Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 194, 28 July 1915 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1915.
MARKETS
WHEAT UNSETTLED ON CHICAGO MARKET CHICAGO. July 28 The wheat market closed irregular and unsettled today, with July 1 cents higher, while the more deferred months were Vs at cents lower. July corn was up cent. September was unchanged while December was cents lower. July oats were 2 cents higher and the September and December were at cent higher respectively. Cash transactions at Chicago were 288,000 bushels wheat of which 280,000 bushels were for export, 95,000 bushels corn and 240,000 bushels oats. Vessel room was chartered for 200,000 bushels wheat and 200,000 bushels corn at cents to Buffalo. Provisions were lower all around and that market was under pressure right up to the close. - The action of the July future showed that there Is still a good sized open Interest in that month in not only wheat but in corn and oats as well. CHICAGO CASH. CHICAGO, July 28. Wheat No. 2 red $1.141.15, No. 2 hard $1.15 1.19. Corn No. 2 corn mixed 81, No. 2 white 8181. No. 2 yellow 81',481, No. 3 white 814 81, No. 3 yellow 81. Oats No. 2 55 56, No. 3 white 5253, No. 4 white 52. Standard 5555. TOLEDO. TOLEDO, July 28. Wheat, July $1.12, Sept. $1.10 Cloverseed Prime cash $7.85, October $8.07. Alsike Oct. $2.85, Sept. $2.95. CHICAGO FUTURES. WHEAT. Open. High. Low. Close July 113 114 113 114 Sept 108 109 107 107 Dec 110 111 109 110 CORN. July 80 80 80 80 Sept 75 75 74 74 Dec 64 65 64 64 OATS. July 54 65 54 55 Sept 38 38 38 38 Dec 40 40 39 39 PORK. Sept $13.37 $13.40 $13.12 $13.30 Oct $13.55 $15.60 $15.32 $15.45 LIVE STOCK CHICAGO. UNION STOCKYARDS, 111., July 28 Hogs: Receipts 24,000, market 5c lower; mixed and butchers $6.60 7.75, good heavies $6 507.55, rough heavies $6.206.40, light $7.20 7.80, pigs $5.757.15, bulk of sales $6.60 7.50. Cattle: Receipts 12,000, mar ket steady: Beeves $6.2510.30, cows and heifers $3.509.40, stockers and feeders, no quotation; calves $9 10.75. Sheep: Receipts 16,000, market strong: natives and westerns $3.25 6.25, lambs $5.408.30. , INDIANAPOLIS. INDIANAPOLIS. Ind.. July 28 Hogs: Receipts 9,000, market steady, best hogs $7.357.80, heavies $7.10 7.60, pigs $7,355x7.80, bulk of 6ales $7.357.80. Cattle: Receipts 1,100, market weak, choice heavy steers $8.759.85, light steers $8.50 9.50, heifers $5.507.25, cows $3.007.25. bulls $5.007.00, calves $5.0011.50. Sheep and lambs: Receipts 450, market strong, prime sheep $5.75 down, lambs $8.75 down. CINCINNATI. CINCINNATI, July 28. Hogs, receipts 2000, market higher, packers and butchers $7.257.35. Cattle Receipts 600, market steady, calves steady. Sheep Receipts 8000, market steady, lambs lower. PITTSBURG. PITTSBURG. July 28. Cattle supply light, market steady; choice steers $9.609.70, prime steers $9(79.50, good steers $8.50 9.00. tidy butchers $8.50 f?9.00, fair $7.50(48.25, common $6 7. common to fat bulls $57.25, common to fat cows $47.25, heifers $7$508.50. veal calces $11.5012. Sheep and lambs, supply light; market steady; prime wethers $6.506.75, lambs $6 7. Hogs: Receipts 10 double decks; market active; prime heavy $7.65 7.75, medium $8.30, heavy yorkers $8.30 light Yorkers and pigs $8.358.40, roughs $6 6.50, stags $55.50. heavy mixed $7908.00. -? PRODUCE
GRAIN
CHICAGO. CHICAGO. July 28. Butter receipts 13751 tubs, firsts 2223. Egg receipts 14650 cases. Chickens 1414, springers 1820, roosters 10 Potatoes 25 cars. NEW YORK. July 28. Live poultry, unsettled; chickens 2025. fowls 23. Butter, quiet; 24 26. Eggs weak. NEW YORK EXCHANGE STOCK QUOTATIONS BY CORRELL & THOMPSON, Brokers, I. O. O. F. Bldg. Phone 144C American Can 60 59 Anaconda 67 67 American Smelter 78 78 Amerlcan'Seet Sugar .... 55 56 American Loco 52 52 United States Steel 65 66 Atchison 100 101' St. Paul 84 83 Great Northern Pacific ..117 117 Erie 26 26 Lehigh Valley 144 142 New York Central 88 88 Northern Pacific 107 106 Pennsylvania . 108 -107 i Reading 147 146 (Southern Pacific 86 86
RICHMOND MARKETS
GLEN MILLER PRICES : HOGS. Heavies .. ................. $6.50 Heavy mixed i $7 00 Heavy Yorkers ....... ..."i. ... - $7.25 Pigs , $6.50 7.25 Sows . $5.00$600 Stags $4.50 CATTLE. , Best steers $7.60 Heifers $7.007.50 Good cows $5.00 6.00 Bulls $5.006.00 Cannera $2.50 mad $3.50 Calves $9 for Saturday delivery 8HEEP. Top lambs 6e Spring lambs - 6 FEED QUOTATIONS Clover hay, $16.00. Timothy hay, selling $21. Prairie hay, selling $15. Straw, paying $6. Oats, paying 40c. Corn, paying 70c. Red clover seed, paying $6.50. Bran, selling $29. Salt. $1.40 barrel. Tankage, $48.00 ton. Oil meal, $38.00 ton. Middlings, $32 $1.60 per 100. PRODUCE (Corrected Daily by Edward Cooper.) Old chickens dressed, paying 18c, selling, 25c. Country butter, paring 18c to 25c; selling, 25c to 33c. Eggs, paying 17c. selling 20c. Country lard paying 10c; selling 15c. Creamery butter, selling 30c. Potatoes, selling 70c per bushel. Young chickens, dressed, paying 28c; selling 35c. Representatiev Sales At Indianapolis Hogs Av. Price U 209 $6.75 58 252 7.27 55 219 7.50 59 223 7.55 50 240 7.60 72 218 7.65 66 197 7.70 78 . 179 7.80 73 ...... ; 166 7.85 Steers. 4 562 7.00 20 822 7.85 20 606 8.00 10 1064 8.35 20 .'. 1272 9.00 18 1269 9.75 Heifers. 2 690 $6.75 4 717 7.00 2 765 7.50 3 676 8.50 3 840 8.65 COWS. 935 4.50 2 965 5.50 3 ; 1060 6.00 2 1175 6.50 1 1260 7.00 Bulls. 1 640 5.25 1 760 5.85 1 ' 1330 6.60 1 . 1530 7.00 Calves. 2 100 7.50 1 250 9.00 6 168 11.00 3 '" . 136 11.25 2 " 140 1150 HONORS BIRTHDAY CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind., July 28. Jesse Hoover of the railway mail service, gave a 6 o'clock dinner on Monday,' in honor of his thirty-second birthday. The guests were as follows: Alvin and Harry Bevtsch, Henry Neerman, Raymond Stubbs, Raymond West, Robert Myers, Herman Barnett, Dr. Kopp, Walter Waddell and Donald Johnson. PENNSY PROVIDES CROSSING GUARD EATON, O., July 28. Even though the public utilities commission held that it was not necessary for the Pennsylvania lines to provide gates or flagmen at three crossings in the city, officials of the road at Richmond have advised city council that a flagman will be stationed at the Barron street crossing and that the system of crossing alarm bells will be greatly improved. Council has also directed the city engineer to establish safety zones on Main street along the track of the Ohio electric. Lines indicating the zones will be painted upon the street and the plan will be strictly enforced. CHESTER, IND. Mr. and Mrs. Will Pickett spent Friday evening with Michael Kendall and family. Elbert Kemp and family 6pent Sunday with Ernest Davenport and family. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Carman and con Raymond, of near Whitewater, were guests of Bert Carman and family, Sunday. Relatives from Camden, O., visited Thomas Borden and family Sunday. Miss Charlotte Rogers of Richmond Is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Will Wessler. Misses Marjorie Pickett and Afton Pyle were guests of Helen Hall in Richmond Sunday. Charley Human and family motored to Lynn Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Martin were guests of Morrison Pyle and family Sunday. Relatives from Newark. N. J., are visiting Charles Woodruff and family Mrs. Noah Wilson is ill with appen dicitis. Mr. and Mrs. Caleb Duke visked William Duke and family near Middleboro Sunday. Mrs. Mary Jeffries has been visiting relatives in Ohio. Communion services will be held next Sunday morning at the M. E. church. Clyde Crampton of Chicago is visiting relatives here. Mrs. Silas Williamson was able to attend church Sunday evening.
BREEDERS OF SWINE CONVENE AT PURDUE
A unlaue school of one day's length tor swine breeders and judges will be held at Purdue University, Live Stock Judging Pavilion, Tuesday, August 3. A full and Interesting program has been arranged in which the visiting breeders and farmers will have a day of Instruction la scoring and judging hogs. The class will be conducted by experienced breeders and Judges who are well qualified o give practical information which will enable breeders and others to select their hogs more Intelligently, and at the same time fit themselves for judging swine in the show ring in Indiana fairs. , The University has large herds of hogs, consisting ' of five different breeds and. excellent equipment for handling the same. The breeding stock and show barrows will be in spected by visitors and -many otherj points or interest to farmers and stockmen visited. A large number of swine breeders and growers will be present from all parts of the state. REGIMENT RALLIES EATON, O., July 28. The seventeenth . anual reunion of members of the 156th regiment, O. V. I., will be held August 5 at Greenville, according to the announcement of Marcus N. Surface .of West Manchester, secretary of the organization. Henry Cossairt, also of West Manchester, one of this county's best known veterans, is president of the association formed by the survivors of this gallant regiment. FIRE BREAKS OUT IN FREIGHT CAR CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind., July 28. When the local freight on the Louisville division was midway between this place and Dublin on Tuesday morning, fire was discovered by the crew in a car of merchandise that had been billed out of Richmond. The train was backed to the siding here and the fire department called. By prompt action on the part of the firemen the car was saved without serious damage, but the goods were almost a total loss. The fire originated inside the 'car near where a piano was stored. YEAR'S THRESHING NEARS COMPLETION CAMBRIDGE CITY. Ind., July 28. The fine weather of the last few days has been very encouraging to the farmers and has shown an unexpected improvement in the yield of wheat. Another week will be required to complete ' the threshing in this locality. The crop is averaging about twentyone bushels to the acre, but is not grading above No. 2. Perhaps onehalf of the crop is being marketed now, while the remainder is being stored in granaries, awaiting higher prices. The oats crop is in the shock, is in good condition and will "oe above the average. GERMAN SOLDIERS APPROACH FORTS BERLIN, July 28. German troops engaged in the great Warsaw drive in Poland have occupied Novorovo, fifteen miles west of the Warsaw fortification, has been stormed by the German troops under Field Marshal Von Hindenburg. Counter attacks of the Russians on both banks of the Narew river to the north of Serosk and to the south of Nazielsk failed. " Near Rozan the Germans captured 2500 Russians and 7 machine guns. Between Mitau and the Niemen the troops under General Von Buelow captured 1200 Russians. To the east and southeast of Rozan the German attacks are proceeding successfully. Fighting is in progress southwest of Gorakalvarpa. VOICE GOMES BACK AFTER LONG STUPOR BERLIN, July 28. In a strange manner a German soldier, Carl Nueller of Freudenstadt, Wuerttemberg, has regained his voice, which he had completely lost through a nervous shock during a terrible artillery-duel north of Arras. Several weeks ago the young man was brought to the hospital at Hattigen on the Kuhr, where the physicians pronounced his case hopeless. His strength returned gradually but his speech seemed to be gone forever. He was not able to utter the slightest sound. This week the unfortunate hero, with a number of convalescent comrades, attended a garden-festival given to the inmates of the hospital by a wealthy merchant. He was in high spirits, but when he returned to the hospital in the evening he broke down and fell into a death-l:'ke stupor. For three days all efforts of the physicians to rouse him proved futile. When he awoke at last his voice had returned. "Good God, I can speak again," he exclaimed loudly to the astonishment of the doctors. His parents were at once informed of his good fortune by telegraph. FELL UNDER HEARSE; CHILD MEETS DEATH CHICAGO, July 28. Another tragedy that came in the wake of the Eastland disaster, came to light today when it was related how little Emma Vesely, aged 9, fell beneath a funeral automobile in which her father had Lgone to attend the burial of Miss Anna Koukl, 18, one of the Eastland victims, and was killed. Isidore Evans, driver of the funeral automobile, was held by the police on a charge of causing the child's death. MARRY IN PARK. EVANSVILLE, July 28 Married in the presence of a picnic party in a city park was the novel method resorted to by William Armstrong and Miss Lora Duncan.
CARNEGIE PENSION FOR AGED WOMAN
f - 1 f ',- v. 1 JZS 1 4CS!k 5 t -y I $ t h -
MRS BOAA 10CKW&CD. Mrs. Belva Lockwood, the venerable peace advocate who ran for president in two campaigns, has been notified that Andrew Carnegie has placed her on his pension list for $20 monthly. Mrs. Lockwood's financial affairs are in the hands of a committee of Washington citizens. v Mrs. Lockwood is in her eighty-fifth year and her health is breaking. War Sidelights Found in News From Continent The astonishSng shell-consuming power of modern artillery is discussed by General Heinrich Rohne in an interview published by the Vossische Zeitung, of Berlin. "Nearly 300,000 shells were fired at the north of Arras on June 17," he says. "This was almost as much as the whole fire of the German artillery in 1870. How costly the bombardment of Arras was for the English may be gathered from the fact that the very smallest gun shoots a projectile costing at least $6." SALES WELL ATTENDED. Summer sales in the shops "and department stores of London are well attended this season, as prudent buyers are laying in stocks for the coming winter. Blue serges and covert goods are becoming scarce, owing to their use by the navy and lack of dyes. All woolens are likely to advance in price, as the demand for army goods is tremendous and labor scarce. Gloves, for which England depended largely on the continent also have an unusually heavy sale among the bargain hunters. Cotton stuffs, on the other hand, are cheaper than in peace times. AMERICANS SCARCE. "You are the first Americans we have seen this season, and a year ago there was never a day without many of them," said the manageress of a well-known inn in Ilfracombe. England, so popular with tourists. It is the same story in Somerset, Warwickshire, Devon or Cornwall. In Stratford the manageress showed the register for the first week in July last year and counted forty-six American names. ISSUE REGULATIONS. The Swiss federal council has issued fresh regulations with regard to the maintenance of the neutrality by the Swiss press and . public. Insults against nations, chiefs of states and foreign governments are forbidden under a maximum penalty of six months imprisonment and a fine of $1,000. MEMORIALS 'HELD. Memorial services for those who have fallen in the war ar being held on alternate afternoons in St. Paul's Cathedral and St. Dunstan s Chapel, London. The chapel where the services are held has become known as the "chapel of tears." v OFFICIAL ISSUES FALSE PASSPORT WASHINGTON, July 28. The state department today is attempting to aid Harry L. Wilson, clerk in the American consulate in Berlin, who has been arrested on the Danish frontier of Germany on the technical charge of trying to leave Germany without a passport. It is understood that Wilson's actual offense was the issuance of a false passport -to a British subject thinking to get out of Germany. Under German law this offense is a felony and had Wilson been of German birth it would have been treason. His situation is serious. Wilson was appointed to the service from Oregon. GOVERNOR GRANTS TEN MEN PAROLES INDIANAPOLIS, July 28. Concurring in the recommendations of the board of pardons, Governor Ralston ordered the release on parole today of ten prisoners serving sentences in state penal institutions. George Wilson, serving a life sentence for killing an innocent bystander at a dance in Evansville, had his sentence commuted, thereby making him eligible to parole in the future. Two bigamists, Elvis Jones of. Marion county, and Charles Beeson of Madison county, were paroled. Others to receive executive clemency included three forgers, James Russell Bowman, DeKalb county; Julius Spitzer, Vanderburg county, and John Friend, DeKalb county. ' 1 Stanley Morrison of Clinton county, perjurer, also will be turned loose.
ENGLISHMEN DRINK TOAST TO DEFEAT
BERLIN, July 28. A companion of the famous African explorer, Leo Frobenius writes, to the "Berliner Heltung am MIttag": . "On our homeward journey through the Suez canal, after the beginning of the war, we used to drink to each other with the toast "Hidekk." This Btrange word meant "Haupt-sache 1st. dass England Keile krfegt." (The main thing is that England shall be soundly thrashed). The word consisted of the initials of the words,ln the sentence. V The Englishmen at the next table were puzzled and tried to get an explanation from .our Arabian servant. This shrewd fellow Informed them that "Hidekk"- was thrf Hungarian equivalent for "heavy" and he added that the queer toast expressed our desire for a "heavy" defeat of our enemies: "At the next. meal the Englishmen, glaring at us fiercely, raised their glasses and shouted, "Hidekk." They were dumbfounded when a burst of laughter , from our table greeted their demonstration. ' What the joke was they never found out." PERMIT ISSUED TO CUT TIMBER WASHINGTON. July 28. The Alaskan engineering commission, which Is to build the government railroad from Seward on the Pacific, 471 miles to Fairbanks, in the interior, has received a permit from the forest service to cut 85 million feet of timber in the Chugach National forest for use in constructing tht new line. The permit was issued by the district forester at Portland, Oregon, who has direct supervision of the Alaskan forests, and is in conformity with the act of March 4, last, which authorized the secretary of agriculture to permit the Alaskan engineering commission and the navy department to take from the national forests free of charge, earth, stone and timber for use In government works. The timber will be cut in designated areas along the right-of-way of tht proposed railroad, which runs through the Chugach National forest for several miles. COMPANIES PAY BIG INSURANCE CHICAGO, July 28. More than a half million dollars will be paid out before the end of this week in insurance policies to the families of victims of the Eastland disaster. This estimate was made today by insurance adjusters who have been working night and day to pay losses. Managers of companies directing the settlement of claims state that between 50 and 75 per cent of those who died on the Eastland held policies for from $200 to $2,000. LANSING FORMS MEXICAN POLICY WASHINGTON, July 28. The state department Is not yet ready to show its hand relative to Mexico, Secretary Lansing said today. It has a definite program in mind and is confident that Mexico will be benefited greatly by the steps to be. taken, he added, but for the present nothing will be di vulged as to the administration s plan BELIEVE MURDERS ARE MANIAC'S ACTS HAMMOND, Ind., July 28. Not far from the spot where last month two men were shot and killed by a mysterious assassin, John Sergo, a young farmer, was shot near the Hammond line last evening. He died todav in St. Margaret's hospital. The lad was found unconscious by his father. A maniac is believed to be responsible for these murders. ASK FOR GERMAN STORY OF ATTACK WASHINGTON, July 28. The state department today announced that inquiry had been made by Ambassador Gerard as to the German account of the attack on the Cunard liner Orduna, bound from Liverpool to New York, with American passengers. The inquiry was made by Ambassador Gerard on instructions from the department. The state department did not transmit a note to the German for eign office on the subject. AIRSHIP EXPLODES LONDON, July 28. Two persons were killed and fifteen injured by the explosion of a British military airship at Wormwood Scrubs today. The explosion occurred while the airship was in its shed. Both machine and shed were completely wrecked. The accident is believed to have been caused by a leak in the motor. FIGHTING RESUMED PARIS, July 28. Desperate fighting has been resumed in the Arras region, north of Souchez. The statement issued by the war office this afternoon tells of the repulse of violent German attacks there. The enemy gained twenty yards, but the effort to break through the French line was checked. SOCIAL POSTPONED On account of threatening weather the ice-cream festival to be given this evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Dietemeyer on Kinsey and Third, by the Live Wire Bible class of the Second English Lutheran church, has been postponed until Tuesday evening of next week. UMBRELLAS and PARASOLS Covered and Repaired DUNING'S 43 N. 8th St
LIST OP MISSING REMAINS AT 507
CHICAGO. July 28. A revision of the list of -missing compiled by. 'the Western ' Electric company today, showed 507 persons who went on board the steamer Eastland last Saturday were unaccounted for. There were 824 identified bodies listed at the Second regiment armory morgue and five unidentified dead. The total number of the possible dead today was 1,336. SAILOR IGNORANT OF FAMILY'S FATE CHICAGO. July 28. The boales of Mrs. Nellie Fitzgerald and her three-year-old, daughter, Dorothy, are in Philadelphia today awaiting burial. They were passengers on the Ill-fated excursion steamer Eastland. Somewhere on the Atlantic ocean John F. Fitzgerald, husband and father, a paymaster sergeant in the United States navy, knows nothing of the fate of his wife and child. Mrs. Fitzgerald was visiting here with her husband's sister. Mrs. Mary Murphy. Mrs. Murphy and her husband both died on the Eastland. They were buried yesterday. "HELP" GET BIDS MICHIGAN CITY. Ind., July 28.--Housemaids in the home of Miss Catherine Barker, Michigan City's $30,000,000 heiress, and the hired men tn her farm, have received Invitations to the wedding of Miss Barker and Howard Spaulding. Jr., of Chicago, at Harbor Point, Mich., next month. Some of the invitations were accompanied by checks. MURDER MYSTERY COLUMBUS. Ind., July 28. The police here today were searching for a woman said to have been near the ennt nrhoro thA hndv of C. M. Horton. an Indianapolis traveling man, was found several days ago. coroner Rrflcken's renort holds that Horton was murdered by a 6hot through the back of tne neaa. lmeruroan employes at the inquest told of seeing the" woman in the woods near Horton'a body. She was moaning and wringing her hands, they said, and she fled at their approach. HARD ON ROOSTERS PASADENA, Cal.. July 28. An automatic anti-crowing device is under consideration by the city trustees of South Pasadena and may be prescribed by law in order to prevent the roosters of that city from indulging in vocal exercise until daylight. It is a well known fact that to crow successfully the rooster 's obliged to elevate his head. The South Pasadena trustees propose to compel people who have chickens to build their roosts so near the top of the coop that the rooster won't have any room for raising his head. If he tries to biff! A sudden vision of stars will stop the crow before it becomes a squawk. BOYS CALLED OUT. PETROGRAD, July 28. Czar Nicholas signed an imperial nkase today calling 19 year old boys to the colors. iTTrr-i
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finance directed hymen Ji of ample buyinexpericna and National reputaUonoiind. view and drenih of character? HieRIondlDcinlcf do the s&me. thin for Kinks that lvink.r do for their customers "a bank cf kinky"
Interest Paid PURINA SCRATCH FEED UNION SCRATCH FEED CHICKEN CHOWDER PRICED
82.
Jo E MEM
162-168 Ft. Wayne Ave;
PRISONER RELATES TALE OF SUFFERING
BERLIN. July 28. "The Waldshut (Baden) "Albbote" publishes a long letter of a German soldier who was taken prisoner by the French in January and has been sent to a camp in Algiers. The captive assures his relatives that he is treated very well, lauds the French people and military authorities, but the first words of the different paragraphs of his letter tell a different story. These words, when combined, form the following sentences: "At last alone. I have found a way to tell you the truth! Our camp is a hell and I am suffering awfully. The Frenchmen are crazy with rage and torment their prisoners. Thrash them as hard as you can, they deserve it." The censor of course did not discover these hidden sentences, or the letter would never have reached Germany. GETS WAR CONTRACT NEW YORK. July 2S. The Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing company has closed a contract for S0O,000 additional rifles for foreign gov ernments. The company also has an option on 200,000 more rifles at price of $27.50 per rifle. ARRESTED FAMILY. PHILADELPHIA. Pa.. July 28. Because they raised a row and disturbed his afternoon nap. Policeman Young, a colored cop. attached to the Second District, arrested his mother-in-law, his sister-in-law and his wife and haled them before a magistrate. Young will be enabled to take' his afternoon nap in peace for the next ten days, as each of the defendants was sentenced to the county prison for that period by Magistrate Haggerty. HORSE VISITS PARLOR. FORT WAYNE, July 28 Hundred of pedestrians scrambled for places of safety when a blind horse ran away through the downtown streets, plunged first through a saloon window and then dashed in to a "beauty" parlor, where it wrecked the furniture before it became exhausted from the loss of blood in cuts sustained from broken glass. It required several policemen to extricate the sightless animal from the "beauty" parlor. TEST NEW LAW. WARSAW, Ind., July 28. When Charles Ward, an employe of the Hugro Manufacturing company, resigned and the company failed to settle promptly. Ward filed suit under the 1915 statute, which provides for payment within seventy-two hours after dismissal or resignation. REFUSED TO BATHE. COLUMBUS, July 28. These are the reasons for Mrs. Flossie Covert's suit for divorce: Hubby refused to bathe; made her work in a factory; appropriated her wage, forced her to cut cross ties and compelled her to cut and saw wood. When he compelled her to resign from a Ladies Aid Society, Mrs. Covert thought the limit had been reached and the suit resulted. i n ri. onPgposits Q Per 100 Lbs. in Phone 2662.
Vq30L
Hooi) Lbs
