Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 219, 26 July 1918 — Page 10
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM,
MARKETS!
BATTLE CAUSE OF FRESH DECLINES (Br Associated Press CHICAGO. July 26 Fresh successes for the entente allies brought about new declines today in the corn market. Announcement of the capture of Oulchy in particular resulted In new accessions to the selling side of the market, and led to a sharp break. Favorable weather and slightly enlarged offerings to arrive counted also against the bulls. Opening prices, which ranged from l-8c off to l-4c advance, with August $1.52 and September 152 1-2 to 152 7-8, were followed by a moderate upturn, and then a decided set back qjl around. Assertions that some export business had been done in oats kept that cereal comparatively steady. Within narrow limits, however, prices sympathized with the changes In corn. After opening l-8c down to l-4c advance, the market scored slight gains, and then fell below yesterday's finish. Provisions went down grade with hogs and corn. Business lacked volume. GRAIN QUOTATIONS CHICAGO GRAIN RANGE CHICAGO, July 26. The range of futures on the Chicago Board oi Trade follows: No trading in wheat. Corn
Open High Low Close 152 153 150 152 152 154 151?4 153 Oats . 69 70 68 69 68 69 68 69 Lard 26.40 26.40 26.30 26.32 26.25 26.25
Aug. Sept Aug. SepL July Sept. CHICAGO, July 26. Corn No. 2 yellow. $1.63; No. 3 yellow, $1.67 1.70; No. 4 yellow. $1.57 1.60. Oats No. 3 white, 7677c; standard, 7677c. Pork Nominal: Ribs, $23.87026.50; Lard, $26.25026.40. TOLEDO. O.. July 26. Cloverseed Prime cash $16.75, Oct. $15.50, Dec, $15.30.Mar. $15.65. Alsike Oct. $14.10. Timothy Prime cash $4.35, Sept., $4.90, Oct. $4.55, Dec. $4.66, March, $4.15, Apr. $4.75. CINCINNATI, July 26. Wheat The price basis for No. 2 red winter wheat will be 3c a bushel below No. 1; No. 3 will be below No. 2. Grades below No. 3 will be dealt in on samples. No. 1 red winter .track, $2.2102.24; No. 3 red winter, track. $2.2002.23; No. 2 red winter, track, 2.1802.21. Officially reported sales, 28 cars. Corn No. 2 white, $1.9502.00; No. 3 white, $1.9001.95; No. 4 white, $1.80 01.85; No. 2 yellow, $1.7001.75; No. 3 yellow. $1.6501.70; No. 4 yellow, $1.6001.65; No. 2 mixed. $1.65 01.70. Ear Corn White, $1.8501.95; yellow, $1.6501.70; mixed, $1.6001.65. LIVE STOCK PRICES INDIANAPOLIS. July 26. Hogs Receipts, 6.500; active. Cattle Receipts, S00; slow and lower. Calves Receipts, 450, steady. Sheep Receipts, 450; steady. Steers Pi:n-t ror-. red steers. 1.300 and up, $17.00017.85; good to choice steers, 1,300 and up. $16.50 0 17 25; good to choice 3teers, 1,15') to 1,200. $15.00016.00: good to choice steers, DOC to 1,000 lbs.. $13.00015.00; fair to irFrfium yearlings, $9.75012.00. Heifers and Cows Good to choice heifers, $11.50014.00; common to fair heifers, $SCO0 10.00; good to choice cows, $10.00012.00; fair to medium, $10.25011.25; canners and cutters, ?6.508.50. Hulls and Calves- 3ood to prime export bulls, $10.00011.00; good to choice butcher bulls, $9.500110; common to fair bulls, $9.25; common to best veal calves, $11015; common to best heavy calves, $7.00012.00; stock calves, 250 to 450 pounds, $10011.50; good to choice lights, $16. lu 16.15. Stockers nud Feeding Cattle Good to choice steers. 700 pounds and up, $11.00012.00; common to fair steers, under 700 pounds, $10.00011.00; good to choice Eteeis, under 700 pounda. $11.00012.00; common to fair steers, under 700 pounds, $9.00010.50; medium to good heifers, $8.50010.00; Medium to good feeding cows, $8,000 f.fiO; springers, $S.OO 09.50. Hogs Best heavies, $18.60018.80 medium and mixed, $18.60018.90; good to choice lights, $18.90019.00; common to medium lights, $18,800 18.90; roughs und packers, $17.25; light pigs, $18.00; bulk of sales, $18.60 018.90; best pigs, $18.25018.50 common to choice, $16.30016.75. Sheep and Lam us Good to choice yearlings, $14.50; common to fair yearlings, $11.00013.75; good to choice sheep. $12.00; bucks. 100 pounds, $9.00010.00; good to choice breeding ewes, $14.00015.00; good to choice spring lambs. $16.50017; good to choice wool lambs, $16.00019.00; common to medium lambs, $14,000 16 75. PITTSBURGH, Pa.. July 26 Hogs Receipts 1000; market higher; heavies $19.25019.40; heavy Yorkers, light Yorkers and pigs, $19.90020.00. Sheep and Lambs Receipts 1,000; market steady; top sheep $12 00; top lambs $16.50. Calves Receipts 100; Bteady market; top $17.00. CINCINNATI. July 26. Hogs Receipts, 4.000; market slow; shippers and butchers, 18.60018.85; common to choice. 13.00016,25; pigs and lights, $17.00018.85; stags, $11.00 0 13.50. Cattle Receipts, 1.600; market, steady. Calves Market steady. Sheep Receipts. 3,300; market steady. Lambs Market steady. U. S. Bureau of Markets, Chicago, July 26 Hogs Receipts, 18,000; market
slow, mostly 15 to 20c lower than yesterday's average: bulk of sales $17.85 018.75; lights J18.6018.85; butchers, $18.4518.75; packing $17.50(18.35; rough $17.20017.45; pigs $17.2518. Cattle Receipts 8,000; beef steers steady; . butchers and cattle dull; salves steady; beef cattle, good, choice and prime M7.1518.45; common and medium, $17.4018.20; Btockers and feeders, good, choice and prime, $10 $13; cows and heifers. $7.5014.25:
canners and cutters, $6.257 50: veal calves, good and choice. $6.50(517.25. Sheep Receipts 11,000; steady market. EAST BUFFALO. N. Y., July 26 Cattle Receipts 550, easier. Calves Receipts 900; steady; $7.0015.00. Hogs Receipts 1,600; slow and easier; heavy S19.5019.75; mixed, $19.75 19.80; Yorkers, light Yorkers and pigs, $19.75(319.90; roughs $17.23 17.50; stags Jll.0013.00. Sheep and Lambs Receipts 400; slow and easier; lambs $14.0017.00; yearlings $10.00015.00; others are unchanged. PRODUCE MARKET CHICAGO. July 26. Butter Market Unchanged. Eggs Receipts 9,273 cases; market unchanged. Live Poultry Market higher; fowls, 28; springs 32033. Potato Market Unchanged; ceipts, 22 cars. reNEW YORK STOCK LIST NEW YORK STOCK LIST NEW YORK, July 26. The closing quotations on the stock exchange were: American Can, 47 1-2. American Locomotive, 67 1-4. American Beet Sugar, 68. American Smelter, 78 3-4. Anaconda. 56 3-8. Atchison. 85 1-2. Bethlehem Steel. 83 1-2. Canadian Pacific, 151 1-4. Chesapeake and Ohio, 56 1-4. Great Northern, pfd. 91. New York Central. 71 3-4. Northern Pacific, 87 3-4. Southern Pacific, 84. Pennsylvania. 44 1-8. U. S. Steel Com, 107 7-8. , LOCAL QUOTATIONS (Corrected Daily by Oriier G. Whelan) Paying Oats, 65c; ear corn, $1.60; rye, $1.35; straw, $6.00 a ton. Selling Cotton seed meal. $58.50 a ton, $3.00 a cwt.; tankage, $92.50 a ton, $1.75 a cwt; oil meal, $63.50 a ton, $3.25 a cwt. FRUIT & VEGETABLES (Corrected Dally by Eggemeyer') SELLING PRICED VEGETABLES Wax beans, rw ceaia Der pound; asparagus, 5c bunch, new cabbage, 5c pound; green beans, 5c pound; spring carrots, & cents per bunch; spring beets, 5c bunch; cauliflower. 15 0 25c head; cucumbers. 10c; egg plants 20025c; kohlrabi, 10c bunch, leaf lettuce, 15c per lb.; bead lettuce, trimmed, 30c a povyd; untrimmed, 20c a lb.; leak, 10c bunch; onions, new Burmudas. 8c lb.; young onions. 6c bunch; 3 for 10c; oyster plant, 5 cents bunch; parsley, 6c bunch; mangoes, 2 for 5c; radishes, 5c bunch; spinach, 15c lb.; home grown tomatoes, 15c lb.; turnips, new, 8c lb.; water cress, 5c per bunch; artichokes, 20c each; celery. 8. 10 and 15c bunch; potatoes, old. $2.00 per bushel; rhubarb, 3 bunches. 10c; green peas. 15c pound; Swiss Chard, 1 5c bunch; Shives. 10c bunch: new potatoes. 75c peck; green corn, home grown, 40c dozen. FRUITS Calif, cherries, 60c lb.; watermelons $1 each; peaches. 10c lb.; sour cherries, 25c qt.; apples, old, 5c each; grape fruit, 10015c; lemons 35 cents per doz.; bananas, 10c lb.; limes, 50c per doz.; oranges, 40c to 60c doz.; pineapples, 30c each; new apples, 12c lb.; red raspberries, 30c quart; berries, 40c a quart; dewberries, 30c a quart; gooseberries, 18c per quart; black raspberries, 30c a quart; hucklecurrants, 30c quart; apricots, 25c a pound; Cal. Canteloupes, 15020c each; cocosnuts, 15c each; California plums, 20c pound; Goose plums, 15c quart; Honey Dew melons, 60c each. MISCELLANEOUS Eggs; 40c per dozen; butter, creamery, 63c; country, 42c per pound. PRODUCE (Buying) Butter, 32c; eggs, 32c; old chickens, 20c; frys, 35c lb. GENERAL MERCHANDISE CINCINNATI, Ohio, July 26. Butter Creamery whom milk extra, 47c; centralized extra, 45 c; do firsts, 42c; do seconds, 41c; fancy dairy, SSc; packing stock. No. 1, 32c; No. 2, 29c. Eggs Prime firsts (loss off). 37c; first, 36c; ordinary first, 33c; seconds, 30c; duck eggs, 36c. Poultry Broilers 1 lbs. and over, 33c; do under 1 lbs., 30c; fowls 4 lbs. and over, 26c; do under 4 lbs., 26c; roosters, 19c; hen turkeys, 8 lbs. and over, 29c; toms 10 lbs. and over, 29c; culls, 10c; white spring ducks. 2 lbs. and over, 26c; colored do, 24c; white ducks, old, 3 lbs and over, 25c; cojored do, 23c; geese, choice full feather, 14c; do medium, 12c; guineas, $6 per dozen. New Apples Transparent, $6.00 0 $7.00 per bbl.; Early Harvest, $6,000 $7.00 per bbl.; Astrican, $1.2501.50 per crate; home grown, $1.5002.50, per hamper. Onions Texas No. 1 yellow, $1,400 $1.50 per crate; Bermuda white, $1.75 02.00 per crate; home grown, $1,400 $1.60 per bu. Potatoes Shipped, red, $3.5003.75; do white, $3.2503.50 per bbl.; homegrown, $3.7504.00. Tomatoes home grown, 50c $1.00 per bushel. JUNK (Prices paid by Sam Jaffe) No. 1 rubber boots and shoes. 7c per lb.; No. 2 rubber boots am! shoes, 10 4c per lb.; automobile tires, 4c per lb.; inner tubes, 816c per lb.; bicycle tires, 2c per lb.; buggy tires. 304c
MOB RIOTS ARE Continued From Page One. 7 lynchers of her armies. Lynchers emulate her disgraceful example. I, for my part, am anxious to see every community in America rise above that level, with pride and a fixed resolution which no man nor set of men can afford to despise. "We proudly claim to be the champions of democracy. If we really are, indeed and in trait, let us see to it that we do not discredit our own. I say plainly that every American who takes part in the action of a mob or
i gives any sort of countenance is no ltrue son of this great democracy, but its betrayer, and does more to dis credit her by that Bingle disloyalty to her standards of law and of right than the words of her statesmen or the sacrifices of her heroic boys in the trenches can do to make suffering , peoples believe her to be their saviour. How shall we commend democracy to the acceptance of other peoples, if we disgrace our own by proving that it is, after all, no protection to the weak? Every mob contributes to German lies about the United States what her most gifted liars cannot improve upon by the way of calumny. They can at least say that such things cannot happen in Germany except in times of revolution, when law is swept away! Must Support Right. "I, therefore, very earnestly and solemnly beg that the governors of all the states, the law offices of every community and above all. the men and women of every community in the United States, all who revere America and wish to keep her name without stain or reproach, will co-operate not passively merely, but actively and watchfully to make an end of this i disgraceful evil. It cannot live where the community does not countenance it. "I have called upon the nation to put its great energy into this war and it has responded responded with a spirit and a genfus for action that has thrilled the world. I now call upon it, upon its men and women everywhere, to see to it that its laws are kept inviolable, its fame untarnished. Let us show our utter contempt for the things that have made this war hideous among the wars of history, by showing how those who love liberty and right and justice and are willing to lay down their lives for them upon foreign fields, stand already also to illustrate to all mankind their loyal ty to the things at home which they ' wish to see established everywhere i as a blessing -and protection to the j peoples who have never known the privileges of liberty and self-govern ment "I cannot ever accept any man as a champion of libertv. either for our selves or for the world, who does not reverence and obey the laws of our own beloved land, whose laws we ourselves have made. He has adopted the standards of the enemies of his country, whom he affects to despise. "WOODROW WILSON." 2 MORE TOWNS Continued From Page One.
"ar ""'".says mat n.ngiana is not me unuea; the Ourcq to Dormans. The forests of j states and that he will be glad to re-1 Fere and Ris are being cleared of the reive letter frnm all h-, friends Mr. I
stubbornly resisting enemy who is tak-1 ing advantage of every natural obstacle in attempting to hold back the alIlesStrike Back With Vigor. Heavily reinforced, the Germans are ' striking back with great vigor all along the front as well as on the east-1
ern side of the pocket. They have not ; Col., and Jacob Keopple of Rockford, been able to hold the allies from ad- j Ohio, are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Tom vancing although their resistance has I Bice Leo Smith and Adolph Bastiffened constantly. j ker are home from the Great Lakes British and French troops are unoM Training Station on a 0-day furlough, ficially reported to have made an ad-1 ....Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Jones entervance of two miles toward Fismes in i tained on Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Walthe region of Vrigny and have reached i ter Jones and daughters of Covington, Gouex and Mery PremecyT which now t Ohio, and Mr. and Mrs. William Rehare the markers of the eastern side. ' merth of Troy Miss Mary Davies The gain here not only narrows the of West Elkton, is the guest of her pocket, but also places in great jeo-' cousin, Mrs. A. R. Hawley. pardy the German forces who are! Mr- anJ Mrs- 1!ie Newbern and north of the Marne in the forests west 6on and Mrs- Chalmer Denny and son
and north of Chatillon. Military observers on the battle field believe that the crown prince before he begins a general retreat with the possibility of losing a large part of his forces now south of the Vesle, will endeavor to halt the allies by launching a strong attack on a more or less wide front in the regvm of Soissons. Here, however. General Foch is protected somewhat by the river Aisne and he also holds the high ground southwest of Soissons. 70 Foe Divisions Seventy German divisions are re-1 ported to have taken part in the fight-1 ing already and the enemy losses are ! now estimated at 200,000. More than I 2o,000 prisoners have been taken bv the allies as well as 500 guns and per lb.; baled paper. 40c per hundred lbs.; country mixed rags, $2.30 pet hundred lbs.; mixed iron, $1.00 per hundred lbs.; heavy brass copper from 13018c per lb. Indianapolis Representative Sales HOGS 270 $16.50 348 17.23 136 18.50 226 18.70 188 1S.95 STEEHV456 $ 8.00 890 11.00 940 13.50 1060 16.25 HEIFERS 503 $ 8.25 571 8.75 657 10.75 930 13.00 COWS 915 $ 6.75 965 9.00 1980 9.75 1225 12.50 BULLS S50 $ 8.25 680 8.00 990 8.50 1215 9.50 CALVES 240 $ 8.00 201 11.50 170 14.03 115 14.50 2 7 11 52 26 3 2 5 2 6 10 4 4 4 16 2 11 24 3
RECREATION
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Are you registering: 100 efficiency? Nothing less should satisfy you. Your nation yes, the world, expects that of each and every one these days. If you are fallinsr short of what you laiow you are capable of doine. stop and take stock of yourself. Do you find yourself crowded by the day's duties and too lagged at evening time to enter en thusiastically into one of the many affairs that call you? If so, it's time to call a halt; better still, halt before you reach this stage. , Get away from your daily routine the farther away, the better. Get o far away, if possible, that no echo rf business distractions can reach you. In normal years you have deemed it NEW PARIS, 0. Mrs. Clarence Via and daughter re turned Sunday after spending a few ; days with Mr- and Mrs- M- L- Via-1 of New Madison Mr. and Mrs. C. R- Coblentz and family picnicked at j Ule" ;lmer luesoay.. .ounaay gu?sis ; X, ,u" ,la' m w , """'I iurs. xi. it. rtoumson, naries auu i Francis Robinson and Mrs. Anna Kminski, of Richmond Word had been received from Harry Roach that he has arrived safely in England. He reports a pleasant journey and says he is enjoying every minute. But he Roach is a member of the 83rd Division which left Camn Sherman on Mav 30 Trafford Bovd and Cecil White enlisted in the army Tuesday. Samuel Schlar was entertained at Cincinnati Saturday and Sunday by Mr. Chatfleld Lon Bice of Mercer countv, Joel Keopple of Denver, tt ended the Newbern reunion at the Glen Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Joe McPiierscn entertained on Sunday. Mrs. I ?.ellie Smith, Mrs. Kate Clawson, and J'.lss Phoebe Smith, of Richmond, and Mrs. Hannah Whitley Mrs. W. L. T r . 1 - . T 1 1 urn Tl rienn, airs, jomn look, Mrs. c. .. . uiarit. ana Mrs. z.eiia maii were Kuebis oi juiss oarrie w uuaiier as her guests on Sunday, Mrs. Amy Frist and Mrs. J. P. Goodrich, of Winchester, and Mrs. Dan Hecker, of Lynn Mrs. Elsie McPherson was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. P. J. McPterson on Tuesday Emmett Har1 is and Miss Hester Nelson motored to ?..resvi!le Sunday. Mrs. C. H. Harris pud daughter, returned with them. Monday evening after an extended visit there. .. .Miss Evelyn Northrop was the dinner guest of Miss Janice Hahn Sunday evening. . . .Mr. and Mrs. Emil Heerman were in Cincinnati Monday on business. Mrs. Rose Hetzler left Wednesday for a visit at Warren, Ind....Mr. and Mrs. Jo Zea entertained on" Sunday, i mr. ana Mrs. Marry Ae& ana lamny or St. Paris, Mrs. W. H. Zea of Urbana. Mr. ana Mrs. unaries tsreisrora ot Bellbrook, and Dick Stenson of Centerville. .. .Robert E. Melody, who has been eniDloved in government work at Nitro, W. Va., returned home Friday, and is seriously ill Mrs. Everett Purviance was at home over Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Howell of West Manchester, were Sunday guests thousands of machine guns. Berlin reports that all allied efforts were frustrated Wednesday. Its brief report on Thursday's fighting declares there were "vigorous local actions" between Soissons and Rheims. From Soissons to the North Sea, there has been little activity except for successful raids by tb,e British, near Albert and elsewhere. Only the artillery has been active on the other sectors in France and Italy. The Russian soviet government is facing an acute situation, Premier Lenlne' is reported to have announced. The Czecho slovak troops continue to advance along the Volga and have captured Simbirsk, . 500 miles east of Moscow and the soviet corn granary. The Czechs now hold Kazan, Simbirsk and Samara on the middle Volga and are reported to be gaining ground west of the river toward Moscow.
MAKES FOR WARTIME
imperative to take a vacation. How much more necessary is a breathing spell in these days that beur so neavily on the strength of every cittzen and especially of men of affairs. Heretofore you have tried t get as far away as your vacation period would allow often crossing the ocean. That is now out of the question, but our friendly neighbor. Canada, is maintaining all her peacei time pleasure resorts, anJ these are available to Americans because of a wide open border. One of New York's successful doctors attributes his success, in large measure, to the fact that for many years he has vacationed in the wilds of Ontario. Putting away ail thought of work, he takes his wife, a WITH THOSE IN ARMY AND NAVY This column, containing news of Richmond and Wayne county soldiers and sailors, will appear daily in the Palladium. Contributions will be welcomed. Mrs. Josephine Lichtenfels, of the Wavne anartments. has received word from her son Peter who has been witn n ,.Qt. . . . 11 lo8th Depot BrlSade- that he has been transferred to the 84th Infantry ! Division, and probably will go over ! seas soon. Frank Lichtenfels a brother, is in France now with an Infantry division, having been in the service several months. He was formerly connected with the Pennsylvania railroad office here, and later at Columbus, O. Harry Vonner, who is in the signal corps at Wilmington shipyards, is here on a seven days furlough visiting his wife and mother. Lieut. Earl Spangler, who has been home on a week's furlough, will return to Camp Dick, Dallas. Texas, the end of this week. Lieut. Spangler is in the aviation corps and received his lieutenancy about a month ago. Harry F. Minor has returned to Long Island, N. Y., after a ten days' furlough spent here with his parents at their home on North Seventeenth street. Minor is in. the aero service. LeQ jj Weiss, son of Mrs. A. 2:1 Veies. has arrived safely in Franc according to word received by mother Friday morning. I . p. . J Harvey Pride, formerly mond, but now living in Chicago, has i been accepted for military service and I will leave for a training camp the first of August. Owing to an accident which Pride sustained here several ! vear m. he haH been hi tn I into any branch of service until at this time. Pride is a nephew of Henry Gennett. Donald Hunt, son of Mr. and Mrs Edward Hunt of Easthaven avenue, is now located at Camp Crane. Allen-! town. Pa. Hunt is an ambulance driv-l fr in the medical corps and according " 0n..,t) nc. Raymond A. Williams, who has been at the Great Lakes trainmg camp , has been transferred to Hampton Roads. He is in the signal service, and expects to be sent on board a submarine chaser. "Eyes" (or the U. S. Navy Are Still in Demand The navy has issued another call for binoculars. Navy Recruiter Kienzle said Friday. Persons who are willing to loan binoculars to the navy for the duration of the war may leave them at the navy recruiting office. A number of Richmond people have already loaned glasses to the government. of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brown Mr. and Mrs. Emerson PInnick and son were in Richmond over Saturday and Sunday. .. .Miss Helen Vossmeyer of Richmond spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. William Clark Mr. and Mrs. William Mills entertained on Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Morse of Peru, and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mills and family Miss Mary Morse and A. T. Scott spent Sunday in Dayton, where they were entertained by friends at the Miami Hotel.
EFFICIENCY
canoe, a map, a camera and a frying pan, and heads into a new district each year. No matter what may be your likes or the length of your vacation, Canada can take care of you. Between the willows and orchards of Evangeline's Land in Nova Scotia, and the Big Trees of Stanley Park in British Columbia, there is spread out for vour choosing more than 3,506 miles of mountains and lakes and streams and woods and interesting cities. Canadians who have been in the war from the beginning, make no mistake about vacations; they take them regularly and thus keep fit for '.he big tasks they have ejected to return. Americans are profiting from Canada's experiences in many ways. Hun Shell ruses Are War Souvenirs The two German shell fuses, repro-
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jjjg uuueu auove, were sem oy ueuu Kicnl ard H. Habbe from France to his
.7 . . , 1 i . I - , . . . father, John F. Habbe. The upper one did not explode and was detached " ' n' ' , ""lB'u"- , 'UUIj. "u"-b1 !1ChVldUS0U,! Lieutenant Habbe' whp Jsrt Headquarters off fifteenth Held artillery, The device for regulating the time to elapse between firing and exploding is plainly visible. The fuses were on 77-milimeter shells. SUIT ON NOTE. Emma .Tones Smith filer! suit FVirtav in Circuit Court aeainst Geortre V. Xewbern and Marv E. Newbern. askinari $300 on a note. Marriage Licenses. Donald Comer Sligar, 22 years old. draftsman, and Dorothy Ellen Rodefel, 23 years old, graduate nurse. PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY 9
SATURDAY ONLY
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Blue Kid, Bronze Kid, Ivory Kid, White Kid Pumps, sizes 3J7 to VlNEW METHOD UP-STAIRS COLONIAL BLDC
HUN CHIEFS
(Continued From Page Cne.l artillery early today and were throw ing shells into the German lines as far as Satonay (five and a half miles northeast of Oulchy Le Chateau), and beyond Fere-en-Tardenoi (two miles southeast of Satonay). The districts to the 60uth were also being peppered by allied shells. SLOW EUT STEADILY." (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON. July 26. Slow but steadily, it appeared today, the allied forces operating on the jaws of the Aisne-Marne salient are slowly closing in upon the army of Gen. Von Boehm, th German leader. In Washington official circles today, there was a feeling that important developments may be expected within the next 24 or 36 hours. In the opinion of some observers the two thrusts at the mouth of Sois-sons-Rheims salient yesterday, one by the British west of Rheims and in the direction of Fismes, and the other by the Franco-Americans in the vicinity of Fere-En-Tadnenols, presage the final closing of the great trap which the strategy of General Foch has set for the Germans. HAS FORTY DIVISIONS. (By Associated Pr !! PARIS, July 26. General Ludendorff apparently has forty divisions of shock troops still In hand says Marcell Hutin in the Echo De Paris. They are destined or at least part of them, for an operation calculated to change the present situation to the advantage of the German crown prince, but, adds M. Hutin, it is hardly likely that General Foch and General Petain will let the initiative be taken from them now. Between July 15 and yesterday, 48 German divisions were identified in the Marne pocket, says M. Hutin, and completejy exhausted divisions are being replaced by half rested ones. Named to Command Division Abroad Major General William C. Langfitt Maj. Gen. William C. Langfitt, who has been appointed chief engineer of the American expeditionary forces, held a simi'ar position on the Etaff of General Barry, commanding the army of pacification in Cuba in 1906. He was assigned in Washington for several years afterwards. CASTELLNAU IS PRISONER. (By Associated Press.) BERNE, July 26. Among the last convoy of French prisoners arriving from Germany for internment at Interlaken was Lieut. De Castellnau. son of Gen. De Castellnau, former chief of the French general staff. Three of the general's sons have been killed in the war. "Y" WORKER WOUNDED. PARIS, Thursdaj July 25. Three Y. M. C. A. workers, acting as stretcher bearers in the Chateau-Thierry sector have ben wounded. They are A. T. Best, of Newark, N. J.. shot in the leg; Murray Bartlett, of Rochester, N. Y.. one foot off, and Edward F. Gross, of Griceell (Grinnell?) Iowa, wounded in the body, but not severely. Motorists who visit Spokane, Washington, sometimes find it difficult to enter into the business spirit of that i very live western metropolis because in the center of the downtown section, beside the very walls of the skyscrapers, the river plunges over rocky leaps in a cascade of foam. And there is a glorious mountain waterfall in the very heart of the commercial districL NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS Notice is hereby given that the Ccunty Council of Wayne County wjil meet in special called session on Friday, August the 2nd, 1918. at 2 o'clock p. m., in the County Commissioners' rVmT-t T? ir, h rvr i j lhe City of Richmond, for the purpose or tne consideration ot tne appropriation for the Food Administrator's office expenses, and such other matters that T.ay come before the Coun cil. L. S. BOWMAN, Auditor Wayne County. July 26
