Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 49, 8 January 1918 — Page 8
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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. TUESDAY, JAN. 8, 1918.
MARKETS
OATS ARE UPHELD ON CHICAGO HART CHICAGO, Jan. 8. Firmness, but no tendency toward any material advance characterized the corn market today. The chief reason appeared to be that the crop movement was still hindered by the effects of the big snowfall. Meanwhile, traders were inclined to restrict selling to a minimum. Opening quotations, which ranged from unchanged figures to 1-8 roff with JJanuary $1.27 1-4 and May at 11.25 1-8 to $1.25 5-8, were followed by a slight hardening of values. Scantiness of receipts upheld oats as well as corn. Trade was very light. Some weakness developed in provis- . ions. Declines were due more lo lack of support than to aggressive selling. GRAIN QUOTATIONS CHICAGO, Jan. 8. The range of futures on the Chicago Board of Trade -follows: No trading in wheat Corn
Open. Hloh. Low. Close. 4 -Jan. .j...,127 127 127 127 , -May 125 125 125 125 I 0t ! -Jan 80 80 78 78 ? May 77 77 75 76 i Lard Jan 24.40 24.00 23.90 23.90 ! .May 24.37 24.37 24.25 24.25
. TOLEDO, Jan. 8. Wneat No. 1 red. $2.20. Cloverseed Old $17.80, new $18.00 Jan. $18.00, Feb. $18.00, Mar. $17.50. Alsike $14.85, Feb. and March, T $14.90. I Timothy Old $4.25, new $4.35, Mar. J $4.50. CHICAGO. Jan. 8. Corn No. 2 yellow and No. 3 yellow, nominal; No. 4 yellow, $1.651.72. Oats No. 3 white, 80 (82; standard. 8182. Pork Nominal. Ribs $23.2524.00. Lard $23.95. CINCINNATI, O.. Jan. 8. Wheat: No. 2 red winter, $2.17; No. 3, $2.14; No. 4, $2.12; sales, one car. Corn: No. 2 white. $1.851.90; No. 3 white. $1.851.90; No. 4 white, $1.80 "1.85; No. 2 yellow, $1.851.90; No. 3 yellow. $1.851.90; No. 4 yellow. . $1.801.S5; No. 2 mixed. $1.801.85; ear corn, white, $1.551.60; yellow, $1.501.55; mixed, $1.451.50. Oats: No. 2 whit& 86c; No. 2 mix--ed. 8485c. LIVE STOCK PRICES PITTSBURGH. Pa.. Jan. 8. HogsReceipts. 3,000; market lower; heav--ies, $17.00; heavy yorkers. $17.05 17.10; light yorkers, $17.0517.10; , pigs, $15.75 17.00. , Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 300; Market steady; top sheep, $13.00; top lambs, $18.00. CalveB Receipts, 150; market, Bteady; top, $17.00. CHICAGO. 111., Jan. 8. Hogs Re- - ceipts, 33,000; market slow; bulk of sales, $16.3017.00; lights. $15.75 16.60; mixed, $16.05 16.75; heavy, $16 16.75; rough, $16 16.20; pigs, $12.5015.50. Cattle Receipts, 22,000; market t. steady; steers. $7.8513.50; stockers : and feeders, $6.70010.50; cows and .heifers, $5.5011.60; calves, $8.50 '15.25. Sheep Receipts, 15,000; market . steady; wethers, $9.50 13.25; lambs. V$13.5017.50. CINCINNATI, O., Jan. 8. Hogs .Receipts, 1.800; market steady. Cattle Receipts, 900; market steady. - Calves Market strong, $5.50 15.75. Sheep Receipts, . none; market Bteady. Lambs Market, steady, $1017.50. INDIANAPOLIS. Jan. 8. Receipts Hogs 10.500, active and higher; cattle, 1,200, strong; calves, 300, strong; sheep, 200, strong. Steers Prime corn fed steers, 1300 and up, $13.0013.50; choice steers, - 1.150 to 1.250, $12.50 13.00 common to medium steers, 1,150 to 1.250, $12.00 ' 12.50; good to choice steers, 80f to '1,100, $11.5012.00; common to medi"um steers, 800 to 1,100, $11.011.50; good to choice heifers, $9.50 11.00; fair to medium yearlings, $9.50 11.00. Heifers and Cows Good to choice heifers, $8.5011.00; common to fair heifers, $6.00 8.25; good to choice cows, $8.0C9.75; fair to medium heifers $7.50825; fair to medium cows, ? $7.00 7.75; canners and cutters, $5.00 -7.00. Bulls and Calves Good to prime export bulls, $8.009.50; good to choice .buthcer bulls, $7.50 8.25; common to fair bulls, $d.007.25; common to ?best veal calves, $7 16.00; common to :best heavy calves $5 12; stock calves :250 to 450 pounds, $7.5010.50. Stockers and Feeding Cattle Good ;to choice steers, 700 lbs., and up, $9.00 ; 10.50; common to fair steers under 700 lbs., $7.009.00; gobd to choice f steers under 700 lbs., $8.009.50; com- ' rnon to fair steers, under 700 lbs.,
;$G.007.75; medium to good heifers, $0.007.50; medium to good feeding 'cows. $6.507.00; springers. $5.50u T$7.5C11.00. Hoks Best nearies. 190 and up, "$16.65 16.75; good to choice lights, '$16.60; medium and mixed lights. : $16.60 16.70; rough and packers. $14 ' 1C; common to medium lights, Hl5.7516.60; best pigs, $15.0015.25; light .pigs, $14.00 14,75; bulk of sales, ; 16.60 16.70. Sheep and Lambs Good to choice ?to medium yearlings, $101100; com?mon to fair yearlings, $6.00 9.75; ? bucks. 100 lbs., $79; good to choice '-breeding ewes, $9.50$13.50; common :to medium spring lambs, $1015.25; 'good to choice spring lambs, $15.50 16.50. ' 'J Mil ! ' "i ! Palladium Want Ads Pay.
EAST BUFFALO, N. Y., Jan. 8. Cattle Receipts 375; steady tOBtrong. Calves Receipts, 150, easier; $7.00 $17.00. Hogs Receipts, 6,500. steady; heavy, $17.3017.40; mixed, $17.25 $17.35; Yorkers. $17.2017.25; light Yorkers. $16.5016.75; pigs, $16.25 $16.50; roughs, $16.0016.25; stags, $14.00 15.00. Sheep and Lambs Receipts. 1,200; lambs easier; lambs $13,018.35; yearlings $12.0015.75; others unchanged.
PRODUCE MARKET CHICAGO, Jan. 8. Butter Market Steady; creamery firsts, 3949. Eggs Market steady; receipts, 6,174 cases; firsts 5556; lowest, 41. Live Poultry Market unsettled; fowls 2025; springs 24. Potato Market Unchanged; receipts 2 cars. NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE NEW YORK, Jan. 8. Closing quotations on the New York Stock Exchange follow: American Can., 37. American Locomotive, 55. American Beet Sugar, 73. American Smelter, 77. Anaconda, 61. Atchison, 81. Bethlehem Steel, bid, 78. Canadian Pacific, 138. Chesapeake & Ohio, 32. Great Northern Pfd., 89. New York Central, 70. No. Pacific, 84. So. Pacific, 83. Pennsylvania, 46. U. S. Steel, Com., 93. LOCAL QUOTATIONS FEED QUOTATIONS (Corrected Dally by Omer Whelan.) Paying Oats, 75c; old corn, $1.85; new corn, $1.25; rye, $i.60; straw. $9.00 a ton. Selling Cotton seed meal, $58.00 a ton. $3.00 a cwt.; middlings, $49.00 a ton, $2.50 a cwt.; bran, $47.00 a ton, $2.40 a cwt.; salt, $2.35 a barrel; tankage, $92.00 a ton; $4.65 a cwt; oil meal, $63.00 a ton; $3.25 a cwt. FRUIT & VEGETABLES (Corrected Daily by Eggemeyers) SELLING PRICES (Corrected Daily by Eggemeyers.) VEGETABLES Brussel sprouts, 35c; green beans, scarce; carrots, 3 to 5c per pound; cabbage 3 to 5c per pound; cauliflower 15 to 25c per head; hot-house cucumber 18c; egg plan.ts 15 to 25c; kohlrabi 10c bunch; leaf lettuce 20c per pound; head lettuce 5 to 20o 'per head; French endive, 75c per pound; leak, 10c bunch; mushrooms 75c to $1.00 per pound; onions 4 to 5c per pound; Spanish onions, 8c per pound; new potatoes, 10c per pound; shallot3 8c bunch; young onions, 5c bunch; oyster plant, 10c bunch; parsley, 5c bunch; mangoes 3 to 5c each; radishes 5c bunch; squash 10 to 20c each; spinnach 15c per pound; H. H.-toms 20 to 35c per pound; turnips 3 to 5c per pound; water cress 5c per bunch; celerr cabbage, 10c per pound. FRUITS Apples 3 to 8c per pound; grape fruit 8 to 10c; Spanish malaya 35c per pound, 2 for 25c; cranberries 15 to 18c per pound; lemons 30c per doz.; bananas, 8c per pound; limes 30c per doz.; Cal. pears, 6 for 25c; pomegranates 8 to 10c each; tangerines, 40c per doz MISCELLANEOUS. Chestnuts. 25 to 40c per pound; new shellbarks, 10c per lb.; black walnuts, 3 to 5c per pound; eggs, 60c per doz.; strawberries, 50c per pt; butter cleamery, 58c, country, 48c; fry chickens, 32c per lb.; turkeys, 38c; ducks, 32c; Geese, 33c. PRODUCE (Paying Prices) (Corrected Daily by Eggemeyer & Sons.) Butter 40c; chickens, old, 16c; fryers, 18c; eggs. 48c; potatoes, new, $150. Onions Yellow, $3.00 3.25; white, $2.75 3.25 per 100-lb. sack. Tomatoes Hothouse 1520c per lb. $1.65 1.75 per crate. Indianapolis Representative Sales HOGS 16 80 25 40 26 6 17 15 18 2 6 8 5 3 3 14 3 1 1 2 1 83 ...172 202 240 , 284 STEERS 521 624 1140 t 1204 HEIFERS 420 935 770 1002 COWS 653 876 1122 1283 BULLS 870 840 800 1420 CALVES 470 120 176 125 $15.50 16.60 16.63 16.70 16.75 8.00 9.50 11.40 12.40 7.00 8.75 10.00 11.00 6.00 7.50 8.60 10.00 7.25 7.50 8.50 9.50 3 11 3 4 7.00 14.00 15.75 16.00 Patrick Henry's great grandson. Robert Taylor, the oldest newsboy of Richmond, Va., has presented to the state, through Governor Stuart, a bronze bust of the great Virginia orator. Mr. Taylor fell heir to the piece of statuary from his mother, who was Henry's granddaughter. Women In Japan are being employed as dockers, and particularly 60 at the port of Tsuruga, a halfway point between America and Petrograd.
PASTORS INSIST BAR ROOMS BE CLOSED UP TOO
Newcastle Churches Say Saloons Also Should Help to Save Coal. INDIANAPOLIS, Jan. 8. Various" measures for saving coal and for making fuel go as far as possible are being worked out under various county fuel directors in Indiana. In Henry county, where It was suggested that the churches do away with or consolidate various meetings held in church buildings through the week, and hold union services Sunday, all to save coal the ministerial association publicly demanded that the saloons of the community also close, as well as the churches and help save fuel. Union meetings of churches and consolidation of church activities to conserve fuel have become general throughout the state as part of the coal saving campaign. The Tippecanoe county council of defense urged that the Lafayette schools and other schools of the county extend their Christmas vacation, do away with furnace fires for a month and thus save fuel. The city of Cleveland. O., acted on this plan. Some confusion has been caused in Indiana because of a supposed conflict between plans to shorten the winter holiday and let out school early in the spring in time for planting, and other plans which seek to prolong the cold weather vacation to save coal. It Is generally accepted that the war emergency is so serious and the winter need for fuel and the spring need for boy power are so acute that the number of days of school mav be cur tailed. Intensive schooling is beine resorted to in many places to make up for the days that may be lost because of elongated holidays or premature spring dismissal. TERRE HAUTE TO SOON HAVE BIG HOUSE GLEANING Saloons Will Be Compelled to Obey Law, Says the New Mayor. TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Jan. 8. With the inauguration of Charles R. Hunter, a Republican, as mayor of Terre Haute today, the new administration through the board of public safety announced a law enforcement of decided character. The city hall was packed at noon for the ceremony. James M. Gossom introduced his successor, Mayor Hunter, who was accompanied to the council chamber by Mrs. Hunter and his mother-in-law, Mrs. R. C. King. Mayor Hunter is the first Republican mayor here in twelve years. Mayor Hunter expressed the desire that he might have the co-operation cf all the people in performing his duties and making good the pledges of his campaign platform. He invited the Rev. Clarke R. Parker, president of the Terre Haute Church Federation to offer prayer. Mayor Hunter then took the oath of the Boy Scouts of America, spoken by Scout Executive Wyckoff, with representatives of the various troops in the city in attendance. Tribute to Philanthropists. Mayor Hunter asked the people to stand in silent tribute to the memory of Spencer F. Ball and Adolph Herz, Terre Haute philanthropists, who died recently. The heads of the various departments assumed their duties and the new City Council organized with the election of Carey E. Anderson as president. With the announcement of the as-
EVERYONE SHOULD READ C AV'S LETTER TO HIS SON
(Frank W. Cavanaugh, the old Dartmouth football coach and now a lieutenant in the American heavy artillery In France, wrote a letter to his small son David at Christmas time of such rare simplicity and feeling that after appearing in the Worcester, Mass. Post, it has been several times reprinted by request. Though written for the understanding of a six-year-old boy the letter will be read with emotion by many grownups.) "Dear Davie Boy Your good moth er writes me that you have a chum, and she says he is a fine boy who lives next door. Isn't that fine? I wish I had a chum. ou and your mother used to be my chums and sometimes Joe and Billy and even dear little Rose Marie and Phil, too. when he was home; but now that Is all changed, and I have no chum In all the world. I think it's rather . sad sometimes, don't you, but I have your picture, which I take down and talk to when I am lonesome. "I am happy to know you like your new school and home, and I'm sure you'll play with clean boys who don't do anything very bad and who also like to go to school. Didn't we use to have great times together, and wasn't it fun when you'd come up to the car to meet me? Then when you saw me getting off do you remember how you'd hide behind a tree and run up behind me and scare me after I had passed? And do you remember how sometimes you and I would race and you were getting so you could run pretty fast, for you were getting to be a big boy? "And then we'd all go do i n to see the circus and the parade and hold hands so we wouldn't get separated or lost. And then, Christmas! Oh, was n't that a wonderful day! Early in the morning how we would all rush downstairs to see your presents. And, 1 then, poor, tired mother would work and work to give all you boys and girls a Christmas dinner turkey, cranberry sauce and dressing and plum pudding, and candy and - nuts . and
Hand of War Turns Hand of Clock Back to Old Wood-Box
INDIANAPOLIS, Jan. 8. The hand of war turns the hands of the clock backward toward the semi-primitive days when the wood-box yawned in the pathway of the email boy, when wood-sawyers made the village rounds, when the load of stove wood was a market-day common-place, and when fuel was corded neatly In every woods against .the coming of wlntcd. Indiana farmers very largely ' have resumed the use of wood for fuel in place of coal, at the suggestion of the Federal fuel administration. Scores of churches in small towns and rural communities are . heated with wood provided by community chopping bees. The schools in many cities and towns and in the country, many of them, are using wood as in the good old days to provide heat during the winter weather. In many county infirmaries wood has become the regular fuel once more. Lodge rooms are adopting wood in place of coal for heating. One of the useful services rendered early in the winter by fuel directors . : i
Commissioners Expected to Name
County Health The board of county commissioners, which it is said, has been at loggerheads over the appointment of a county health officer, is expected to make the appointment Wednesday. The board is expected to make the appointment of the physician for the county infirmary at the same session. These are the only two appointments which were not made when the other appointees were selected by the board. Dr. J. M. Fouts, present pbys ' ician at the county infirmary, is an applicant for the position as county health officer, which carries with it a salary of approximately $700 annually. Dr. F. W. Krueger, present county health officer, and Dr. M. S. Bulla are the other two applicants for the position. While the board is satisfied with the efficient way Dr. Krueger had filled the position, they are in favor, it is said, of "passing the job around." The county board of education has unanimously endorsed Dr. Krueger. Politics is also being played, says a signment of the police the board of safety issued orders to stop all gambling, compel saloons to observe legal hours, keep high school boys out of cigar stores, suppress all houses of ill fame, arrest all street walkers and men without visible means of support, enforce traffic regulations, close pool rooms at midnight and stop all construction not properly licensed. 50 GARS APPLES SHIPPED ABROAD NEW YORK, Jan. 8 The International Apple Shippers' association campaign to send 100 cars of apples to the American soldiers abroad is progressing rapidly. About fifty cars or their equivalent in money have been contributed. The first shipment to the other side was received with enthusiasm. Wayne M. French this week received a letter from the Honorable Secretary of the Liverpool Red Cross in which he said: "I wish I could convey to you how much the apples will mean to 15,000 men in hospitals. Owing to the restrictions of fruit importations they bave been for nearly two months with out any fruit whatever. Arriving as they did just in time for Christmas made the gift doubly acceptable." Frank W. Cavanaugh everything. Oh, Dave, did any little boy have such a good mother as you, I wonder. , And now you are soon to have another Christmas and old Cav won't be home. But I want you to have the best time you ever had on that day, so that f may be happy over here ' thinking of you all. I wish I knew some little boys and girls over here so that I might talk to them and hold their hands and I would call them my boys and girls' names and pretend, that 1 was home. - "The other night I had a lovely dream and I was so disappointed when
in many counties had to do with the survey of the supply of wood suitable and available to be used for fuel In place of coal. In Lake county, for exemple, Edward Simon, appointed on a committee to look after fallen timber in. the county, reported hundreds of cords of such material at the site of a new bridge on the Kankakee river. The Indiana Harbor Belt railroad was asked not to destroy old ties which could be used for fuel. The Pennsylvania railroad in many Indiana coun ties has contributed quantities of old! railroad ties to be cut into stove-wood for the people along the line, the station agent being the gobetween. Old shade trees are being cut into stove-wood at Kokomo and in many
other cities, including Lebanon, the cutters being restricted to dead and dying timber or to undesirables. Sher idan Clyde of Elwood, an agent of the fuel director of Madison county, re cently publicly denounced iarmers in that section for hoarding and using coal while at the same time they were i fully supplied with wood. Officer Wednesday rumor, and pressure is being brought to bear upon the board. Cheesman Favors Fouts. William K. Cheesman favors the appointment of Dr. Fouts. Both come from Center township. William O. Seaney is said to be In favor of the appointment of Dr. Bulla. Andrew Simpson is non-commital. Altogether, Dr. Krueger, so the story, says is out of the race, despite the fact that the state board of health some time ago recommended the ap pointment of long-term health officers. SELFISH FUEL HOARDERS HIT INDIANAPOLIS, Jan 8. Starting with the surgar hoarders, and the troubles those greedy and selfish per sons caused for food administrators and for their sugarless neighbors, the war has produced some strange phenomena in this country. With the cold weather, according to reports from various county fuel di rectors over Indiana, there appeared the coal-grabber, usually the same type or species as the sugar hoarder. The women, as a rule, were the worst offenders In the sugar-hoarding game. The men are most frequently detected in tricky attempts to get more coal than they are entitled to have out of the short stocks available. Here and there the Federal officers find traces in the coal grab of the same hysterical, unreasoning greed that snapped up sugar in large lots and hid it away in pantries in such quantities as to cause a nation-wide sugar famine, which, without government price-regulation, would have resulted in 30-cent sugar as a by-product of the people's own selfishness. In Marion county, in St. Joseph county, in Dekalb, Ripley, Lake, Wayne, Madison, and elsewhere, local fuel directors have taken drastic action to put a summary stop to tricky efforts on the part of a few unpatriotic "hogs" who have sought to get into their coal bins a larger allowance of fuel than could be spared to any single horns. It is being pointed out that while coal is short and while many families are in danger of severe suffering due to the lack of fuel, no house hold which has on hand even a small supply of coal can be permitted to continue to put coal away in excess of its real needs. Coal hoarding in one home means suffering, probable sickness and possible death in many other homes. I awoke. I dreamed I was sitting in our kitchen with mother and David and all the children, and a chair which was tilted back against the wall slipped and I fell gently and without hurting me to the floor. And then mother and you and all the children laughed and laughed, just like good, naughty folks. And you came over and took my hand in yours und lifted me up easily. Isn't that funny, Dave? Think of any boy lifting a big, fat father like me from the floor with one hand. Then we laughed some more, and suddenly I remembered it was after 9 o'clock. I said, Why, children, what are you doing out of bed at this hour of the night?' And you said, 'Why, It isn't very often our father goes away to war so we thought we j ougnt to stay up to say gooa-oy. Ana then I was so surprised to learn that I hadn't gone away to war yet that I suddenly awoke, only to find myself in my little lonely barracks and the rain was coming down hard outside and I was lonesome for my dear family. "And now, David, old boy, everyone is in bed but me, trying to get lots of strength and health for the big fights we will soon be in, so I must do likewise and end this letter to you. You must always remember that your father came into this great war for the sake of all little children, and I know that you will, while I am gone, take good care of mother and all the children. I can see you growing up tall and straight, with shoulders back and head up, because that's what old 'Cav' wants, and you love 'Cav,' don't you. Davie boy? Dave, will you do something read nice for me? I knew you would. Then kiss mother and Annie and Billy, Rose Marie and John for 'Cav,' and send one to Philip in Maine. "Excuse me, David, for writing in pencil instead of ink, but ink is hard to get "The lights are going out in a few minutes, so goodnight, good-by, Davie, and God bless you. "From your old man, CAV."
NEEDLESS WASTE
By P. Q. HOLOEN. URING October and November thousands of pounds of potatoes and other vegetables were damped from railroad . cars along the tracks near West Chicago.
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It Is reported that these vegetables spoiled In transit or before mipment Wagon loada were carted away by hucksters and others and sold )r taken home, but the vegetables saved were but a snail portion of the whole.
Immense Pile of Potatoes, Squash and Other Vegetable Thrown in Dump. There may be a question as to whether any of these vegetables were fit for human food at the time they were thrown away, bat It Is certain that all sf them were at one time good; and that carelessness of someone caused them to spoil. It is equally certain that most of this produce could have been utilized as animal food or converted into glycerine, of which there is now a serious need.
Hucksters and Others Gathering Potatoes From the Dump. No matter who is to blame for this waste of food in these days of wat and food scarcity, those responsible should be called to account by the propel officials and steps taken to put a stop to it, When we consider the human labor required to grow these vegetables, the amount of land necessary for their production, the high cost of all foodstuffs and the great need of conserving every particle of food possible la arder that we may help win this war, wholesale and needless waste Is unpatriotic, criminal little short of vicious.
Can't See Over Snowbanks on Downtown Streets of Chicago After Blizzard CHICAGO, Jan. 8. Snow banks that man can't see over, lay on the downtown streets today, thirty-six hours after the record-breaking blizzard which swept the middle west last Sunday had stopped. The task of removing the big snowdrifts is so great that 2,500 men and nearly a thousand teams, have made little progress, although the work was continued through the night. Many trunk line trains arrived be hind time today but railroad men say that conditions were improved and that practically normal schedule both in passenger and freight service would be resumed tomorrow, unless a fur ther heavy snow fall interferes. ECONOMY TO BE Continued From Page One. for them," Mayor Zimmerman charged thiis increasing the bonded indebtedness of the city to the present extent. Matthew von Peln, newly elected member of council, scored the Richmond Light, Heat and Power Company for not furnishing artificial gas after the natural gas supply had failed for several days. The matter was fin ally referred to the board of public works for investigation. "Steps should be taken at once to get artificial gas," Mr. von Pein said. "We are paying for it and we ought Stop Lumbago Pain, Rub Backache Away Instant Relief! Limber Up! Rub Pain Soreness and Stiffness Right Out with "St. Jacob's Liniment." When your back is sore and lame or lumbago, sciatica or neutris has you stiffened up, don't suffer! Get a small trial bottle of old, honest "St. Jacob's Liniment" at any drug store, pour a little in your hand and rub it right into the pain or ache, and by the time you count fifty, the soreness and lameness is gone. Don't stay crippled. This soothing, penetrating liniment takes the ache and pain right out and ends the misery. It is magical, yet absolutely harmless and doesn't even burn or discolor the skin. Nothing else stops lumbago, sciatica and lame back misery so promptly and j surely. It never disappoints! (Adv.)
OF FOOD A CRIME
to get it. The state of affairs demands urgent action."The mayor declared that that was the service the city wanted from the gas company and that if that required "stepping on Nimrod Johii son's toes or anybody else's," the city couldn't help that. "Paying for Upkeep" "We are paying for the upkeep of the gas plant and we ought to have artificial gas," von Pein added. Von Pein was named chairman o? the committee on ordances with Ed Stegman and Joseph Walterman as members. Jesse Evans was appointed chairman of the committee on street? and alleys with David Goldman and Oscar Williams as members. John Schneider, John White and William P Richardson were made members of the utilities committee. Ben Bulla was appointed chairman of the public welfare and educational committee with H. H.. Sweitzer and Albert J. Ford as members. Dr. W. W. Anderson, . negro physii cian, was appointed to succeed Dr. W. W. Huffman as city physician. Dr. E. H. Mendenhall was reappointed the other city physician. DBon't Suffer From Piles Send For Tree Trial Treatment, No matte? how long or how bad goto your druggist today and get a CO cent box ot Pyramid Pile Treatment. It The Pyramid Smile From a Stogie TrUL.' will give relief, nnd a slnirle box often cures. A trial packngre mailed free in plala wrapper If you send U3 coupon below. FREE SAMPLE COUPON PYRAMID DRrO COMPANY, 62 t yranill Bldg.. Marshall. Mich'. ' Kindly spnd me a Free sample of Pyramid Pile Treatment. In plain wrapper. Name Street CHv Ptate -..
Glen Miller Stock Yards Market Every Day Call Phone 3744 SHURLEY&GAAR
