Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 165, 23 May 1918 — Page 10

PAGE TEN

W- RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. THURSDAY, MAY 23, 191b

MARKET

BEARISH INFLUENCE ON CORN MARKET

(By Associated Press) CHICAGO, May 23 Prospects that the crop movement would increase as soon as planting was completed had a bearish Influence today In the corn market. Favorable weather for planting tended also to ease prices. Some large commission houses were prominent sellers and the market was poorly supported. After opening unchanged to c up. with July 141 to 141 and June not quoted, the market underwent a decided sag and then showed something of a rally. Oats reflected the weakness of corn. Some expert buying was noted, but the amounts were small. Opening prices, which ranged from to 1 lower, with July 66 were followed by additional losses and then a little upturn. Declines in the hog market carried down provisions. Demand lacked volume.

GRAIN QUOTATIONS

CHICAGO, May 23. The range of futures on the Chicago Board of Trade follows: No trading in wheat. Corn Open. High. Low. Close. June 140; 136V'3 137 July 141 142 139 139 OatsMay 73 76 ,74 75 July 66 67 66 66 Lard July 24.60 24.67 24.50 24.50 Sept. ..... 24.97 24.97- 24.82 24.82 TOLEDO. O., May 23. Wheat No. 1 red, $2.20. Clover seed Prime cah. $18.25; Oct., $14.15. Alsike Prime cash, $15.25. Timothy Prime cash, $3.75; Sept. $4.35; Oct., $4.05; Dec, $4.15; March, $4.22 1-2. CHICAGO. May 23. Corn, No. 2 yellow. $1.76; No. 3 yellow, $1.50 1.70; No. 4 yellow, $1.45. Oats No. white, 74 l-275 6-8; Standard, 76 l-277 1-4. Pork, nominal. Ribs, $21.8022.42. Lard, $24.5024.55. CINCINNATI, O., May 23. WheatLocal prices of wheat are computed on the zone basis of $2.24 Baltimore for No. 2 red, less 1 c per bushel, less the export rate from point of shipment, plus the local rate from points of shipment in Cincinnati.

Corn No. 3 white, $1.65 l.f 5; No. 4 white. $1.451.60; No. 3 yellow, $1.401.50. , Ear Corn White, $101.55; yellow, $101.40; mixed. $11.40. Oats No. 2 white, 76y277c; No. 2 mixed, 731a74c.

Hogs Receipts 1,000, easier; heavy, $18.40018.50; mixed $18.75 18.90; Yorkers and light Yorkers $18.85 $18.90; pigs $18.75; roughs $16.25 $16.51); stags $12.00013.00. Sheep and Lambs Receipts 2,400; steady. Lambs, $11017.75; others unchanged. .

PRODUCE MARKET

CHICAGO, May 23. Butter Market, unchanged. Eggs Receipts, 20,474; market, lower; firsts, 30 1-2 32c; lowest. 28c. Live poultry Market, lower; fowls, 26 1-2. Potato market, higher; receipts, 14 cars. Wisconsin, Michigan, Minnesota, bulk, $1.00 1.10; do sacks, $1.1501.25.

NEW YORK STOCK LIST

NEW YORK, May 23. The closing quotations on the stock exchange were: American Can 47. American Locomotive 66. American Beet Sugar 73. American Smelter 81. Anaconda 46. Atchison, 85c. Bethlehem Steel, bid S6. Canadian Pacific 145. Chesapeake & Ohio 57. Great Northern Pfd. 88. New York Central 71. No. Pacific 85. So. Pacific 84. Pennsylvania 43. U. S. Steel Cgm. 109.

LOCAL QUOTATIONS

(Corrected Daily by Omer G. Whelan) Paying Oats, 70c; ear corn, $1.35 01.50; 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 Dally by Eggemeyefs) SELLING PRICE

LIVE STOCK PRICES

INDIANAPOLIS. May 23. Hogs Receipts, 7.500; steady. Cattle Receipts, 1.100; slow. Calves Receipts, 600; lower. Sheep Receipts, 50; steady. Steers Prime corn fed steers, 1.300 and up, $16.50017.25; good to choice steers. 1.300 and up, $16.25017.00; up. $15.75016.25;good to choice steers to medium steers. 1,150 to 1.200, J15.5O016.OO; good to choice steers, 600 to 1.000 lbs.. $13.50014.25; fair to medium yearlings, $9.75 0 12.00. Heifers and Cows Goou to choice heifers, $11.500 14.50; common to fair hoifers? $9.00010.25; fair to medium cows, $9.50010.25; canners and cut, $7.5009.25. Bulls and Calves Good to prime export bulls. $12.00012.50; good to choice butcher bulls. $11.00012.00; common to fair bulls, $9.00010.75; common to best veal calves, $9.50 $13.75; 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. Stackers and Feeding Cattle Good to choice steers, 700 pounds and up. $11.00 012.50; common to fair steers, uuder 700 pounds, $10.00011.00; good to choice tteers, under 700 pounds, $10.50012.00; common to fair steers, under 700 pounds, $9.00010.50; medium to good heifers. $8.50010.00; medium to good feeding cows, $8,000 P.50; springers, $S. 0009.50. Hogs Best heavies. $17.85017.90; medium and mixed, $17.85017.90; good to choice lights. $17.90018.00; common to medium lights, $17,850

17.90; rough and packers, $15,500 16.50; light pigs. $15.00016.25; light pigs, $15.00017.25; bulk of best hogs. $I7.850 J7.9O; best pigs, $17.50018.00. Sheep and Lambs Good to choice yearlings, $t5.0018 0o: common to fair yearlings, $12.50013.75; good to choice wool sheep, $14.00016.00; bucks. 100 pounds. $10.00011.00; good tM choice breeding ewes, $14,000 10.00; common to medium spring lambs, $14015.75; good to choice wool lambs, $16.00018.00.

Onions, yellow, $1.75 0 2.00 per 100 lbs.; white $1.75 0 2.00 per 100-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,

i 5c lb.; green beans, 15c lb; catrots, 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 i 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 bunhea 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, 100 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. PRODUCE (Buying) Butter. 28c; eggs 27c; potatoes 75c; chickens 20c.

CINCINNATI. May 23. Hogs Receipts, 3,900; market steady; pigs and lights, 600; stags, slow. Calves Market slow. Sheep Receipts, 200; market strong; $6.000 $13.00; lambs, market slow, $12.00016.75. PITTSBURGH. Pa.. May 23. Hogs Receipts 2,500; market, lower; heavies, $17.9O018.OO;heavy Yorkers, $18.700 18.75; light Yorkers. $18.70 18.80; pigs. $18.80018.90. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 250; market steady; top sheep, $14.25; top lambs. $17.25. Calves Receipts, foO; ararket. higher; top, $15.25. CHICAGO. May 23 Hogs, receipts 33.000; market slow; bulk of sales $17.35017.75; lights $17.35017.80; mixed $17.100 17.80; heavy 16.40 17.60; rough 16.40016.75. Pigs $14.75 017.45. Cattle Receipts 122,000; market weak. Steers $10.40017.50; stockers and feeders $9.250 13.20; cows and heifers $7.25014.75; calves $8014.00. Sheep Receipts 11,000. market steady. Sheep $9.75014.75; lambs $13.25016.50. EAST BUFFALO. N. Y., May 23. iCattle Receipts 126. steady. Calves Receipts 200, strong. $7.00016.00.

GENERAL MERCHANDISE. Butter Creamery whole milk extra 46; centralized extra, 44c; do first, 41; do seconds. 40; fancy dairy, 34; packing stock No. 1, 28c, No. 2, 24cEsgs Prime firsts (loss off), 30c; firsts, 29 c; ordinary firsts, 27c; seconds, 27c; goose eggs, 60c; duck eggs, 35c. Poultry Broilers under 2 lbs.; 450 50c; fryers over 2 lbs., 30c; roosters, 18s; culls. 10s; white ducks, 3 lbs. and over, 23c: colored do 30c; geese, choice full feather, 20c; do medium, 18c; guineas. $6 per dozen. Apples Pippins, $5,500 $6 per brl.; Ben Davis, $4.5005.50; Ganos,$505.5O per brl; Winesaps, $6.5007.00. Beets Home-grown, $101.25 per bushel; Florida, $2.2502.50 per crate. Onions Yellow, $1.7502 per 100-lb sack; Texas crystal white, $202.25 per crate; Spanish, $101.25 per crate. Potatoes Wisconsin, $1.4001.45 per 100-lb sack; Florida, $2.5004 per brl. Tomatoes Florida, $3.7504.50 per crate. Sweet Potatoes Genuine Jersey seed, $2.

JUNK (Prices paid by Sam Jaffe) No. 1 rubber boots and shoes. 7c per lb.; No. 2 rubber boots an:! shoes, 10 4c per lb.; automobile tires, 4c per lb.; inner tubes, 8016c per lb.; bicycle tires. 3c per lb.; buggy tires, 3 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.

INSURANCE IS PROVIDED

(By Associated Press.) WASHINGTON, May 23. Government insurance of Dutch ships taken over by the United States is provided in a bill approved by the house. It extends the ship insurance law to the vessels of all friendly or neutral nations. ,

BASS ARE "TRANSFERRED"

Several thousand small bass have been removed from the ponds south of Richmond which belong to the Wayne County Fish and Game association, and transferred to Price's pond on the National road. When these bass grow to a large enough size to "take care of themselves," they will be' transferred to the various streams and rivers In the county. This probably will be done next fall.

MAY MAKE DIRECT APPLICATION FOR ALL WAR CONTRACTS

The names and addresses of men who are instrumental in awarding government contracts to manufacturers, have been listed at the Commercial club in order that Richmond manufacturers may apply for contracts directly to the different departments. Under a present arrangement Richmond manufacturers may obtain contracts through co-operation with the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce, but several are desiring to make the application directly to the men in charge. The divisions listed here are: War department, cantonment construction, remount division, carriage division, small arms division, gun division and equipment division; quartermasters department, supplies division, transportation division, cantonment construction and repair and cemeterial division; navy, bureau of supplies, surpchasing offices of the war shipping board, and purchasing commission of the allied foreign powers.

DTOLJNLIND1 Preaching services at the Friends and M. E. churches next Sunday morning at 10:30, at U. B. church at 10:30 a. m. and 7:15 p. m. Union Christian Endeavor at 6 p. m Mrs. Jennie Stant of Elwood, Ind., spent last week with her sister Mrs. Elizabeth Schuneman and family Mrs. Helen Finch Gray of Pittsburg, Pa., came to attend the alumni and is spending a few days with her cousin, Mrs. John Champ, and calling on old friends. . . ..Mrs. Rachel Sarver and daughter. Jessie spent Sunday in Pershing with relatives . .. .Mrs. Lessie Beard returned home Sunday evening after several months stay in California and other western states Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bradway of Indianapolis attended the alumni here Saturday evening and spent Sunday with Mrs. Alice Elliott and daughter .Robert Lanning of Akron, Ohio, spent from Thursday until Sunday with his mother and other relatives .Harvey Burr and son Miriam of Richmond, spent Sunday with Fred Clifford and family .Mr. Revalee and family motored to Anderson Sunday and spent the day with relatives.. . . .John Fackler of Pittsburg, Pa., spent Saturday and Sunday with his parents, Dr. and Mrs. V. N. Fackler Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Wilson, of Seattle, Wash, came to attend the alumni and spent Sunday calling on old friends. The Dublin high alumni banquet was held at the I. O- O. F. hall Saturday evening. There were about. 125 present and many from a distance who had not- been here for several years. A nice social time was enjoyed by all Mrs. Alice Letner has returned home from a visft with her children at Liberty, Ind Orlando Wisseler and family spent from Friday until Sunday with his parents near Bentonville Lieutenant Forest McKee and wife of Camp Custer, Battlecreek, Mich., came last Thursday for a ten days' furlough, with his parents, Dr. and Mrs. C. E. McKee... Those from here attended the convention of Federation of clubs which was held at Greenfield Tuesday and Wednesday of last week are: Mrs. Julia Morgan and Mrs. Margaret Demaree were delegates, others were Mrs. Lillie Tweedy, Mrs. Mary Stewart, Mrs. Ella Hiatt, Mrs. Marabel Morris, Mrs. Jennie Smalley, Mrs. Alcinda Bradway and Mrs. Eva Beeson. .Raymond Sehueneman left Monday for Columbus, O., to answer his country's call ....Mr. and. Mrs. Charles Cox entertained at dinner Sunday Mrs. Elizabeth Nuss and family of Richmond, Ed Cox and family of near Milton and Hubert Cox of Michigan Mrs. Frank Mitchell and children returned to their home in Liberty Monday, after a few, days' visit with her mother, Mrs. Mary Funk. The Union Christian Endeavor will have the monthly social at the home of Hr. and Mrs. Ralph Champ Saturday evening. May 25.....Miss Lora Henly left Monday for Fremont, Ind., for an indefinite visit with her brother Alvin and family.. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Gilmorc and daughter Jane, Mrs. J. F. Nation of Muncie, Mrs. Kate Jay of Centerville. Mrs. Lydla Huddleston and Miss Lillian VanBuskirk of Cambridge City spent Sunday with Mrs. Sarah Houren and daughter Lillian. They brought well filled baskets so It would not cause Mrs. Houren, who is in very poor health, any extra work. A good time was enjoyed by all and it is a day long to be remembered... Mrs. Frank Huddleston and daughter Emma returned home Friday after a few days' visit with Richmond rela

tives. .. .Ralph and Robert Moore accompanied Miss Mary Sills of Milton to Connersville last Thursday. .. Frank Clark and family, north of Cambridge City, spent Sunday afternoon with their aunt, Mrs. Elizabeth Wallace, and she' accompanied them home and stayed until Tuesday evening Mrs. Joseph Norris passed away at her home south of town, Monday morning after several months' illness. Funeral was held Wednesday at Bentonville. .....Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Hall spent Sunday with Glen Golay and family, near South Salem.

Indianapolis Representative Sales H03S . 2 235 ' $15.50 4 153 16.00 31 202 17.85 71 169 18.00 STEERS 4 547 $12.00 45 843 13.60 2 1110 15.25 HEIFERS 3 386 $ 9.00 2 490 10.25 5 636 12.50 1 820 14.00 COWS 3 653 $ 7.50 5 826 18.50 4 ..1010 10.25 2 1295 13.00 BULLS 2 515 $ 825 1 -..-.780 9.00 1 i 1470 10.50 1 .1260 11.50 - CALVES 1 ..310 $ 8.00 2 435 9.5) 9 ................. ..136 12.50 3 ..........160 14.00

Rev. and Mrs. Leslie Bond attended quarterly meeting at Ludlow Falls and West Branch last Thursday and Friday. Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Hoffman were shopping In Richmond last Thursday Miss Alice Jones visited with friends In Hagerstown from Friday until Monday Misses Norma Herbst and Lora Henly came home Friday for their summer vacation Mr. Roy Hazelrigg and family. Mr. William Clifton and family, Mr. Ozro Thompson and family, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. James Thompson .George Byba, jr., and sister, Lillian, spent Sunday in Lewisville with their aunt, Mrs. Berger and family...,. Mr. Charles Morris of Indianapolis, called on friends here Saturday evening. He spent Sunday in Cambridge City with his son and family.... '.Mrs. G. Ev Moore and son Ray, were shopping In Richmond Friday Mr. Albert Swayne and daughter of Fountain City spent one day last week with Rev. and Mrs. Bond.

Jesse Nail, Wayne Man, is Buried at New Paris

NEW PARIS, O., May 23. The funeral of Jesse Null, 69 years old, who died at his home two miles east of Camden, was held Sunday afternoon at the New Paris Methodist church. The Rev. C W. Hoeffef of Richmond was in chaige of the services. Burial was in Spring Lawn cemetery. Mr. Null was born in Wayne county, near Richmond. He had been a resident of New Paris for several years. Surviving are his mother, his widow, six sons and four daughters, and twenty-three grandchildren and three great grandchildren. A brother and sister also survive. Mrs. Augusta Morrison died at her home in Paris, 111., following an operation. Mr. and Mrs. Morrison resided on the Morrison farm north of New Paris six years ago, and are well known here. Mrs. Morrison was 30 years old. She leaves her husband, Frank Morrison. Mr. and Mrs. C. Z. Morrison, parents of Frank Morrison, Lon Morrison, M. and Mrs. Edgar Morrison and T. L. Bartlett attended the funeral services at Paris, 111., Sunday.

14 N. P.H. S. PUPILS RECEIVE DIPLOMAS

NEW PARIS. O., May 23. Fourteen pupils were graduated from the New Paris high school at the annual commencement exercises held Thursday evening in the high school auditorium. O. T. Corson of Columbus, O., was the

speaker. He urged patriotism and

service and pointed out tne obligations that would be assumed by the members of the class. Mr. Corson is a former Preble county resident

The class members, with the faculty.

principal, superintendent and speaker

for the evening occupied the platfcrm which was decorated with a large American flag, presented the school by

the senior class. The Rev. D. S. Ewry

gave the invocation and the Rev.

George F. Crites the benediction. Miss

Zelma Nunnamaker presented the di

plomas, and Superintendent C. R. Coblentz introduced the speaker. Miss

Janice Hahn gave the class history, Miss Evelyn Northrup the class poem and LeRoy Arnold the class oration.

Hicks orchestra of Richmond furnish

ed the musical numbers. Mrs. Irvin Kimmel and daughter Angela attended the closing session of

the national Dunkard meeting, east of

Covington, O., Tuesday.

AMERICAN ARMY

Continued From Page One. complain that we have not done more, yet we have done in one year, twice as much as they thought we could do in two ye"ars. "The army is growing so rapidly and its needs are so urgent that the efforts heretofore made will be small, in comparison with those of the next twelve months. The army will probably have between 4,000,000 and 5,00,000 men before the end of the next fiscal year. "Our military law has been amended, giving the president authrity to call additional increments of men from time to time, as needed. It has also been amended to permit him to register and classify all men that reach the age of 21 years. We now have 2,000,000 men in the army. 20,000,000 in Seven Years. "The men between the ages of 21 and 31 years in 1917 have been classified, and there remains in class 1 approximately 2,000,C00 men physically fit. not called. The class of 1918, which will be registered this summer, will , add another million, making a grand total of 5,000,000, without calling classes 2, 3, 4 or 5, containing nearly 6,000,000. and without calling the boys from 18 to 21, 3,000,000 more. "If the war last3 until 1924 there will be added 6,000,C00 more men. The potential man power of America, for a seven year war, therefore, may be conservatively estimated at 20,000,000 fighting men of recognized military age this out of a population of 125,-000,000."

DRY GOODS MEN TO CONVENE IN CAPITAL JUNE 11

Will Be "War Convention" Many Dealers Are on the Program. The fourth annual convention of the Indiana Retail Dry Goods association and one which promises to be the most interesting of the conventions held by this body will be held in Indianapolis, Tuesday, June 11. The convention is aptly termed a war convention; probably no line of business is affected to so great an extent by the war conditions as is the dry goods trade. The program of the convention has therefore been arranged to suit the occasion, every subject on it being a subject of direct interest to retail dry goods and ready-to-wear dealers. The subjects will be handled by the members themselves, there being no professional orators as is usually the case in conventions, no entertainment but the whole day and evening will be given over to a discussion and consideration of questions pertinent to the retail dry goods trade. Among the subjects to be considered are "Trade Acceptances," "Abolishing The Trade Discount by the Manufacturer," "How To Mark Merchandise Under Present Conditions," "The Self Serve Idea in Merchandising," "Conserving Advertising" and "How Merchandise Should Be Bought in the Future." These subjects will be handled by

well known dry goods and ready-to-wear dealers in the state and will be followed by discussion by the entire membership. j The evening session of the convention will be given over to a question box at which session all questions which have been submitted for answer will be read and asnwered by the dry goods men present. The questions submitted, will of course have to do with the dry goods and ready-to-wear trade and will cover every phase of tnat business. The question box conducted by the association at its previous conventions have been unusually successful as through the interchange of ideas, as conducted by the question box, merchants are enabled to learn from their fellow merchants how certain perplexing problems in the dry goods and suit trade are solved, thus offering them an opportunity to solve them in the same manner. The formal announcement of the convention states that all dry goods men throughout Indiana are invited to attend.

PROF. BRADFORD QUITS

OXFORD, O.. May 23 Prof. J. E. Bradford, of the department of history, Miami university, last night resigned as a member of the village council There has been a question ever since Prof. Bradford was elected last fall as to whether heywas eligible to serve in council, in view of the fact that he was an employe of the State.

PERSHING VETERAN TO BOOST WAR CHEST AT OXFORD, O.

OXFORD, O., May 23. Corporal Cosgrove, of the 18th U.' S. Infantry, one of the fifty soldiers sent to America by General Pershing to assist in the Liberty Bond campaign, will speak in , the interests of the war chest In the west park Friday afternoon at 4 o'clock.

Palladium Want Ads Pay.

NOTICE On Friday and Saturday all goods will be sold for 10, 15 and 25c at the Closing Out Sale of THE LINEN STORE. Ella Haskett

Church Notice The brotherhood class of First M. E. church will entertain the members of Grand Army Post this evening. All members of class are requested to attend.

NOTICE ALL TRUCK DRIVERS TAXI CAB DRIVERS AND CHAUFFEURS There will be a meeting at Carpenters Union Hall over LukerTs drug store at 626J2 Main street. We will discuss ways and means of bettering our working conditions. Don't wait for a future call because there will be none. Friday Night, 8 : 00 P. M., May 24th

May Send Delegates to War Economy Meeting The Richmond Commercial club has received an invitation to attend the conference on war economy to be held in New York June 5 and 6 under the direction of the Academy of Political Science and the Bureau of Municipal Research. The question of civic economy in war times will receive the attention of the conference. Members of the Commercial club, who wish to attend the conference may notify Secretary Ullman, and receive appointment as accredited delegates.

WILL SINK NEW WELLS

OXFORD, O., May 23. Oxford's water supply having been far from satisfactory for several months, council will expend several thousand dollars in sinking new wells and overhauling the pumps.

Summer Comfort

is enjoyed only when your attire is of the sort that will feel cool and comfortable un- ' der any conditions. We have in stock a line of shoes that will do just this thing. Pumps, Oxfords and White Canvass Dress and Sport Shoes that all rank up there with our quality policy, but they are very reasonable in price.

Have you given your part of the Red Cross War Fund

Will Ask Everybody to Give to Red Cross Friday Friday is "free-for-all" day in the Red Cross campaign, and '.he solicitors are expecting to reach all persons who have not contributed. If there are any persons who wish to contribute, and are afraid they will not be reached by the committee, they are asked to call the war fund headquarters, telephone 1310, before Friday nooa and anangements will be mc.de to obtain the subscription.

REV. LEWIS ULMER TO GIVE PATRIOTIC TALK AT CHESTER

CHESTER. May 23. Rev. Lewis Ulmer, pastor of the Chester and Middleboro Methodist churches, will make a patriotic address at Goshen Sunday afternoon. The Memorial Day celebration is to be held in Goshen next Sunday.

MEMORIAL SERVICES AT OXFORD.

OXFORD, O., May 23. Rev. J. M. Work will deliver the address on Memorial Day. The services will be held in the United Presbyterian church, and the Boy Scouts will escort the members of Millikin Post, G. A. R., from their hall to the church.

ffiim

"I WILL SAVE YOU AT LEAST

Off C?

c

ON YOUR CLOTHES AND

FURNISHINGS"--SoI FrankeL

All Our

i

no

Possess the Ear Marks of the Best Custom Makes

They're remarkably good looking in the real sense of the words; and have the kind of stuff behind them that will keep them so as long as a day's wear can be gotten out of their sturdy fabrics. They're In all up-to-date styles, cut upon extreme and conservative lines. Sizes to fit every man no matter how tall or how short, how thin or how stout, he may be. At the following purse-loosening prices.

12. OO to $25.00

These are Straw Hat Days Get yours now. We have just C the style and size you want, at 1c

i.OO up

820 Main Street

f

a xi

4 rJ it y w

s, uuu Av- nnn

fill. HUM

' llll I inn

1DI7