, he will at the hour of 2 o'clock p. m.. on Friday, March 19th, 1915, offer for sale at public sale all the interest of said decedent in and to the fol lowing described real estate, situated in the City of Richmond, of Wayne County, and State of Indiana, to-wit: Being full interest in and to Lot Number Seven (7) in James McNeill's Sub-division of a part of Christian Fetta's Addition to said City of Rich mond. Said Bale will he made subject to the approval of Wayne Circuit Court of Indiana, and for not less than twothirds of the appraised value of said real estate, and upon following terms and conditions: At least one-third of purchase money cash in hand, and balance in two equal installments, payable in not to exceed nine and eighteen months, evidenced by notes oi purchaser, bearing six per cent interest from date, evidenced by notes in usual bankable form, waiving relief providing for attorney s fees and secured by mortgage on -the real estate sold. This real estate will further be sold subject to taxes for year 1915, but free of all other liens. Abstract of title will be furnished to purchaser without further cost. GIDEON W. NEFF. Administrator. With Will Annexed Anna M. Whitman, deceased. GARDNER, JESSUP & WHITE, Attorneya-at-Law. COL. MEEK, Auctioneer. febl8-23 mar4-ll-18 DO YOU N Call on us we loan any amount from $5.00 to $100 on household goods, pianos, teams, stock Etc. If unable to call, write or phone our agent will call on you. The State Investment & Loan Co. Phone 2560 Room No. 40 Colonial Bldg, Third Floor Richmond, Ind.
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