Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 50, 9 January 1918 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. WEDNESDAY, JAN. 9, 1918.

MARKETS

BULLISH EFFECT ON CHICAGO EXCHANGE CHICAGO, Jan. 9. Corn prices hardened today largely as a result of a lessening of peace talk. The market was also bullishly affected by fresh steps looking to a possible lifting of the . maximum price limit on future deliveries. Besides, arrivals still continued meager. Opening quotations, which ranged from a shade off to 1-4 advance, with Jan. $1.27 1-8 and May J1.25 to $1.25 3-8, were followed by a slight general upturn. Oats showed greater strength than corn, as the decline of oats prices yesterday, on account of peace selling, had been more pronounced than was the case in the corn market. Speculative selling of oats today had only a transient effect. Advances in the hog market gave an upward swing to provisions. There was no pressure to unload. GRAIN QUOTATIONS CHICAGO, Jan. 9. The range of futures on the Chicago Board of Trade follows: No trading In wheat Corn Open. High. Lew. Close. Jan 127 127 127 127 May 125 125Ya 125 125 Oats Jan 7&b . 79 78 79 May 76 77 75 76 Lard Jan. 24.12 24.00 24.12 May "......24.35 24.50 24.32 24.50 CHICAGO, Jan. 9. Corn No. 2 yellow, nominal; No. 3 yellow, $1.81;' No. 4 yellow, $1.65. ! Oats No. 3 white, S0U81; standard, 8182. Pork Nominal. Ribs $23.37024.00. Lard $24.12. TOLEDO, O., Jan. 9. Wneat No. 1 red. $2.20. Cloverseed Old $17.55, new $17.75 Jan. and Feb., $17.75, March $17.17. ! Alslke Prime cash and Jan , $14.80 ' Feb. $14.85. Mar., $14.85. i Timothy Old $4.05, new $1.15, Mar $4.30. CINCINNATI. O., Jan. 9. Grain: Wheat No. 2 red winter, $2.17; No. 2, $2.142.15; No. 4, $2.1202.14; eales, two cars. Corn No. 2 white, $1.8501.90; No. 3 white, $1.85S1.90; No. 4 white, $1.80 fijl.85; No. 2 yellow, $1.8501.90; No. 3 yellow, $1.851.90; No. 4 yellow, $1.801.85; No. 2 mixed, $1.751.80. Ear corn: White, $1.5501.60; yellow, $1.5001.55; mixed, $1.4501.50. Oats No. 2 white, 85086c; No. 2 mixed, 84 0 85c. LIVE STOCK PRICES PITTSBURGH, Pa., Jan. 9. HogsReceipts, 2.000; market active; heav ies, $17.10017.50; heavy yorkers, $17.15017.20; light yorkers, $17.20 17.25; pigs. $14016.00. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 500; market steady; top sheep, $13.00; top lambs, $18.00. Calves Receipts, 100; market steady; top, $17.00. CHICAGO. 111., Jan. 9. Hogs Receipts, 20,000; market, slow at yesterday's average to 5c higher; bulk of sales. $16.25016.60; lights, $15.80 16.55; mixed, $16.00016.65; heavy, $15.90016.65; rough, $15.90016.10; pigs, $12.50015.50. Cattle Receipts, 10.000; market strong; steers, $8.15013.75; stockers and feeders, $6.85010.75; cows and heifers, $5.80011.85; calves. $8.50 1550. Sheep Receipts, 5,000; market strong; wethers, $9.70013.35; lambs, $14017.75. CINCINNATI. Jan. 9. Hogs Receipts, 4,400; market lower; shippers and butchers $16.75. Cattle Receipts 600; market strong. Calves Market steady. Sheep Receipts, none: market steady. Lambs Market steady. INDIANAPOLIS. Jan. 9. Receipts Hogs. 16,000, lower; cattle, 1,300, strong; calves, 400, higher; sheep, 100, steady. Steers Prime corn fed steers, 1300 and-up, $13.25013.50; good to choice steers. 1.150 to 1.250, $12.75013.25; common to medium steers, 1,150 to 1.250, $12.25012.75: good to choice steers. 800 to 1.100, $11.75 0 12.50; common to medium steers.SOO to 1,100 $11.25011.75; good to choice heifers, $9.50011.00; fair to medium yearlings, $9.75012.00. Heifers nd Cowii Good to choice heifsrs. $8.50011.00; common to fair heifers. $6.00(5T8.25; good to choice cows. $8010.25; fair to medium heif ers $7.5008 25; fair to medium cows, $7.0007.75; canners and cutters. $6.00 07.00. Bulls and Calves Good to prime ex port bulls, $8.5009.75; good to choice butcher bulls. $8. 0009.00; common to fair bulls, $6.5007.75; common to best veal calves, $8016.50; common to best, heavy calves, $7012.50; stock calves 250 to 450 pounds, $7.50010.50. Stockers and Feeding Cattle Good to choice steers, 700 lbs., and up, $9.00 ft 10.50; common to fair steers under 700' lbs., $7 0009.00; good to choice steers under 700 lbs., $8.0009.50; com mon to fair steers, under 700 lbs.. $6.00 0 7.75; medium to good heifers, $6.0007.50; medium to good feeding cows, $5.5007.00;. springers, 55.50 $7.50011.00. Hogs Beet heavies. 190 and , up, $16.55016.70; .good to choice lights, $16.60016.55; medium .and mixed lights,-$16 5016.60; rough and: packcrs, $ 14.00 0 16.00; common to medium lights, $15.75016.50; .best pigs, $15.00 016; common to medium lights, 015.23; light pigs, $14.00014.75; bulk of sales, $16.50018.65. Sheep and Lambs Good to choice to medium yearlings, $10011.00; common to fair yearlings, $6.0009.75; bucks. 100 lbs., $709; good to choice vdtng ewes, $9.5O0$13.5O:common

to medium spring lambs, $10 15.25; good to choice spring lambs, J15.503 16.50.

EAST BUFFALO, Jan. 9. CattleReceipts, 125; market steady. Calves Receipts, 100; steady, $7.0017.00. Hogs Receipts, 2,200; market strong; heavy, $17.7017.75; mixed, $17.60017.70; Yorkers, 17.50 17.60; light yorkers. $16.50 16.75; pigs and loughs, $16.2516.50; stags, $14.00 15.00. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, - 600; market active; lambs strong at $13.00 18.50; others unchanged. PRODUCE MARKET CHICAGO, Jan. 9. Butter market lower; creamery firsts, 3948c. Eggs Receipts, 2,547 cases; market higher; firsts 5657;' lowest 41. ' Live Poultry Market lower; fowls 2022; springs, 24.Potato Market Unchanged; re ceipts, 25 cars. NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE NEW YORK, 'Jan. 9. Closing Quo tations on the New York Stock Exchange follow: American Can., 38. American Locomotive, 66. American Beet Sugar, 74. American Smelter, 78. Anaconda, 62. Atchison, 85 Bethlehem Steel, bid, 78. Canadian Pacific. 1394Chesapeake & Ohio, 53. Great Northern Pfd., 90. New York Central, 70. No. Pacific, 85. So. Pacific, 83. Pennsylvania, 46. U. S. Steel, Com., 94. LOCAL QUOTATIONS FEED QUOTATIONS (Corrected Dally by Omer Whetan Paying Oats, 75c; old corn, $1.85; new corn, $1.25; rye, $1.60; 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 7RUIT & VEGETABLE? (Corrected Daily by Eggemeyeri) 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; cauliflow er 15 to 2c per-head; hot-house cu cumber 18c; egg plants 15 to 25c; koh lrabi 10c bunch; leaf lettuce 20c per pound; neaa lettuce 5 to 20c per neaa; French endive, 75c per pound: leak, 10c hunch; mushrooms 75c to $1.00 per pound; onions 4 to 5c per pound; Spanish onions, 8c per pound; new potatoes, 10c per pound; shallots 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; celery 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 ISc 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, 32e per lb.; turkeys, 38c; ducks, 32c; Geese, 33c. PRODUCE (Paving Prices) (Corrected Daily by Eggemeyer & Sons.) Butter 40c; chickens, old, 16c; fryers, 18c; eggs, 48c; potatoes, new, $150. Onions Yellow. $3.00(5)3.25; white, $2.7503.25 per 100-lb. sack. Tomatoes Hothouse 15020c per lb. $1.6501.75 per crate. Indianapolis Representative Sales HOGS 273 412 198 281 270 STEERS ' 600 ..921 1218 1421 HEIFERS 3 19 63 209 156 7 7 11 19 5 9 24 8 4 14 7 18 1 1 1 1 1 4 $14.00 16.00 16.50 16.60 16.65 8.00 10.00 11.40 12.S5 7.25 7.75 '9.75 10.50 6.25 7.25 8.60 9.50 8.00 9.00 10.00 11.00 7.00 13.50 16.00 16.50 522 700 ........609 550 COWS 877 892 985 ..1131 BULLS 1210 , ..1590 , 1380 1420 CALVES 390 102 "....141 ...155 MAIL ABLE TO GO AN ATLANTIC PORT. Jan. 9. A number of ships loaded with supplies for the allies, which have been delay ed here for more than two weeks be cause of lack of coal, sailed today for European ports. One of the steamers carried the first mail to leave here in seventeen days. Many vessels are still idle at the docks here awaiting fuel.

Conserve the Nation's Food Egg Crop Loss $50,000,000 a Year Br P. G. HOLDEN

AT PRESENT prices the ralue of poultry products In the United States is fully three-quarters o.f a billion dollars annually. ' it should be much more. Government reports show that poultry Is raised on only 4,000,000 out of 6,000,000 farms in the country; that the average number of fowls to the farm Is 50, while In Iowa It Is 130, and that the average farm hen produces 60 eggs a year, when with proper feed and care she would produce 100 eggs. If the 6,000,000 farms in the United States had an average of 100 chickens per farm, and each hen produced 100. eggs a year, the annual Income from eggs at present prices would he worth nearly $2,000,000,000. These figures show the possibilities of the poultry Industry. Since the beginning of the war our annual exports of eggs have been Increased from 16,000,000 to 26,000,000 dozen. Large flocks of poultry are needed on every farm and every farmer should

Hauling Away Spoiled and Broken Eggs From a Large Storage Plant. Seventeen Per Cent of All the Eggs Produced Every Year In the United States Are Wasted Because of Careless Gathering and Handling. keep hla young pullets, which will soon be his best layers. Get rid of the roosters. Avoid wasteful methods in handling poultry and in marketing eggs. Enormous Waste In Eggs. The waste in eggs In the United States every year amounts to over $50,000,000. It is estimated that 17 per cant of all the eggs produced in this country become unfit for human food before reaching the consumer because of .areless methods of handling. These losses can be prevented very largely by producing infertile eggs, by not letting hens nest on the damp ground, by keeping the nests clean, by being careful not to crack eggs while handling, by gathering eggs daily, by storing them In a cool, dry place, and by marketing them at least once a week, and twice a week if possible. Few people understand that eggs are almost as perishable as meat or milk ; that eggs-will not stand any kind of treatment. The truth is eggs belong to the same class of food as meat. If we do not produce more eggs, let us at least care for our present production that is a duty as well as good business.

CONTRIBUTED VERSE

Henry Coffin Fellow, graduate of Earlham college and now professor In Friends University at Wichita, Kas., has written a poem entitled "Who Is My Brother?" which has been issued as a pamphlet. Professor Fellow is in the department of philosophy and education at the Friends University. He is vicepresident of the Kansas Authors' club. His poem follows: WHO IS MY BROTHER? By Henry Coffin Fellow Dedicated to the Universal Brotherhood of Man ' Who Is my Brother? God knows: I cannot tell In this vast bewilderment, This hell lit conflagration That's burning the world to charred bits, That's tearing its bleeding heart to fragments. I drink the chalice of God, I weep mine eyes out, and know not j why. j My tears run rivers to the sea of Doubt, Toward some unfrequented . shore Where they may mingle unperplexed With the currents of life's unrealized. Ah! Well! Perchance I have it now. Is he my Brother, whom Huns Have stabbed with splintered steel In some dark' catacomb of Hell, And split his skull with their spiked heels In the murky blood red ooze along the ' Marne, While from a burning Altar An invisible choir chants with measured cadence A last requiem to his departed soul, A myriad thousand years peal forth. Yes! My Brother! Ask the ghouls beneath the waves That tread with green eyed phantoms The slime strewn wrecks of shattered ships. They know my Brother and my Brother's child, And with a blood red wand Point toward their broken bodies, Repellant and half devoured By garrotish hydra monsters of the deep. Is not he my Brother and these his kith Whom Kings have sent as kinsmen In fragments to the Regions of the Damned. Say, Vulture of the Skull tower, tell me, Is not he my Brother who conquers air And sends to earth a Pelican of war While at Its gluttonous feast Of men's souls, - mild air, And vomiting its last abhorrent mor6al of love Upon a blood-drenched, weeping world. Yes, he who plumes his rocket of the skies In one fell swoop to sweep His aerial cycle in the sun Of every dark forboding ship That's sailing the azure blue. And dropping its fiery bombs upon the slumbering city! Is he my Brother, Who sits upon a gilded throne And wings his Emissaries forth Throughout a sin cursed Earth To mix heU broth with blood and sighs, And bind the hands that seek to bless the world, With triple brazen chains. Forged on the anvils of the Damned, j And holds, the blood-stained garments While the Crescent hordes of Allah Stone and devour a myriad thousandthousand -- .. .. . . Beneath the cold Caucassian peaks. That he may shackle, bind, biand and seal . The Human Race with Autocratic power

And drive it toward Charybdian rocks of Death? He, my Brother! God forbid; for I must say him nay. Forgiveness; Vain thought and far

removed Beyond the bounds of hope. Sayeth Humanity, mangled and torn in fragments Upon . Golgotha's : blood-drenched heights. O, Spirit of the night winds, tell me, wnere, u wnere is the struggling con course Of children pleading for bread? Drenched with the dust of the wayside. Worn with their watch from the broken wall And the blasted turrets of riveted bronze, Begrimed with the soot of burning cities. Half clad with tatters of putrid rags. Faint hearted and gaunt, and famished with thirst. Stumbling along o'er the stony streets And shattered walls of palace and hovel; They know not whence they come Or whither they wearily go. Tell me, O God, are not these ray Brother's own. Or arp they mere Pensioners of the Future; Tell me ere I go hence " Into that vast Uncharted Solitude Or that City, the key to whose portal is Love! Wichita, Kansas, Dec. 19, 1917. FOULKE TO SPEAK AT NIGHT SCHOOL William Dudley Foulke will make an address on "Paris," illustrated with seventy-five stereopticon views, Wednesday evening at the opening of night school. The Junior high school orchestra will play from 75:15 until 7:45 o'clock. At 8:15 registrations will be made and persons assigned to class rooms for regular instruction. Principal Carman said Wednesday in order to conserve light all the classes will meet in the new building. Classes have been assigned to the following rooms: Public Speaking Room 31 ; English for beginners Room 32, English advanced. 32: Penmanshin 23 rnmmen. cial arithmetic 25. Bookkeeping 23, Typewriting 24. Stenography 20, Bench work 7, Practical nursing 6, Cooking, serving and preparing meals, 5, Dressmaking .56, Millinery, lunch room. Commercial Art 36, Trade Mathematics 25, Beginning sewing, lunch room, Children's room 37, Sheet metal drafting 26, printing 50, Drawing and Fine Arts 36, Household Physics 41. Practical Chemistry 40, Physical Training Gymnasium, Mechanical Drawing 26, Telegraphy 45, Cabinet Making 7, Forging and Tool Making 2 Automobile, Electrical and General 47. Radio and hnzzpr niwrnHne JS Spanish, beginning 38, Spanish, advanced, 33, French 35. For information on salemanship, pattern making and other courses, apply at the principal's office. WEDDING ANNOUNCED OXFORD, O., Jan. 9. A wedding which took place last October has just been announced here. The bride is Miss Bricie Stanton, daughter of William Stanton, well-known stock raiser living west of town in Indiana; the bridegroom is William LaBoiteaux, a young; farmer, also of Indiana.

BANKS RE-ELECT THEIR OFFICERS

Stockholders of three Richmond banks First National, Union National and Second National held their annual meetings Tuesday. No changes were made in the directors nor officials. Officers of the First National are: President, Albert D. Gaylor; vice president, Frank M. Taylor; cashier, Alton T. Hale; assistant cashier, Ernest Calvert. George Seidel was reelected to the board. At the Union National bank officers as follows were named: President, George L. Cates; vice presidents T. H. Cates and M. C. Henley; cashier, H. J. HaneS; assistant cashier, H. J. Koehring. The members of the board are W. D. Loehr, M. C. Henley, E. G. Hibberd, Charles A. McGuire, Elwood McGuire, H. J. Hanes, George L. Cates, E. H. Cates and George R. Hart. S. W. Gaar was re-elected president of the Second National bank as were Vice Presidents Dr. David H. Dougan and C. W. Elmer, by the seventeen directors who were re-appointed. Dudley Elmer was made cashier to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of William Seeker. A. G. Matthews, who came to Richmond from Muncie in November and has been acting vice president, was made vice president at the meeting Tuesday. The annual meeting of the Dickinson Trust company will be held Monday, Jan. 14. "OVER THE TOP" FOR RED CROSS WILLIAMSBURG. Ind., Jan. 9. The Red Cross drive in Green township netted 319 members almost one hundred more than the quota. Although the Red Cross has only been organized here a short time, bed sheets, bed shoes, handkerchiefs, sweaters, socks, and pajamas have been made. The Ladies Cemetery association met with Mrs. Mary Blair Saturday and elected officers, as follows. Miss Mary A. Reynolds, president; Mrs. Kate Oler, vice president; Mrs. L. I. Cranor, secretary; Mrs. James Ladd, treasurer. The Quarterly meeting of the M. E. church of the Williamsburg circuit will be held Sunday at Chester. Dr. Somerville Light of Richmond, will preach at 10:30 o'clock. In the afternoon the quarterly conference will be held. Rev. Mr. Ulmer will give the second illustrated sermon at the M. E. church here Sunday night. One hundred and fifty views will be shown. GILES URGES THRIFT SALES Reports on the sale of thrift stamps in the Richmond Public schools were make .Wednesday afternoon at the pricipals' meeting in the office of Superintendent Giles. 55uperintendent Giles said there are three convincing reasons why children should purchase thrift stamps: first, from patriotic motives; second, the certificates are a safe and profitable investment; third, it is an education in thrift. The child who denies himself luxuries to buy .stamps will find delight in such sacrifice, he said. WORKS TO TEACH WAR'S BLIND MEN Mrs. Benjamin R. Russell. Realizing that the restoration of selfreliance is the most valued gift to men blinded through the misfortunes of war, Mrs. Russell, wife of Col. Benjamin Reeve Russell, United States marine corps, is taking lessons In basket weaving and the wrapping of wires for electrical equipment so that she may be able to impart this knowledge should the occasion arise. Recently in New York a number of blind were taught wire wrapping, acquiring the art so quickly that within a month's time they were self-supporting. Mrs. Russell is chairman of the American women's home service committee for the equipment of the government service hospitals in the New York district.

4 tj&yii'

New Jack Tars Will Have to Wait Awhile Richmond manufacturers are urged to give employment to men who have enlisted in the navy and who will not be called for a month or six weeks. Navy Recruiter Goldfarb has received word that men will not be called for service immediately and as many as the enlisted men have given up their jobs manufacturers are asked to find places for them. "This is another chance for Richmond manufacturers to do thpfr bit."

j Secretary Albus of the - Commercial club said. MRS. JOHNSTON GOES TO NEW YORK FOR PICTURES Mrs. M. F. Johnston, iii charee of exhibits at the Art Gallery, left WedI nesday for New York where she will visit and exhibit and secure pictures i for the traveling exhibit which comes to Richmond in October. Mrs. Johnston said Wednesday morning she expects to return in timfor the exhibit of Indiana Artists which will be hung In the art gallery February 6 and remain in place during the entire month. NAB GERMAN Continued From Page One. been employed at the Starr factory since. He said that he has been studying chemistry for some time and that he also attended the Riqhmond night school, in an endeavor to become a public speaker. He was asked if he would rather be in Germany now than where he is. "1 don't know about that," was his answer after a minute's thought. And for the first time during the Interview he showed some emotion. His eyee became suddenly watery. He remained silent. Police have, had Metzdorff and Joseph Emmer, who - formerly roomed with him. under surveillance for some time. Emmer and Metzdorff were once called before police because of their alleged utterances. They were released however, because of insufficient evidence. Emmer Has Gone Emmer has since left Richmond and Metzdorff says his whereabouts are unknown to him. His alleged utterances against the United States were reported to police again and he has been watched since that time. A large oil painting of the kaiser was found in his room and taken by police. Several postcards addressed to Em mer, were taken from Metzdorff. The cards were mailed from Weisingen, Germany, and are signed "Rese," the German for Rosa. "I hope you will come back to Weisingen after the war says one of the postcards. A picture of a German and another (Advertisement.) Vinol Makes ChildrenStrong And Invigorates Old People Any doctor will tell you that the Ingredients of Vinol as printed below contain the elements needed to improve the health of delicate children and restore strength to old people, i "P,Cod Liver and Beef Peptones, IX Iron and Jlangranese Peptonates. Iron and Ammonium Citrate, Lime and Soda Gylcerophosphates, Cascarln. Those who have puny, ailing or rundown children or aged parents may prove this at our expense. Besides the good it does children and the aged there is nothing like Vinol to restore strength and vitality to weak, nervous women and overworked, run-down men. Try it. If you are not entirely satisfied, we will return your money without question; that proves our fairness and your protection. Millions of people have been convinced this way. Clem Thistlethwaite, Druggist, and at the best drug store in every town and city in the country. Adv. Glen Miller Stock Yardi Market Every Day Call Phone 3744 SHURLEY & GAAR 1 What

The Palladium has, loud and clear enough to announce your wants to all the occupants of nearly 6,000 Richmond homes! Approximately 3 occupants of these homes are regular readers of the catalog of wants and offers printed here every day. Here they may read the details of your proposition as they study the classified ads in their homes.

WHEN YOU ADVERTISE YOU REACH 95 OF THE . 3 T

of a German private were found In his pockets. Metzdorff was ordered by police and Sheriff Carr to report at police station at 7 o'clock Tuesday. He was there promptly. One of bis statements to police was that he was "born and reared in Germand and, naturally for Germany." "France and England will have to account to Germany within the next three months, he is also alleged tc have said to Sheriff Carr and Assistant Chief McNally. According to Metzdorff bis mother Is living in Germany now and his stepfather is fighing in the German army. He has other relatives in the war he said. "I was born and educated in Germany. Why shouldn't I be for Germany?" he is alleged to have 6aid. It is said that he was arrested In Newcastle some time ago because of alleged disloyal utterances and was held In Jail for a week. He was released at the end of this time however.

, DO THISWhen the Children Cough, Rub Musterole on Throats and Chests No telling how soon the symptoms ma? develop into croup, or worse. And then's when you're glad you have a jar of Musterole at hand to give prompt, sure re lief. It does not blister. As first aid and a certain remedy, Musterole is excellent. Thousands of mothers know it. You should keep a jar in the house, ready for instant use.

MOTHERS

It is the remedy for adults, too. Re- J

lieves sore tnroat, broncnius, tonsuius, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, headache, congestion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, pains and aches of back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, chilblains, frosted feet and colds of the chest (it often prevents pneumonia). 30c and 60c jars; hospital size $2.50. TRACY'S HOME MADE PEANUT BUTTER (Made Fresh While You Wait) Per lb. 30 Vz lb 15c TRACY'S 526 MAIN STREET NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT State of Indiana, Wayne County, ss : Estate of Jennie L. Beckman, Deceased. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the Wayne Circuit Court, Administratrix of the estate of Jennie L. Beckman, Deceased, late of Wayne County, Indiana. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. BARBARA B. PARKE, Administratrix. Gardner, Jessup, Hoelscher and White, Attorneys. Jan. 9-16-23 NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT State of Indiana, Wayne County, ss: Estate of Walter II. Sieweke, De ceased. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has been appointed by the Wayne Circuit Court, Administratrix of the estate . of Sieweke, Deceased., late of Wayne County, Indiana. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. CORA E. SIEWEKE, Administratrix. Gardner. Jessup, Hoelscher and White, Attorneys. Jan. 9-16-23 a Voice E3 n IN THE PALLADIUM HOMES IN RICHMOND

EM