Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 308, 8 November 1918 — Page 13

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1918.

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THE PALLADIUM CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING fttandardlted and Indexed for Quick Refrnc. according to Th Baatl I Smith 8yatem. (Coyprlt-ht) . CLA8SIK1ED KATES le per word One Time tr pr word Two Timet Be per word Seven Time 80c per word One Month COVTRACT RATES obtained from The Palladium hualnesa office. TT)5TNO HOURS AH Want-Ad must be In tfore It M. noon, of day of publication. OLT-OF-TOMTO ADS rouet be accom-r-anUd by cah In full payment acrordrn to above rates. THE PAM.ADTUM reserve the rtj:ht to rlaeelfy all ads according to Its own rules and regulations. TTANT-APS rlvln a "letter or number." care thin office, can no"t be an-

ewre in person. A letter should be Rrtdred to the "letter or number." . care thl office. The advertiser will call for hi answers and later call on you providing: your reply to this advertisement pleases him. I TET.KPHONR your Want-Ads when It Is more convenient to do so. Bill will be sent to you. and as this Is an accommodation service. The Palladium xpects pavment promptly upon receipt of bill. Phone 2834 DEATHS AND FUNERAL NOTICESl WILLIAMS, King- R., 68 years old, died Thursday, Nov. 7, 1918, at his residence on Easthaven Ave. The decease cd has been a resident of Richmond many years and is survived by his wife, Mrs. Harriet Williams, six chll- , dren, W. D. Williams. Chas. Williams, Mrs. Levi Myers, Mrs. Jas. Brumflel, '. all of Richmond, and Mas. Newton i Brumfield of Webster. Ind.; Earl Wili liams of Detroit, Mich., and five grand- '( children, Hazel and Mary Brumflel, jitiroiu norri, rvinK rsrurrmeia ana Norman Williams. Funeral arrangements will be announced later. Friends may call any time. WIESKHAHN, Katherlne Ellabeth. dlfd yesterday afternoon, Nov. 7, 1918, after a long illness at her residence. C07 Soutn J street, at the age' of 55 years. She is survived by her husband, George H., 2 sons, Henry and Fred Wlesehahn, 4 daughters, Mrs. Elizabeth Nordsleck. Misses Helen, Agatha and Margaret Wlesehahn, all of this city; 3 brothers, Henry and William Eggert of thic city and Fred Eggcrt of Canton. Ohio: 2 sisters, Mrs. Henry Nlewoehner and Mrs. Fred A. Hartman, of this city. The deceas ed was a member of St. John's Lutheran church. The funeral will take place at 1:30. Short prayer services will be held at the homo and at 2:00 p. in. the funeral services will be held In St. John's church. Burial in Lutheranla cemetery. Friends may call at any time. AMBULANCE & UNDERTAKERS 1A WILSON. POHLMEYER & DOWNING FUNERAL. DIRECTORS Ambulance and Limousins service Casket dlsplav room, 15 North 10th St. Phone 1335 KLUTE A SMITH Funeral Directors 14 N. th St. Phone 1284. JORDAN. McMANCS. HUNT & WALTKRMANN Funeral Directors and Ainbulaiife. 1014 Main. Phone 2175. MONUMENTAL 1B Make the erection of a monument a present d.iv duty. Do not leave it to others and to bo sure that you get the right ma rial see John P. Emslle, 15 So. 10th St. Specialist in Barre Granite. FLORIST "1C LEMON'S Flower Phnp Qualltv. fresh flowers. Service. 1015 Main. Ph. 1003. " SITUATIONS WANTED 8 XM.VS GIFTS The Ladies Homo Journal and Saturday Eve. Post. 10 N. 10. LOST AND FOUND TWO FIVE DOLLAR RILLS Lost on Main or S. 8th last Friday or Monday. Liberal reward. 634 Richmond Ave. OOLD WATCH FOB Lost, Masonic emblem, Utter "C" on pendant. Return Culver Dairy, Reward. , PACKAOE- Lost, containing varnish and pin boxes, put In automobile by mistake. Return 238 North 22nd. HELP WANTED MALE HOYS SVanted, 18 to 20 years ot age. Experience not necessary. Steady emnlovnirnt Jonkfns Vulcan Sprlnir Co. novs--Wanted. Zwlssler's. South 5th. -Wanted to make trains. Union News Stand. Penn. Station. CAPABLE MAN Wanted to take charge of an established tea and coffee route. Bond required, good proposition for rtnrht party. Great A. & R Tea Co., Mr. Anspaugh, Mgr., (27 Main. FARM HAND Wanted. Experienced, married. Box II 8018 Palladium. IloIrSEIAN Wanted, 232 N 10th St. MEN 18 ""and overr of 'Richmond and vlclnltv. desiring to prepare for government examinations for positions as departmental clerks, Field Clerks. Post Off le Clerks, Railway Mail Clerks, Stenographers. Bookkeepers, Government Farmers, Revenue (Officers, Customs Officers, etc.. call and interview Mr. Henry Laurens at Westcott hotel, Saturday, November 9. permanent positions at good salaries. Call and Koe Mr. Laurens without fail. 1 p. m. until 9 p m. One day only. MEN Wanted "for" bench and machine work. Richmond Casket Co. ,1 j,;n (Vunted for factory work. Experience not necessary. Steady employment. .Tonkins Vulcan Spring Co. WANTED Janitor. Modern apartment for man and wife. Call 1 426 Mrtin St. YOT'NO MAN Wanted for general work around warehouse and take care of shipping department: also some experience In pHcking coffee. C. D. Kenny Co., 195 Ft. Wayne Ave. WANTED "Machinists, Bearing Scrapers and Motor Builders. Good wages, time nnd half for overtime. Excellent working conditions. This Is all war work. If you are on war work row, stay there and help win the war. Call, write or phone Teetor-Hartley Motor Corporation. Hagerstown. Ind., or Inquire evenings between seven and eight o'clock at 108 S. 15th St.,' Richmond. WANTED Five Teamsters at once. BULLERDIvXS COAL Yard HELP WANTEO FEMALE

GIRLS Two. experienced, wanted to work in restaurant. 013 Main. Quick Lunc h. SALESLADIES Wanted. Apply at once. Wool worth 5 &10c Store. WOMAN Wanted to "rare"" for sick woman. Call 109 Randolph St. WOMEN IS and over, of Richmond end vicinity, who desire to prepare .A. for government examinations for positions as Postoffiee Clerks, Field Clerks, Departmental Clerks. Steno1 grnphers. Typists, Matrons, etc., call and Interview Mr. Henry Laurens at Westcott hotel, Saturday, November 9th. Permanent positions at good salaries. See Mr. Laurens without fail. 1 p. m until 9 p. m. One day only.

PALLADIUM WANTS RESULTS

ROOM8 FOR RENT

STII 8T.. SOUTH 233od room for rent. -Modern furnlsh11TII STTrs5UTH S9 Furnished room for rent. Modern. Telephone 4182. 1ITH ST., N. 109 Furnished room for llRht housekeeping: for rent. Phone J 5 50. lJTIl ST.. NOUTH 28 For rentFurnlshed bed rooms. 13TII Sf7. NORTH 30T Furnished room for rent for two girls. Private kitchen If desired. ' ROOM S Two heated furnished, wanted for light housekeeping. Address 13 6107 care Palladium. BUSINESS SERVICE 12 Well Drilling: Pumps Wind Mills and Wind Mill repairing any part ot. i Wayne County Bertsch Bros. Centerville. Telephone 26. BUILDING & CONTRACTING 13 The MILLER-KEMPER Co. N. W. 2nd & Center Sts. Phones 32474447. All kinds of lumber and millwork. General contracting and building. PLUMBING 14 Our FUEL SAVERS SAVE FUEL. See MEERHOFF the Plumber, 9 S. 9th. Phone 1236. PAINTING A DECORATING 15 RAl.Vl'S and supplies. Phono 33 Haner & Fahlsing. 428 Main. . WALL PAPER 15A U t. HAYS 5 and 10 cent wall paper. MOVING & STORAGE 16 AUTO- MOVING . VAN Largest and best equ.pped In the city for local and long distance moving. Furniture crated, s ored or shipped. FORREST MONGER 200 S. 7th St. Phone 2608 J. L. M'NEILL, AUTO VANS b -Gilt Ettgo Moving Service ?Phon 2564 t3"lck work - rilull 617 South B St. MOVING & STORAGE Local and long distance moving and general draying. W. E. Evans, 320 Lincoln St.. Phone .11 OB OFFICE SUPPLIES 17A Office Desks, Chairs, Safes and Filing Puses. Bart el & Rohe. REPAIRING AND CLEANING 17 We repair bicycles and almost everything. Call for and deliver. Phone S0. Woslev Br?wn Son. MIRRORS RESILVERED 17 MIRRORS RESILVERED F. J. Lahman. Phone 275S. 209 W. Main FURNITURE REPAIRING 17 FURNITURE neatly repaired and reflnlshed. We repair almost everything Work called for and (Zellvered. Cook's Repair Shop. 122 West Main. Phone 3252. J. C. DARNELL CO. Picture Framing, Grinding Knives, Baby Cab Tires, .new and second hand Bicycles. We repair anything. 1020 Main. Phone 1930. EDUCATIONAL 20 GOVERNMENT NEEDS 12.000 WOMEN Clerks. Richmond examinations, Dec. 7. Salary $1200. Experience unnecessary. Women desiring- government positions write for free particulars, J. C. Leonard (former Civil Sorvioe examiner), 320 Konols Building. Wash ington. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 21 BABT CAB Pearl Reed, for sale. Bargain. 1109 3. A. 2 II. P. Gasoline Engine, 2 wagons for sale. Fhone 3252 evenings. DOUBLE COT and pad for sale. 1314 N. A St. GAS HEATER For sale, condition. 218 N 20th. cheap, good GAS RANGE For sale. "Estate". Reasonable. 231 North 10th. Phone 1736. STORAGE TANKS Gasoline, two undergTouml for sale for small garage. One 120-gallon tank with pump, one 170 gallon tank, call 1030 Main St. Sanitary Davenport and Talking machine for sale. 223 Kinsey St. Second hand flat top desk and chair, $10.00. Bartel & Rohe. WASHING "MACHINE For sale, 124 N. 16th. TRUNK & LEATHEK GOODS 21 A TRAVELING GOODS Trunks, Bags, Suit Cases, Small Leather Ooorls. Repairing of all kinds MILLERS. S27 MA7V MISCELLANEOUS WANTED ?2 FURNITURE Wanted. Will pay you cash for good household furniture. J. W. Brammer, 520 Main. Phone 1469. FURnTt I RE'und Stoves. IIomeSuoplv Store. 181 Ft. Wayne Ave. Ph. 1SB2 INDIAN RELICS Wanted. Every description. A. E. Bonsall, Room 1 Knollenberg's Annex. JUNK We pay more for scrap iron, metals, hides, tallow, rags and junk. Henry Holzapfel. Phone 2098 or 4104. too MEN Wanted. Hair Cut 20c. NoT"9 Smith 6th. MEDICAI7vTbrXt6r WanTted, or will rent and pay for use of same. Address Mrs. Rchaefer. 233 S. 5th St. SELL your junk to Sam Jaffe. more for same. Phone 2017. We pay STOVES and used furniture wanted. Good prices given for same. Townsend's Used Goods Store, 533 Main. Phone 1290. USElVTRUCK 3-4 ton. wanted"To buy, Maxwell or Republic preferred. Write Stunt Machine Works, Connersville, Ind. -v MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 21

I FOR SALE ' 1 1 Upright Steam J

1 . Boilers p from 4 to 1 2 horse-power. All sizes steam and water j pipe. Rabbit and Chicken Wire Screen. Call I HENRY HOLZAPFEL' Phone 2098

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LIVE STOCK AND VEHICLES 31

FOR

Farmers come and see the best CAR LOAD OF HORSES we have ever shipped in from Howard County. They consist of well mated teams, mares and geldings weighing from 1400 to 1750, will arrive at 12:30 Saturday. v CLEMENTS & LANDWER ' AT WILSON'S BARN, SO. 6TH STREET

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS 23 PIANO For sale or rent. 9th. Phone 2010. Call 40Q S. EXCHANGE Your piano for a Victrola or buy a used piano through me and save the dealer's profit. Walter B. Fulghum, 1000 Main St. MACHINERY & TOOLS 24 Richmond Boiler Works, N. W. 1st & Rich. Ave. j-Joiler repairing and fine weMr Phon 3097. .Tncoh Kirn SPECIAL AT THE STORES 25 Guns For rent, 75c per day. Shells 85e and $1.00 per box WAKING & CO. Opposite Court House TYPEWRITER Desks and Chairs. Bartel & Rohe. FARM AND DAIRY PRODUCTS 27 Corn in shock for sale. Phone 1466. DRESSED CHICKEXS-For sale, 30c per pound. 14 S. 10th. BUILDING MATERIALS 28 The MILLER-KEMPER Co. N. W. 2nd & Center Sts. Phones 32474447. For all kinds of Building Material. LIVE STOCK & VEHICLES 31 FOR SALE Wagons, Wagons, Harness, Vehicles, Vehicles, all kinds. N Nice as new. 317 North A BUILDING MATERIALS 23, RICHMOND LUMBER CO. Lumber. Millwork. Phones 3209 3307 PET STOCK AND POULTRY 3; FERRETS $4.50 and $5.00. Phone 1356 or 4179. AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE 33 1918 FORD TOURING CAR Run few hundred' miles, good as new. K. E. Stant, 707 West 8th St., Connersville, Ind. FORD For sale, 1917 model, first class condition. Geo. Worley, 15 S. 9th St., Phone 1536. FORD TOURING CAKrnodel. Call 415 N 21. "or sale, 1917 ST U D E BAKER CAR For sale. Electric starter, 5 passenger, cheap. Richmond Junk Yard, North 10th and J St., Phone 3498. AUTO SUPPLIES & REPAIRS 25 AUTO OWNERS Let us do your tire repairing half and have puaranteed work in vour old tires. We make Save Bring 2-in-l tires. 30x3 14 at $1.50 to $2.25 for 37x5. Good used tires and tubes, 28x3 to 87x5 at right prices. We buy old tires. United States and Goodyear Tire Service tation. A. J. Miller Phone 2414. 731 S. 8th St. WELDING THOS. TURNER & SON Boiler Repairs, Machine Work Auto Cylinder Rehorlne Acetyline Welding PHONE 1226 OUR WELDING WILL FIX IT Cracked or broken cylinders of any size of any type engine are repaired and made SAFE and SOUND with our OXYGEN-ACETYLENE WELDING Our WELDING SERVICE covers repairing of broken metal parts of practically all kinds of metal and the work is done with expert skill and care to insure absolute dependable results. x A trial proves the work. WELDEX MFG. CO. Expert Welders Cor. 12th & North E Sts. Phone 1494. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 21 3 w. r l. trTrTTtrT' n liifiCiitfTiffMlf W

LIVE STOCK AND VEHICLES 31

SALE

GARAGES FOR RENT 8TII & NORTH C ST. For rent, four garage rooms. Phone 1412. E. Louck. TAXI TAXI Anderson's Taxi Servic 28 N. 7th Street Phone 1370 HOUSES APTS APARTMENT For rent in Keystone, Second Floor. Jonas Gaar, 1426 Main St. APARTMENT For rent, four rooms furnished, strictly modern, centrally located. 1300 N. A. D ST.f NORTH 1519 Upper Duplex, modern, 4 rooms and bath for rent. S. O. Yates. HOUSE For ren t, 6 rooms. Phone 2556. 6TH ST., N. 122 Part'oThouse, 8.00 8TII ST., SOUTH 324 House for rent. HOtfSE For rent, good location. $3.00 See Jno. N. Hastings. 121 North 9th street HOUSES For rent. 2 five room, North 12th St.. $10.00; Flat. South 6th St., 1st square, to colored people. Dye & Price, 2150. . FOR RENT $7.00 for 3 rooms. 511 K. D. Call 204 S. 12th. Phone 2854. FOR RENT 48 South 10th St., 916 South A St., Furnace and Eath. Inquire E. H. Harris, Telephone 2834-2360. RIDGE ST., 1230 Five newly papered, $8.50. room house, PEARL ST., 33-i large garage rent. Modern 6-room house, j and chicken park for WANTED TO RENT 41 1 1 ROOMS Wanted to rent, two furnished ior ng-nt nousekeepinsr. modern cen tral location In private family. Box n bios Palladium. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE 42 BENNETT & PARKER All kinds of real estate for sale. A square deal to Doth buyer and seller. 212 Union Bank Rids:., phone 2707. FOR REAL, ESTATE an-1 FARMS see A. M. ROBERTS. Liberty Ave. .Office ik o xtn. jJhone 4171. HOUSES FOR SALE Two 5-roomed houses, $12.50 each. One 4-roomed house, $10.50; one 3roomed house, $10.60. No Interest, tax or Insurance. Stav 100 months then deed. Call 325 West Main St. LOTS 3 in Richmond terrace to trade for automobile. Ed DeBoy, Lynn. Ind. MODER MOUSE PAYMENTS LIKE RENT Northeast. See T. W. HADLEY 2nd Nat. Bank Bldg. Phone 1922 FARMS FOR SALE 43 4 6 acres for sale, good land, 2 miles from Richmond, all lever and tillable. No buildings. Having left the city I cannot give this my attention, immediate possession. For prices " and trms address me, care Johnson Lumber Co., or call O. A. Miller, care The Miller-Kempei Co. Edwin G. Kempc. PREBLE COUNTY FARMS 60 Acres, good land, more than half fine bottom, no stream, good seven room house, bank barn, good location, price $150 per acre. Possession March 1st. 130 Acres splendid stock farm, 50 acres tillable, balance well watered pasture land, good buildings, only $75 per acre. Easy terms. C. C. HAWLEY, New Paris. Ohio. MONEY TO LOAN 46 for any purpose at the Legal Rate in sums up to $300.00 on personal property. The State Investment & Loan Co. Room 40 Colonial Building. Richmond. Ind. Phone 2560 Take Twenty Months Borrow what money you need from us and repay in small monthly installments, taking twenty months if you desire, or pay faster if you like. Get $50.00, pay back $2.50 a month. Get $100, pay back $5.00 a month. ; With interest at 3 per month on unpaid balances. You are allowed however to repay in full at any time and are -charged interest only for actual number of months loan is carried. Call and get a free booklet THE TWENTY PAYMENT PLAN, which describes everything fully. We make loans on furniture, pianos, victrolas, etc., without removal. i RICHMOND LOAN COMPANY Established 1895 Room 8, Colonial Bldg. Cor. Main & Seventh streets Automatic Phone 1545. Richmond, Indiana. TTnder State Supervision PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY

Will

rtiESIDENT EDWARD WENTWORTH BEATTY'S RISE IN LIFE a AN INSPIRATION TO EVERY YOUtfG MAN OF AMBITION

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TO RENT 38 Ji -Ls N ' W f l I

Although Edward Wentworth Beatty is only 41 years of age, his life story to date should be an inspiration to every young man who is earnest, industrious and eager to rise in life. Beatty went to work for the Canadian Pacific Railway as an assistant in the law department seventeen years ago, and now he is president of that colossal enterprise : with its 18,233 miles of railroad, its 90 steamers, its trans-continental telegraph system and its millions of cres of farm lands. How did he get there? By hard work, brains and loyalty. Starting at the bottom in the law department he won suc-i HOGS BRING HIGH MILTON, Ind., Nov. 8. Otto Crownovers has received $8,709 from sixty head of hogs which he sold. He sold one hog ior $1,200. M 1 ; PUBLIC SAL. POLLED JERSEY SALE Get a registered cream and butter cow at Walter B. FulghurrTs first public sale on THURSDAY, NOV. 14TH at the Round Barn. Catalog on request. Closing Oiflt Sale off All Stock Plain View Stock Farm I. N. Morrow, prop. CAMDEN, OHIO TUESDAY, Nov. 12, 1918 8 Big black Spanish Jacks 8 7 Jennets 7 21 Mules 21 i 10 Horses 10 17 Cattle 17 20 Breeding Ewes 20 20 Duroc Brood Sows 20 1 Two-Year-Old Duroc Boar 1 None Reserved None Protected All Must Sell Free transportation to the sale and return from Camden, Ohio, located on the Penna. Railroad, 19 miles north of Hamilton, Ohio, and 25 miles southeast of Richmond, Ind. Plain View Stock Farm located 5 miles west of Camden, Ohio, 8 miles northeast of College Corner, 8 miles north of Oxford, Ohio; 22 miles west of Middletown, Ohio; 20 miles southeast of Richmond; 12 miles east of Liberty. LIBERAL TERMS j f Five Auctioneers Eats served by the Ladies of the Red Cross. Follow the crowd and attend the sale. PUELIC SALE 43

Public

Having decided to quit farming, I known as the C. C. Hawley farm, one on the New Paris and New Madison WEDNESDAY, Beginning at 10:00 o'clock A. M., 4 HORSES 4 One team of geldings, 4 and 5 years old ; one Chestnut sorrel gelding. 7 years old ; gray mare S years old. 12 CATTLE 12 One red Shorthorn cow; one roan Shorthorn cow; two Jersey cows, all good milch cows; one springer roan heifer; two Angus springers; 2 steers; balance young cattle.' 60 HOGS 60 9 Duroc Jersey brood sows, 4 gilts, 12 spring pigs, S4 September pigs, 1 Duroc Jersey male hog. 10 Head of Native Sheep; 600 Bushels or more Corn in crib. Maxwell (25) Roadster, 1916 model, in good running condition. Your inspection is invited,

USUAL TERMS MADE KNOWN ON THE DAY OF SALE Lawrence Hawley

THOMAS CONNIFF. Auctioneer Lunch on

i cessive promotions to assistant so

licitor, general solicitor. , general counsel, director and vice-president. Like another Beatty, who has been bottling up the German fleet for years, he is square-jawed, athletic and full of energy. Lord Shaughnessy, the veteran "Builder of Canada," who has retired as- president but Temains as chairman of the board of directors, was born in Wisconsin. Beatty is a native of Canada. Thorold, Ont., was his birth-place. Lord Shaughnessy got his first railroad experi ence in the United States and Canada secured his services in 1882.'

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2 & M

ANIMALS HAV JEFNEDTASTE

(National Crop Improvement Service.) BABY ANIMALS ARE just as fond of molasses on their breakfast cereal as are children. Perhaps if a boy were very hungry he would eat oat meal porridge without any sugar, but he wculd not be keen about it. This is true with all livestock. A dairy ration must, of all things, be palatable, so that a cow will eat It. It must be bulky and coarse so as to avoid indigestion and sickness. The ration must contain a variety of foods so that the cow will not tire of It or get off her feed. It must contain enough real protein all protein is not alike. It must contain the right amounts and kinds ot mineral substances necessary to life, health and milk secretion. It must be highly digestible. Many fds are only about fifty to sixty per cent digestible and the work of excreting so much waste matter is costly in that it uses up the energy of the food to do It. , When a man undertakes to mix his own dairy rations, what does he do? He buys straight feeds. He pays a lot more than the manufacturer who PUSH "EVERY MEMBER" MOVE. B. Willis Beede of the Friends' Foreign Missionary board was in Fountain City Friday to attend a meeting in the interest of the "Every Member" movement. R. A. Hadley went to Wilmington to attend, a meeting of the same nature there.PUBLIC SALE 48 will offer at public auction on what is and one-half miles north of New Paris, Pike, on NOVEMBER 13 sharp, my entire farming equipment: Clover Hay in the Mow FARMING IMPLEMENTS One Troy wagon, with flat bed and hog rack complete; 1 gravel bed; 1 McCormick mower; 1 Deering binder; 1 Deering mower: 1 Black Hawk corn planter, new; 1 disc; 1 Janesville gang plow; 1 Janesville 2-row plow; 1 Syracuse walking plow; 1 Gale walking piow; x inree-wmg narrow; . z onehorse wheat drills; 1 field roller; 1 corn eheller; 1 buggy; Acme harrow; 1 clover buncher; breeching harness for four horses; lead harness; buggy harness for one horse; collars, nets; 1 base burner; 1 ton of hard coal; 3 tons of base burner coke; 1 Majestic range and many other articles not mentioned. Grounds E. C. MIKES ELL, Clerk

Sale

Starting as general purchasing agent, he rose steadily and became president on June 12, 1899. Sine the great war began he has trans-i' ported hundreds of thousands of sow diers and millions of tons of Munitions over land and sea for Canada, and one of his sons has made the sn preme sacrifice for the empire. I Grant Hall, who has succeeded Sir George Bury as vice president, it Montreal, is a native of Canada an4 a veteran railroad man of 28 years' experience. He was appointed vica

president on Jan. 1, 1915, after vanous promotions covering of a century. quarter bought them in Immense quantities. There are also a great many different grades of each feed. Take cottonseed meal for instance. The farmer will generally buy the lowest price meal that be can get. He gets it. The demand for cheap feeding ingredients has caused the quality to be gradually lowered. Consequently the farmer nearly always works with feeds which are poorer than be believes them to be. He bas no facilities for having the . feed analyzed and he doesn't know J what he is working with and is guess- I ing all the time. There is no economy in feeding unless adequate re-' suits are secured. Feed is bandied on a smaller margin than coal, ton for ton. The re-' tall feed dealer who buys in carload lots can sell as cheap as the manu-i facturer can in Iess-than-carload lots, ' the difference in freight rates being; the dealer's gross profit In nearly every Instance, a group of farmers , can order their feed, through a deal-j er, in carloads and make a material saving over mixing those feeds from the several ingredients. Ohio Goes Wild Over Unconfirmed Rumor COLUMBUS, O., Nov. 8. All Ohio went wild Thursday over the unconfirmed report that Germany had sign-' ed the armistice terms. Street parades i were held in many cities; factories were closed and business generally was suspended, regardless of the fact that Secretary Lansing at 2:15 o'clock (Eastern time) denied that an armistice with Germany had been eigned. In Columbus large crowds surrounded the State House and were addressed by Governor Cox from the portico of that building. Offices and factories generally dismissed their employes. Parades were numerous and flass were waived everywhere. Blvery one crowded to. the streets. As a precautionary measure, city police officials ordered all saloons closed until tomorrow morning, j The Associated Press did not circulate the unconfirmed rumors in Ohio. AMERICAN ACE KILLED. WITH THE AMERICAN FIRST ARMY, Nov. 8. Captain Hamilton Coolidge, an American "ace," who had ! eight German machines to his credit was killed by a German anti-aircraft shell while flying behind the enemy lines on October 27.

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT -State of Indiana, Wayne County, ss: Estate of Anna T. Veregge, deceased. Notice is hereby given that thi undersigned bas been appointed by the Wayne Circuit? Court Executor of ; the estate of Anna . T. Veregge, deceased, late of Wayne County, Indiana, j Said estate is supposed to be solvent . JOHN W. VEREGGE, r ' j Executor.' Arthur Wilsdorf, Attorney. Nov. 8-15-2?, 1918.