Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 163, 21 May 1918 — Page 10
PAGE TEN
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1918
MARKETS
BUYING IS LIGHT ON CHICAGO MART
CHICAGO. May 21. Absence of any aggressive buying gave an advantage today to bears in the corn market About the only demand came from local traders. Commission houses did roost ot-jthe selling. Opening prices, which ranged from M off to a shade advance, with May 127Ts and July 143'i to 143R. were followed by a moderate further setback in the active option July. Oats showed relative firmness owing to congestion of the May delivery. Buying on the part of May shorts caused a decided bulge in that month. July, after opening unchanged to c lower, hardened a little, but later cased back to slightly below yesterday's finish. Provisions lacked support. The market averaged lower, influenced by scattered selling.
GRAIN QUOTATIONS
CHICAGO. May 21. The range of futures on the Chicago Board of Trade follows: No trading in wheat. Corn Open. High. Low. Close. May. 127T4 1277a July 143U H4U H298 142Va Oats May 78 79 78 78 July 67 687s 67 67 Lard July 24.77 24.S5 24.65 21.65 Sept 25.07 25.15 24.95 24.97 TOLEDO, O., May 21. WheatPrime cash, No. 1 red, $2.20. Cloverseed Prime cash $18.25; Oct. $14.20. Alsike Prime cash $15.25. Timothy Prime cash $3.80; Sept., $4.40; Oct. $4.10; Dec. $44.27; Mar. $4.25.CHICAGO. May 21. Corn No. 2 yellow, 172; No. 3 yellow, 1670171c; No. 4 Nominal. Oats No. 3 white, 79S012C;
Standard. 79 Vi (5 80c. Pork, ncminal. Pigs $22.1 2 ffl i $22.62. Lard, $21.62 24.67.
PRODUCE MARKET
CHICAGO. May 21. Butter Market, unchanged. Eggs Receipts, ,30,316 cases; market, unchanged. Live poultry Market unchanged. Potato market, unchanged; receipts, 40 cars.
NEW YORK STOCK LIST
NEW YORK, May 21. The closing quotations on the stock exchange were : American Can, 47 3-4. American Locomotive, 67 3-4. American Beet Sugar, 73 bid. American Smelter, ,82 1-4. Anaconda, 68 1-2. Atchison, 86 5-8. Bethlehem Steel, bid, 87 1-2. Canadian Pacific, 147 1-4. Chesapeake & Ohio, 59. Great Northern, pfd, 91. New York Central. 73 7-8. Northern Pacific, 87. Southern Pacific, 85. . Pennsylvania, 44 3-8. U. S. Steel Com, 108 5-8.
LOCAL QUOTATIONS
(Corrected Daily by Omer G. Whelan) Paying Oats, 70c; ear corn, $1.35 1.50; rye, $1.50; straw, $6.00 a ton. Selling Cotton seed meal, $58.00 a ton, $3.00 a cwt; tankage, $93.00 a ton, $4.75 a cwt; oil meal, $63.50 a ton, $3.25 a cwt.
FRUIT & VEGETABLES (Corrected Daily by Eggemeyer's) SELLING PRICES
LIVE STOCK PRICES
INDIANAPOLIS, May 21. Hogs Receipts, 7,500; lower. Cattle Receipts, 1.400; steady. Calves Receipts, 500; higher. Sheep Receipts, 200; strong. Steers Pilme corn fed steers. 1,300 and u?, $16017.25; good to choice steers, 1,300 and up, $15.75016.25; common to medium steers, 1,300 and up. $15.0015.75;good to choice steers to medium steers, 1,150 to 1.250. $14.50015.25; good to choice steers. 600 to 1.000 lbs., $13.50014.25; fair to medium yearlings, $9.75012.00. ' Heifers and Cows Goou o choice heifers, $11.500 14.50; common to fair heifers, $9.000 10.25; fair to medium cows, $8.50 0 9.25; canners and cut$7.2508.75. B ills and Calves Good to prime export bulls, $12.000 13.25; good to choioi butcher bulls, $11.00012.00; common to fair bulls, $9.00010.75; common to best veal calvps, $9,500 $14.00; common to best heavy calves, $8.5O0$11.OO; stock calves, 250 to 450 pounds, $7,500 10.50; good to choice lights, $16,100 16.15. Stockers and Feeding Cattle Good to choice steers, 700 pounds and up. $10.00 0 11.25; common to fair steers, under 700 pounds. $9.OO0$1O.OO; good to choice steers, under 700 pounds. $9.50010.50; common to fair steers, ' under 700 pcunds, $8.5009.50; medium to good heifers, $7.6009.00; medium to good feeding cows, $7.0008.50; prlngers, $7 0008X0. Hogs Best heavies, $17.C0; medium and mixed, $17.60; good to choke lights, $17.60tft 17.70; common to medium lights. $17.60017.65; rough and packers. $15016.25; light pigs, $150 $15.00016.25; light p.ga. $15,000 $17.25: bulk of best hogs, $17.60; best pigs. $17.50017.00. Sheep and Lambs Good to choice yearlings, $15.OO01S.OO; common to fair yearlings, $13.00014.75; good to choice 6'iepp. $14.00016.00; bucks 100 pounds, '$10.00011.00; good to choice breeding ewes, $14.00016.00; common to medium cpring lambs, $14.00 $18.00020.00; fair to best spring lambs CINCINNATI. O., May 21. HogsReceipts 1.000; market steady; packers and butchers $17.50017.75. Cattle Receipts 200; market steady. Calves Market higher; $7014 Sheep Receipts- 100; market steady. Lambs Steady.
PRODUCE Buttfir. 35c; eggs, 30c; potatoes. 75c; old hens. 20c. Onions, yellow, $1.75 0 2.00 per 100 lbs.; white $1.75 0 2.00 per tOO-lb. sack: Texas Burmuda onions, white, $2.15, crate 40 lbs.; yellow, $1.65, crate 40 lbs. VEGETABLES Wax beans, 20 cents per pound:
asparagus, 5c bunch: new cabbage.
5c lb.; green beans, 15c lb; carrots, 3 to 5c lb.; spring carrots, 8c bunch; spring beets,' 10c bunch; cauliflower 15025c head; cucumbers 5010c; egg plants 15c; kohlrabi 10c bunch; leaf lettuce 20c per pound, untrimmed; leak, 10c bunch; mushrooms, 75c lb.; onions, New Burmudas, 8c lb; young onions, 5c bunch, 3 for 10c; oyster plant, 5c bunch; parsley, 5c bunch; mangoes, 2 for 5c; radishes, 5c bunch; spinnach 10c lb.; toms, 25c lb.; turnips, new 8c lb.; water cress, 5c per' bunch; artichokes, 20c each; celery. 8, 10 and 15c bunch; potatoes, $101.35 per bu.; rhubarb, 3 bunhes 10c; green peas, 15c lb; kahl, 10c lb. FRUITS Calif, cherries. 60c lb.; watermelons $1 each; peaches, 15c lb.; hot house toms, 30c lb.; sour cherries, 25c lb.;
apples, 8 to 10c lb.; grape fruit, 10 15c; lemons, 40c per doz.; bananas, 10c lb.; limes, 30c per doz.; oranges, 40c to 60c doz.; pineapples, 25c each. MISCELLANEOUS Eggs., 35c. per dozen; strawberries, 20 to 25c qt; butter, creamery, 52c; country, 45c per pound, sassafras. 5c 010c per bunch.
NO MOTIVE IS. FOUND FOR MAN SHOOTING SELF William H. Wuenker Ends Life by Sending Bullet Through Brain. William Henry Wuenker, 31 years old, ended his life Monday afternoon by sending a bullet from a 32 caliber revolver through his brain. . Death was instantaneous. His motive is unknown. Wuenker lived with ' his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. John Wuenker, on their farm south of Richmond on the Abington pike, for the last 18 years. Relatives say they know no reason which might have led him to take his life. Wuenker had been almost blind for cne year, having lost the partial sight of his right eye by an ulcer which formed just above it and extended over the eyelid. Relatives said that he had not seemed to be downhearted. He was registered for selective srvice with the Richmond board and had been placed in Class 2, because of the condition of his ryes. Shortly after dinner Monday Wuenker left the house, telling his aunt, Mrs. Emma Wuenker, that he was not feeling good and did not believe be would work during the afternoon. Ae he seemed to be nervous Mrs. Wuenker followed him from the house to the barn. As Mrs. Wuenker entered the building she heard the report of the revolver and a moment later found her nephew lying on the floor in the loft of the barn. The ballet had entered bjs brain causing instant death. The revolver lay near the body. Four sisters and three brothers survive. They are Miss, Mary Wuenker, Mrs. Henry Tontrout. Mrs. Harrv
! Deal and Mrs. Emma Alexander:
Fred, Harry and Edward Beal. Funeral arrangements have not been completed.
CHICAGO, eclpts 23.000;
May 21. Hogs Remarket strong; bulk of
sales. $17.35017.80; lights $17.35 0
$17.85; mixed $17.1017.S5; heavy, $16.35017.65; rough $16.35 0 16 75; pigs $14.60017.50. Cattle Receipts 14.000; market weak: steers $1X60017.70; stockers and feeders $9.30013.10; cows and heifers $7.30014.00; calves $8014 Sheep Rec-lpts 14.000; market weak: sheep $10.00014.75; lambs $13.-50016.75.
PITTSBURGH. Pa.. May 21. Hogs Receipts 2000; market higher; heavies $17.90018; heavy Yorkers $18:70 018.75; light Yorkers $18.75018.10.
Sheep and Lambs Receipts 31)0; market steady; top sheep $14.25; top lambs $17.25. Calves Receipts 300; market steady; top $15.25. v
GENERAL MERCHANDISE Butter Creamery vliol milk extra 46 V?; centralized extra, 44c; do firsts, 4V2; do seconds, 40M; fancy dairy, 34, packing stock No. 1, 2Sc, No. 2. 24c. Eggs Prime firsts (loss off), 32.c; firsts 31 VsC; ordinary firsts, 29c; seconds. 2S',c; goose eggs, 60c; duck egss, 35c. Poultry Broilers under 2 lbs., 45 50c; fryers over 2 lbs.. 30c; roosters, 18c; cull?. 10c; white ducks 3 lbs. and over 23c; colored do 30c; geese choice full feather, 20c; do medium, lSc; guineas $6 per dozen. Apples Pippins $5.5O0$6 per brl.: Ben Davis. $4.5005.50; Ganos. $505.50 per brl.; Baldwin. $505.50, Greenirgs $606.50, Rome Beauty $607 per brl. Beets Home-grown $1.5001.75 pef bush. Florida $250!fi)3 per crate. Onions Yellow $1.750$2.OO per 100 lb. sack, v.hite $$2.00$2.25. Spanisn Potatoes .Wisconsin, $1.30031.40 per 100 pound sack.
REV., STANLEY TO BE BURIED WEDNESDAY The Rev. Mrs. Hannah W. Stanley, 66 years old, died Monday afternoon at her home, 401 Southwest Third street, after a long illness. She was born at Oregon, Mo., In 1851, and came with her parents to Indiana when she was only six months of age. They moved near Boston and most of her life was spent in that community. Mrs. Stanley was ordained to the ministry in the Christian church 30 years ago, and served a number of pastorates until her resignation from active pulpit life eight years ago on account of failing health. Since that time she has lived in Richmond and
I has devoted as much of her time as
possioie to me ministry, tnougn sne did not assume any actual charge. Her first church was at Losantsville, Ind., and she was also in charge of Christian churches in later years at Bryant. Winchester, Prairie Grove, and Hollansburg, O. For a number of years Rev. Stanley was president of the examining board of the Eastern Indiana conference, wnich examined and recommended for ordination the ministerial students. She served for several years on the Foreign Mission board of the conference. Several years ago she was made a life member of the Board of Foreign Missions of the General conference. ' For 13 years she was president of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union of Wayne county. She is survived by her husband. Jesse B. Stanley, and five daughters and two sons. Funeral services will be conducted Wednesday afternoon at. 2 o'clock at the home and at 3 o'clock at Elkhorn. Burial will be in Elkhorn cemetery.
JUNK (Prices paid by Sam Jaffe) No. 1 rubber boots and shoes, 7c per lb.; No. 2 rubber boots an:! shoes, 40 4'2C per lb.; automobile tires, 4c per lb.; inner tubes, 8016c per lb.; bicycle tires, 3c per lb.; buggy tires, 3 '2 04c per lb.: baled paper. 40c per hundred lbs.; country mixed rags, $2.30 per hundred lbs.; mixed iron, $1.00 per hundred lbs.; heavy brass copper from 13018c per lb.
Indianapolis Representative Sales
EAST BUFFALO, N. Y., May 21 Cattle Receipts 125: strong. Calves Receipts 150; strong; $7.00 015.50. Hogs Receipts 1.800; strong; heavy $18.250 18.50; mixed $18,60 0 $18.75; Yorkers, light Yorkers and pigs. $18.75019.10: roughs $16.25 0 16.50: stags $12.00013.00. Sheep and Lambs Receipts 2,600; active; lambs $11017.50; others unchanged?
The cherry gets its n:;me from Cerasos, an old Greek town on the Black fiea, whence came the first garden chewies known to Europe.
24 76 52 9 12 26 30 3 4 5 4
H03S 208 17!) 203 222 .'...'.'262 STEERS 742 . i 874 856 1093 HEIFERS 706 900 746 867 COWS 693 1065 1120 1180 BULLS ....880 1270 1340 1190 CALVES 215 150 173 160
$14.00 17.60 17.60 17.60 17.60 $11.00 14.00 15.00 16.00 $10.00 12.00 12.75 14.00
$
8.00
9.50 11.50 13.00
$ 9.50 10.00 11.00 12.25 $ 9.00 12.75 13.50 .14.00
The waters of the Dead sea. in Palestine, are eight or nine times more salty than the ocean. Its surface. 1.312 feet below the level of the Mediterranean, is lower than that of
any other known body of water.
BOLSHEVIK FOREIGN MINISTER NAMED
(By Associated Press.') AMSTERDAM. May 21. M. Karakhan has been apoointed to succeed M. Tchitcherin as Bolshevik foreign minister, according to a dispatch from Kiev. M. Karakhan was secretary of the Russian delegation at Brest-Litovsk
peace conference at its first sitting. At the second Brest-Litovsk conference he was one of the Russian delegates. Something of his foreign policy may be gained from an interview published Feb. 26, 1918. in which he said that Russia's position toward the allies would be that of a neutral, adding that Russia would not support Germany except in an indirect way from the resumption of commercial relations.
EUGENE V, DEBS SPEAK HERE TONIGHT
Eugene V. Debs, former Socialist candidate tor president, and one of the best known members of the party, will speak at the Socialist hall, 625 Yz Main street, Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock. Debs is touring the state in the interest of the socialist candidates for congress. The subject of his address here will be "Socialism and Democracy." According to Richmond socialists, Debs probably will be nominated for congress by the socialists of the fifth district. He was a candidate for the congressional election from the district last year. The district socialists at their meeting here nominated John Knipp of Rushville for the party candidate for congress, and Fred Huckrey of Richmond, former candidate for mayor, for joint representative.
PERRY T. BAILEY DIES SUDDENLY
Perry T. Bailey, 59 years old, died suddenly, Tuesday at noon at his home, 310 North Eighteenth street. He had been in poor health for some time. Tuesday morning he apparently was as well as ever. About 11 o'clock, he was found dead in his room. His widow, two daughters; Mrs. Henry Rothert, Mrs. Myrtle Kenworthy, three grand children and one brother and sister survive. Friends may call at any time after Wednesday at noon,
FIVE HUN PLANES DOWNED IN RAID
fBy Associated Presa.) LONDON. May 21. Of the twenty to thirty Gotha machines which took part in the raid on London Sunday night, five are reported officially to have been brought down. Official confirmation is lacking to the report that two others feH into the North Sea. On the raiders as engaged by a British airman who fired at close range until the machine disappeared in a cloud. Shortly afterward the machine burst into flames at a height of 7,000 feet, and fell as a blazing wreck. Another machine was brought down by anti-aircraft guns in London. Two others were brought down while attempting to escape, one being destroyed by British airmen. The fifth was set afire and fell into the sea. A few dozen bombs were dropped promiscuously on certain parts of the London district doing, in a few cases only, no inconsiderable damage to small dwelling houses. Two fires were caused in large buildings, but they were well under control. Some small dwelling houses were wrecked by the bombs and much glass was broken.
100 Airplane Stamps Tamed Upside Down are Sold for $20,000 (By Associated Press) NEW YORK. May 21. A sheet of the new postal airplane stamps, but with the airplane turned upside down through an error made by the bureau of engraving and printing at Washington, has been purchased for $20,000 by Col. E. H. R. Green of Texas, eon of the late Hetty Green, it was learned here today. Over a window counter at the postoffice in Washington this sheet sold for $24. So far as is known here this Is the only sheet that escaped the vigil of the Washington postal authorities. Three other sheets were discovered and were pen-cancelled so that their postal value was nullified and they probably will be destroyed. The stamps bought by Col. Green were turned back by a Washington citizen at the stamp window because the airplane was inverted. In the line behind this citizen was a man who sensed the philatelic value of the sheet and purchased it at its face value and it reached the hands of a Philadelphia stamp dealer who today received a bid of $12,500 prior to the higher offer made by Col. Green. Col. Green said here today that he planned to retain a portion of the sheet for his collection and dispose of the other stamps among his friends. It is predicted by Philatelists that if the sheet proves to be the only one in existence outside the government ownership, the stamps will attain a philatelic value of $250 each.
President M ay Decide Extra Session of Congress WASHINGTON, May 21. Indications today were that President Wilson may be called upon to decide whether congress will remain in session after July 1, to pass new war revenue legislation as suggested by Secretary McAdoo. Congressional leaders, who conferred with the secretary yesterday, were not convinced of the immediate
j necessity of the legislation and were
disinclined to abandon their original plan of adjdurning in July. Secretary McAdoo at the same time was said to have been considerably impressed by the assertions of leaders that it would be extremely difficult to hold congress. Further conferences of the subject, are looked for later in the week, however, and in the event of a deadlock President Wilson probably will be called upon to speak the deciding word.
Troop Train is Wrecked; Sixteen Soldiers are Hart
(By A"ociated Press.) TEXARKANA.'Ark., May 21 Troop train No. 551, north-bound, was wrecked near Garland City, Ark. today, the engine and four coaches being overturned. The engineer and fireman are reported to have been killed and 16 or more soldiers injured. Two relief trains have been sent out and the injured will be brought here. Reports said no soldiers had been killed.
President Sets June 5 for Second Registration (Bv Associated Press.) WASHINGTON, May 21. President Wilson, in a proclamation published today, formally fixed June 5 next as the date of registration under the selective draft for all youths attaining the a?e of 21 years since the first registration day, June 5. 1917. The proclamation was issued in accordance with the act of congress making the youths eligible for service. All men whether citizens or not, are required to register, but ex
emptions under the original act, in-j eluding men already in the military) service apply. Divinity and medical i
students are exempted.
Bentley Will Speak at Services at Whitewater
J. H. Bentley, principal of the Richmond high school, will be the speaker at the Memorial Day services to be held at Whitewater the afternoon of May 30. Music will be furnished by ihe Richmond band and singers under the direction of Mrs. Grace Gorman. The services will be held at the First M. E. church. A short talk will be made at the monument to the unknown at the cemetery by Aimey Tschaen, and patriotic exercises will be given by the school children.
CONVICTED OF MURDER
ITHACA, Mich., May 21. Albert Eichhorn, a farmer, who has been on trial here for the past three weeks, was convicted late yesterday evening of the murder, Sept. 4, 1917, of 17-year old Beatrice Epler at Alma, and sentenced to life imprisonment.
HIPSKIND ENLISTS.
Alphonsus E. Hipskind enlisted as seaman, second class, in the naval reserve force, and was sent in to the Great Lakes Training station Tuesday.
LEAVE FOR CONSTANTINOPLE.
HUN FOOD SITUATION IS MOST CRITICAL
(By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, May 21. The food situation in Germany, officials here believe, is the most critical it has been at any time.
Information reaching Washington
from many sources indicate that even with the reduced ration planned for June 15, the country will not have enough food to carry the population through to the next harvest and that further reduction will have to be made. The reduced rations was to have been put into operation March 1 but the measure was postponed in the hope that grain would be forthcoming in large quantities from the Ukraine. When this hope vanished, the German government saw that the reduction was Inevitable. Germany began consuming her 1917 wheat crop two months before It was intended to start on it and the German potato crop has not turned out nearly so well as German agricultural interests had hoped.
Perry Township Praised in Red Cross Meeting ECONOMY, Ind., May 21. R. E. Swallow of Richmond paid a fitting tribute to Perry township in an address at the Red Cross meeting in the Methodist church here Sunday night, when he presented the Liberty loan honor flag won by the township in the third Liberty loan drive. Byram Robbins spoke on the Red Cross drive that is in progress this week. Mrs. Edgar Hiatt gave a talk on child welfare work. A musical program was given by a choir of forty voices.
American Flier With British, is Killed (By Associated Press.) LONDON. May . 21. Second Lieut. Mortimer Crane of the British flying corps has been killed while flying in Great Britain and was buried Monday. He was a son of T. J. Crane of Philadelphia. Young Crane joined the American army when the United States entered the war, but wishing to get active service, he obtained a discharge and joined the British army.
SOFIA, Sunday, May 19 Emperor Charles and Empress Zita of AustriaHungary and their party left Sofia today for Constantinople. t 4 I omnno Poo i if if w I
Make Quarter Pint
of Lotion, Cheap j
I What girl or woman hasn't heard of I lemon juice to remove complexion I blemishes; to bleach the skin and to!
bring out the roses, the freshness and the hidden beauty? But lemon juice alone is acid, therefore irritating, and should be mixed, with orchard white this way. Strain through a fine cloth the juice of two fresh lemons into a bottle containing about three ounces of orchard white, then shake well and you have a whole quarter pint of skin and complexion lotion at about the cost one usually pays for a small jar of ordinary cold cream. Be sure to strain the lemon juice so no pulp gets into the bottle, then this lotion will remain pure and fresh for months.
When applied daily to the face, neck, ' arms and hands it should help to;
bleach, clear, smoothen and beautify the skin. Any druggist will supply three ounces of orchard white at very little cost and the grocer has the lemons. Adv.
CHINA AND JAPAN SIGN NEW TREATY
(By Associated Press.) PEKING, Friday, May 17. China and Japan have signed the treaty concluded after negotiations lasting several days concerning the military operations to be conducted jointly by these two countries in Siberia. The treaty also contains clauses dealing with other matters the details of which are not made public.
RETURNS TO WASHINGTON
(By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, May 21. President Wilson arrived here early today from New York where he opened the Red Cross second $100,000,000 war fund campaign Saturday night.
600 HAVE JOINED.
(By Associated Pri LONDON, May , 21. Six hundred employes of the London Times have joined the army or navy since the war began. Of these 150 have teen killed, wounded or disabled by sickness.
CUT THIS OIT IT IS WORTH MOXEV DON'T MISS THIS. Cut out this slip, enclose with 5c and mall It to Foley & Co., 2S35 Sheffield Ave.. Chicago. 111., writing your name and address clearly. You will receive in return a trial package containing Foley's Honey and Tar Compound, for coughs, colds and croup; Foley Kidney Pills, for pain .in sides and back: rheumatism, backache, kidney and bladder ailments; and Foley Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome and thoroughly cleansing cathartic, for constipation, biliousness, headache ani sluggish bowels. For sale by A. G. Luken & Co. Adv.
PR. El. MAY
SPECIALIST
Will Se at The
Arlington Motel RICHMOND; Monday, May 27th And Every Four Weeks Thereafter.
Dr. Mayo has treated a number of cases of cancer without the knife. Dr. Mayo has treated successfully all forms of Chronic Diseases that are curaBle. such as Diseases of the Brain. Heart. Lungs, Throat. Eye and Ear. Stomach. Liver, Kidneys. Bladder. Blood Poison. Rectum. Catarrh. Rupture. Eczema. Lpllepsy, Dropsy. Female Diseases. Nervous Debility. Functional Weakness, Etc MEN A speedy, permanent and lasting cure Is what I give you beyond a doubt If your case is curable. If not. I will not accept your money and promise to do anything for you. The best reference I could give as to profe clonal reliability is the many cured, satisfied patients I dismiss. SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO DISEASES PECULIAR TO WOMEN I will give the POOREST man a chance, as well as the RICH, to receive a cure from me at a SMALL COST. There Is no one too POOR to get my best advice FREE. VARICOCELE AND HYDROCELE Our one treatment cure Is what you FhouM have. Only one visit Is required. We do no cutting. All signs disappear in a few days or a few weeks. BLOOD POISON, SKIN DISEASES We will &Ive you treatment that will in a few days or weeks cure all rash and sores. STRICTURE, KIDNEY, BLADDER, BLADDER TROUBLES Are scientifically treated by us. Our methods immediately benefit you. PILES, FISTULA We can cure you so quickly and so easily that yon will be surprised. We will give you just the result and cure you are looking for. RUPTURE TREATED After an examination we will tell you Just what we can do for you. If we cannot benefit or cure you. we will frankly and boaestly tell you so. Call on or address W. R. MAYO, M. D. 843 North Delaware Street. Indianapolis, Indiana
38
The Boy of Today 1
Is the Man of Tomorrow and he should be taught the importance of careful selection of materials and the different fabrics. He will profit in the years to come by what he learns while young and the. best teacher is experience. Bring him with you when you select his suit let him assist and have us explain to him the different qualities the advantage of one over another. We are Showing an Excellent Line of Boys' Suits Priced $6 to $12
iiiii
WITHDRAWS RESIGNATION
LONDON. May 21. Baron Rhondda, who last month asked Premier Lloyd George to relieve him of his duties as Food Controller, today withdrew his resignation.
EARLHAM HEIGHTS UNIT NEEDS SEWING MACHINES
The Earlham Heights Red Cross
unit will meet at the church TuesdavJ
afternoon. The unit is in need of sewing machines for use in its workroom, and will appreciate the loan of any machines that are not being used by the owners.
BRIEFS
ATTENTION MOOSE.
Meet at hall, Wednesday, May 22, 7 p. m. to attend, funeral service for Bro. Chas. Moravec. Chas. E. Thomas, Dictator W. Howard Brooks, Sec'y.
Glen Miller Stock Yards Market Every Day Call Phone 3744 SHURLEY & GAAR
CANDIES FINE, FRESH, TOOTHSOME You Get a Little More at Mc's
Locoa ureams m Cocoanut Custard Chocolate Creams Frappa Creams Midget Creams Cocoanut Squares Jelly, Beans Spanish Salted Peanuts
MANY OTHER CHOICE CANDIES. Mc's 5 & 10c Store 432 Main St., Cor. 5th '
8 ounces or onehalf lb.
10
J
