Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 106, 14 March 1919 — Page 15

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM FRIDAY, MARCH 14, 1910.

PAGE FIFTEEN .

r i

3-Grain

Cadomene Tablets Absolutely Restore Vigor. Vitality, Strength to Weak Men and Women. Sold by All Druggists. ' Adv. PENNSYLVANIA R. R. Pays Man $75,000.00 for loss of two legs and he never kicked, t you will have no kick coming either if your glasses are fitted byEdmunds Optometrist 10 North Ninth St.

NOTHING can take the place of father and moth- . er. But a good photograph will keep a perfect image of their faces always before you. Let us make the pictures.

Indiana Tractor The All 'Round Tractor for the All 'Round Farmer Some of the Things It Does: In a ten-hour day The Indiana Tractor will do any of the following things: Plow 3 Va to 4 acres. Disk 20 acres with a 7-foot tanden disk. Harrow 45 to 50 acres with 15-foot harrow. Plant 20 to 22 acres with a 2-row planter. Cultivate 20 acres with a 2-row cultivator. Drill. 25 acres with a 10-foot grain drill. Harvest 10 acres with a corn binder. Harvest 20 acres with an 8-foot grain binder. Mow 25 acres with an 8-foot mower. Rake 40 acres with a 12-foot rake. Rake 25 acres with an 8-foot side delivery rake. Load 12 acres of hay.

Orville Cambridge City, Ind.

PUBLIC SALE 48 PUBLIC SALE 48

Public

We, the undersigned, will sell at public auction at our farm, 5 miles south ol Richmond, on the Liberty Pike, on . MoaisoAV, mm m Beginning at 10:30 o'clock a. m., sharp, the following personal property, to-wit: 6 HEAD OF MORSES 6 One black mare, 10 years old, wt. 1500; 1 brown gelding, 4 years old, wt. 1450; 1 bay mare, 4 years old, wt. 1300; 1 gray mare, 10 years old, wt. 1400; 1 black mare, 3 years old. wt. 1300. All these horses are broke and good workers. One gray filly, coming 2 years old, unbroke. , 14 HEAD OF CATTLE 14 Four cows, giving good flow of milk; 1 heifer, coming 2 years old; 3 steers, coming 2 years old; 6 calves. 29 HEAD OF HOGS 29 ' Three sows due to farrow April If 2 sows riot bred; 15 shoats, weight 100 to 120 lbs.; 8 pigs, weight about 40 lbs.; IBig Type Poland China male hog, double immune. FARMING IMPLEMENTS, ETC. ' Three Ohio 1-row corn plows; 1 high-lift J. I. Case sulky plow; 1 steel-tooth hay rake; 1 one-horse corn cutter; 1 five-disc wheat drill; 1 Osborne mower; 1 windmill; 1 sleigh; 1 carriage; 1 road wagon; 2 farm wagons; 1 wagon bed; 1 roller; 1 two-horse wheat drill; 1 grindstone; 1 breaking plow.

TERMS OF SALE

sums of $5.00 and under, cash. Over

percent interest from date, purchaser giving bankable note with approved security. Lunch will be furnished by the Jadies of Elkhorn.

Lo Ho Beesoe tHOS. CONNIFF, FOREST MEEK, Aucts.

Three Ohio Men Are Wanted for Robbery Frank Harris,' Cliff Dispensette and Tony Sovine, stationary engineers, are wanted in Darke county, Ohio, for robbery, says a notice received by the Richmond police Friday. Reward of (50 is offered for information concerning any of the three. The word anniBtice is derived from two Latin words signifying "arms ' and "a stop." and implies a temporary cessation of hostilities.

We have installed a machine for automatically producing scallop embroidery on any kind of material. lACEY'S Sewing Machine Store 9 So. 7th St. Phone 1756 PHOTOS 722 MAIN ST WCMMONtt IN0 Bur Phone 90-90 $5.00 a credit of six months, with six JACOB HANES, Clerk.

Sa

ocal GRAIN QUOTATIONS E. W. WAGNER & CO.'S REVIEW CHICAGO, March 14. Liquidation was on again this morning in corn, the majority of buyers at prices much lower have sold out News generally of a depressing character. Argentine corn is being offered frely and purchases for the week show an increase. It is expected that the Argentine strike may be settled soon. Shipping demand slow. Sample grade of corn unchanged to one cent lower. Country offerings slow on account of bad roads. Raining today in many sections of the belt which portends continued light movement of both corn and oats. CHICAGO GRAIN RANGE Furnished by E. W. WAGNER & CO, 212 Union National Bank Building. Phone 1720. CHICAGO, March 14. Following is

the range of futures on Chicago board of Trade today: Open High Low Close r Corn May . 135 136 133 135 July . 129 130 128!4 12994 Sept 126 126 125 126 Oats - May . 61 62 61 62 July 60 61 60 61 Pork May 44.00 44.35 44.00 44.00 Lard May . 26.85 27.67 26.82 27.62 Ribs " May 24.30 24.55 24.27 24.27

CHICAGO, March 14. Corn No. 3 yellow, $1.451.47; No. 4 yellow, $1.421.43; No. 5 yellow, $1.391.42. Oats No. 3 white, 6061; Standard, 6162. Pork, nominal; ribs, $25.0025.50; lard, $26.15. TOLEDO SEED PRICES TOLEDO, March 14. Clover seedPrime cash and March, $27.10; April, $23.00; Oct., $16.25. Alsike Prime cash and March, $19.75. Timothy prime cash, old, $4.90; new, March, April' and May, $4.95; Sept., $5.55; Oct., $5.40. CINCINNATI, O., March 14. Wheat quotations: No. 1 red, $2.52 2.53; No. 2 red, $2.502.52; No. 3 red, $2.46(3) $2.49; lower grades as to quality, $2.25 2.45. Corn No. 2 white, $1.48 $1.50; No. 3, $1.461.48; No. 4, $1.44 1.46; No. 2 yellow, $1.491.50; No. 3, $1.481.49; No. 4, $1.4o1.46; No. 2 j mixed, $1.461.48; ear corn, white,! $1.441.46; yellow, $1.461.4S; mixed I $1.431.45. 1 LIVE STOCK? PRICES INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., March 14. Hogs Receipts, 5,000. Cattle Receipts, 550. , Calves Receipts, 550. Sheep Receipts 100. HOGS Good to choice, 160 to 200 lbs., $18.75 19.00; mixed and medium, 160 to 150 lbs., $19.6019.85; fat hogs, $18.50 19.50; fat back pigs, under 130 lbs., $19.00 down; feeding pigs, under 130 lbs., $17.00 down; sows, according to quality, $15.00 18.00, bulk of sows. $16.5017.50; poor to best stags, SO lbs. dock, $14.0017.50; boars, thin sows and skips no definite prices. , CATTLE ' Killing Steers Extra good, 1,300 lbs. and upward, $18.0019.00; good to choice, 1,300 lbs., and upward, $17.50 18.00; common to medium, 1,300 lbs. and upward, $15.5016.50; good to choice, 1,200 to 1,300 lbs., $17.50 $18.50; common to medium, 1,200 to 1,300 lbs., $15 16.00; good to choice", 1,000 to 1,150 lbs., $15.0015.50; common to medium, 1,000 to 1,150 lbs., $13.50 15.00; poor to good, under 1,000 lbs., $12.00 15.00; good to best yearlings, $15.00 16.50. Heifers Good to best, 800 lbs. and up, $13.0015.00; common to medium, 800 lbs. up, $10.0012.00; good to best, under 800 lbs., $12.0013.00: common to medium, under 800 lbs., $8.50 11. Cows Good to best, 1,050 lbs. upward, $12.0014.00; common to medium, 1,050 lbs., upwards, $9.5011.00; good to best, under l,05u lbs., $10.00 $12.00; common to medium, under 1,050 lbs., $8.00 9.50; canners and cutters, $5.00 7.50; fair to choice milkers, ?90.00140. Bulls Common to best, 1,300 lbs. upward, $9.50 12.00; good to choice, under 1,300 lbs., $10.0012.00; fair to medium, under 1.300 lbs., $8.509.50; common to good bolognas, $8.00 9.50. Calves Good to choice veals, under 200 lbs., $16.0017.00; common to medium veals, under 200 lbs., $10.00 15.00; good to choice heavy calves, $9.00 10.00; common to medium heavy calves, $6.00S.50. Stockers and Feeding Cattle Good to choice steers. 800 lbs., and up, $12.5013.00; common to fair steers, S00 lbs., and up, $11.0012.00; good to choice steers under 800 lbs., $12.00 12.50; common to medium, under 800 lbs., $10.0011.00; medium to good heifers, $9.0010.00; medium to good cows, $8.009.00; springers, $8.50 9.50; stock calves, 250 to 450 lbs., $8.5011.00.SHEEP AND LAMBS. Good to choice sheep, $9.0010.00; common to medium sheep, $6.00 $8.00: good to choice light lambs, $17 18.50; common ; to medium lambs, $1216; western fed lambs, $19.25 down; western fed sheep, $11.00 down; bucks, per 100 pounds, $7.007.50. CINCINNATI, O., March 14. Cattle Receipts, 600; Hogs, 9,000; sheep, 30. Cattle Market active and strong; shippers, $13.00 16.50; butchers steers, extra, $14.00 15.50; good to choice, $12.0014.00; common to fair, $7.0011.50. Heifers extra, $l2.5013.50; good to choice, $11.00 12.00; common to fair, $6.5010.00; cows, extra, $10.00 11.50; good to choice, $8.0010.00; common to fair, $5.507.50. Calves Receipts 50; market, slower; extra, $17.2517.50; fair -to good, $14.5017.00; common and large, $7 14.00; canners, unchanged. Packers and feeders, $7.50 12.50; bulls, slow and unchanged; milch cows, steady. Hogs Market, steady to 50 cents lower; selected heavy shippers, $19.50; good to choice packers and butchers, . 19.50; medium, $18.75 19.25; stags, $10.0012.00; common to choice heavy fat sows, $13.0017.50;

and foreicm

light shippers, $17.0018.50; pigs, 110 pounds and less, $12.00016.00. . Sheep Market, strong; extra, $11 11.60;good to choice, I10.0010.76; common to fair, $6.009.00. Lambs Market, strong; $17.50 $18.00 good to choice, $17.00 17.50; common to fair, $13.0015.00; sheared lambs, $10.00(8)15.50. PITTSBURGH, Pa.. March 14. Hogs Receipts 1,200; market steady; heavies $20.10 20.15; heavy Yorkers, $20.10 20.15; light Yorkers $18.25 $18.50; pigs $18 18.50. Sheep and Lambs Receipts 300; market steady; top sheep $15.00; top lambs, $20.00. Calves Receipts 60; market slow, top $19.00. EAST BUFFALO, N. Y., March 14. Cattle Receipts 1,000; good steady; common easier. Calves Receipts, 1,200; 50c lower; $5.0019.50. HogsReceipts, 4,000; 10 to 25c lower; heavy and mixed, $20.0020.15; Yorkers, $19.7520.00; light Yorkers and pigs, $18.7519.00; roughs, $16.00 O17.00; stags, $12.0014.00; Canadians, $19.75 20.00. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 4,000; steady to strong; lambs, $12.0020.50; yearlings, $11.00 318.50; wethers, $15.0016.00; ewes, $5.0014.50; mixed sheep, $14.50 15.00. . U.S. BUREAU OF MARKETS, Chicago, March 14. Hogs Receipts 26,000; market firm at yesterday's close. Bulk of sales $19.1019.45; butchers, $19.3019.50; lights $18.75 19.35; packing $1819.25; throwouts $17.25 18.00; pigs, good to choice, $17.00 $18.25. Cattle Receipts 3,000; market generally steady; calves slow to lower; beef cattle, good, choice and prime, $16.8520.35; common and medium, $10.65 16.85. Butcher stocks, cows and heifers $7.35 15.75; canners and cutters $67.35; stackers and feeders good, choice and prime $11.2515.25; inferior, common and medium $8.25 $11.25; veal calves good to choice, $17.5018.00. Sheep Receipts 6,000; fat classes 10 to 25 cents higher; feeders steady. Lambs choice and prime $20.1020.25, medium and good, $18.6520.10; cull3, $15.2517.00; ewes, choice and prime, $14.1014.50; medium and good, $11.5014.10; culls $69.25. PRODUCE MARKET CHICAGO March 14. Butter market, higher; creamery firsts, 5158c. Eggs Receipts, 11,338 cases; market, higher; firsts, 39c; lowest SSc. Live poultry Market, lower; fowls, 30c; springs, 32c. Potato Market, unsettled; receipts, 35 cars; Wis.. Mich., $1.601.75; Minn., $1.35 1.55. NEW YORK STOCK LIST NEW YORK, March 13. The closing quotations on th estock exchange were: American Can, 48. American Locomotive, 67 1-2. American Beet Sugar, 74 1-4. American Smelter, 67 1-4. Anaconda, 60 5-8. Atchison, 92 3-4. Bethlehem Steel, bid, 65 5-S. Canadian Pacific, 162 1-2. Chesapeake and Ohio, 59 1-2. Great Northern, pfd, 94. New York Central, 75 1-2. Northern Pacific, 93 7-8. Southern Pacific, 102 1-2. Pennsylvania, 44 3-4. U. S. Steel Com, 96. 3-8. ' LI BERT v BONDS NEW YORK, March 14. The final prices on Liberty bonds today were: 3 $98.86 First 4 94.56 Second 4 93.80 First 4V4 94.54 Second 4 14 93.80 Third 4V4 95.22 Fourth 4U 93.94 BUTTER FAT QUOTATION The Western Ohio Cream company is paying 60 cents for butter fat de livered this week. LOCAL QUOTATIONS Buying Corn, 1.50; oats, 62c; rye, $1.15; straw, per ton, $7.00. .Selling Cottonseed meal, per ton, $07.00; per cwt., $3.50; tankage, 50 per cent, per ton, $93.00; per cwt , $4.75; 60 per cent, $108 per ton; $5.50 per cwt.; Quaker dairy feed, per ton, j $50, per cwt., $2.75; linseed oil meal, per ton, $72; per cwt, $3.75; salt, per bbl., $2.75; wheat bran, per ton, $48; bran and shorts mixed, per ton, $50; rye wheat middlings, per ton, $55; flour wheat middlings, per ton, $60; white rye middlings, per ton, $55. FRUIT & VEGETABLES (Corrected Dally by Eggemeyr') 8ELLING PRICE VEGETABLES New cabbage, 10c lb., green beans, 30c, cucumbers, 30c; egg plant, 30c lb.; new spring carrots, 15c bunch; spring beets, Ec lb. , Cauliflower, small, 20c lh.;.. large cauliflower, 15c lb.; leaf lettuce, 25c per lb.; 'head lettuce, trimmed, 35c per lb.; untrimmed, 25c lb.; leak, 10c a bunch. Bermuda onions, 15c per pound; parsley, 5c a bunch; mangoes, 8 cents each; tomatoes, hot house grown, 35 cents lb. jj Jersey sweet potatoes, 12 c lb.; turnips, new, 8c lb.; potatoes, old, $1.75 bu.; young spring onions, 5c a bunch; Shallott's, 10c bunch; breakfast radishes, 5c bunch. Button mushrooms, $1.00 a pound; cranberries, 35c a pound; sprouts, 35 cents straight; parsnips, 5c lb.; blask walnuts, 30c '4-lb., shelled 10c pound. Pumpkins and squashes, 2c to 5c per pound; new green peas, per pound 35 cents. Miscellaneous. Eggs, 42 cents; creamery butter, 68 cents ; country butter, 55 cents a pound. . , Produce (Buying). Country butter, 45c lb.; eggs, SSc

DON'T STARVE YOUR COWS. National Crop Improvement Service. i ( -T INE-TENTUS of the dairymen X v are at fault In that their cows are underfed, and no small percentage have cows on their farms that are actaally starving," says A. C. Palmer in Hoard's Dairyman. "To a large extent this is due to an gnorance of food properties and values, as, for Instance, a feeling that corn fodder, or corn silage even, and bran make a balanced ration. Bat by far the common reason is plain, downright stinginess with the creature that will repay with high Interest every cent spent upon her proper nourishment." And that is Just the trouble. So many of ns discover a fine cow and pay a good price, thinking that the good cow will do the business. We

Work of Richmond Artists Ehibitedjn Local Gallery Noted For Brilliance

Everyone in Richmond will be interested in the exhibit of Maude Kaufman Eggemeyer and John Elwood Bundy which will open Sunday afternoon in the public art gallery. Mrs. Eggemeyer began her work when she was nine years old. For three years after finishing school she studied architectural drawing under her father, a prominent architect in Richmond. She studied under the art teachers that were in Richmond. She then went to Cincinnati where she studied with L. H. Meakin and Vincent Nowohny, well known artists. She took figure work from the latter and landscape work from Mr. Meakin. She was in Cincinnati two years. She studied for many years with Mr. Bundy with whom she is exhibiting and spent a summer studying with J. Otis Adams, a well known painter. Mrs. Eggemeyer's work is distinctive for its brilliance and color. Much of her work is done in the summer. Her gardens are particularly beauti ful. There are several portraits in the exhibition. Many of them have been posed in Richmond by well known people. Many of her pictures have been made in Richmond and this fact adds interest. Though Mr. Bunday Is a painter of national reputation, few Richmond people know much about him. When he was 5 years old he came to Indiana from Carolina, with the family or father, mother and nine children. As a boy he was noted in the family for his ability to draw straight corn rows. The years of Mr. Bundy's youth went by with a conscious effort in learning to see and sketch the paintable appearance of the landscape, but with no help in the use of the painter's materials. His only real instruction came at the age of 20, when he had two weeks of help in the use of oil colors from B. S. Hayes, SCENIC ACT AT MURRAY. The new bill which opened at the Murray yesterday, contained one act held over from the first half. This was the big scenic act "The Follies of j audeville," and which will be seen for the last time tonight. Claudia Tracey is a singing comedienne who has quite a following locally from the fact that she entertained at several social functions here, and it seemed last night that the whole audience knew her personally from the way they received her efforts. Mack and Williams have a novel dancing act, doing steps up and down a stair arrangement. Henry Walthall in "A Long Lane's Turning" is delighting his many admirers. The acts playing the Murray will be transferred to the Murrette for Saturday only, while "Parlor Bed Room and Bath." is playing. dozen; old chickens, 22c pound; fry chickens, 24c pound. Fruits. Grape fruit, 10c, 15c and 18c; bulk King applfcs, 10c lb., or $1.75 per basket; Winesaps and Roman Beauties, 10c pound straight. Bananas, 10c lb.; lemons, 40c dozen, limes, 50c dozen; oranges, 60c dozen; strawberries, 75c quart; celery, California, 25c bunch; fresh pineapple, 50c each; cocoanuts, 20c each. Artichokes, 25c each; celery, 25c bunch; baking potatoes, 5 c each; spinnach, 18c lb.; new potatoes, 12 ya cents pound. RID THE FACE OF BEAUTY SPOILERS Let Stuart's Calcium Wafers Be Your Beauty Treatment to Relieve the Face of Pimples, Blackheads, Etc. Send for a Free Trial Package. For those pesky pimples and blemishes that spoil the complexion be sure to use Stuart's Calcium Wafers. The influence of their calcium trains the skin to convert the impurities into a harmless substance for easy elimination instead of gathering into little red spots. Do not varnish your skin with grease. It is a vain hope. Beauty is impaired by a bad, pimply skin and calcium is considered of great value for all forms of suppuration of the skin. Try these wafers. Thousands have done so with the most gratifying results. Stuart's Calcium Wafers are so widely known and used that you will find them on sale in almost any drug store in the United States or Canada at 50 cents a box. If you wish to try them first, send your name and address to F. A. Stuart Co., 861 Stuart Bldg., Marshall, Mich., and a free trial package, plain and sealed will be-sent you by return mail. Adv.

forget that 75 per cent of a cowi production depends upon her feed and care and not over 25 per cent upon her ancestry. There are three reasons why readymixed feeds of established reputation should be fed. First, the impossibility of getting at a fair price at all times all the ingredients necessary. Second, the lack of skill and knowledge of the value of the various ingredients. Third, the labor necessary to properly mix feeds which can be much better done by machinery. There are cases where a fanner can raise all the feed necessary for his cows and he is a happy man; but in most cases cows should be fed opon by-product feeds after the part suitable for human consumption has been extracted, supplemented, of course, by home-grown roughage, silage and pas

turage. a portrait painter of some renown," who happened to be in Indianapolis at tnat time. This brief schooling was followed by several years' work in painting portraits in oil from photographs. For the following eight years he taught drawing and painting in Earlham college. He learned that he could not teach and at the same time produce paintings so in 1888, at the age of 35 he gave up this work and set himself to be a landscape painter. He developed great skill in rapid outdoor sketching with oils. With the exception of three summers in northern Michigan and a winter in California, Mr. Bundy has worked continuously in Richmond. He is a member of the Richmond Art association and the Society of Western Artists. He received the Richmond prize in 1907 and 1909, and the Mary T. R. Foulke in 1911. He is represented in the City Art Museum, St. Loui3; the-Vincennes Art Collection, the Marion Art League, and the public art gallery and many other places. He exhibits annually in Chicago, Indianapolis, New York and Philadelphia. New Method Keeps All Teeth Spotless Do j-ou imagine that because you "clean" your teeth regularly that they are spotless? Just take a hand mirror over to the window where the light is good, examine your teeth closely, and notice the stains and tartar. Why are they there? Because your dentifrice is powerless to remove them, even though you scrub your teeth several times a. day. The stains are really discolored j films thin coating-s of fat which the usual powders, pastes and liquids do not penetrate. You will be grlad to know that there is a new product discovered bv a wellknown dentist which will positively remove all stains or spots whether yellow, black, gray, any color almost as "quick as a wink," without scratching or harming the teeth in the least. Just get a package of J'Once-a-Week Tooth Polish" from your druggist, use a little on your tooth brush then con sult your mirror again. The result will ! surprise you most agreeably. If you will use Once-a-Week Tooth Poiisii weekly the trouble will not reappear, the germs which multiply underneath those films will disappear, tartar will no longer accumulate, tooth decay will be prevented "pearly white teeth" will have a new meaning to you. Adv. E3 u

SATURDAY SALE

oiling Beef, lb. - 16c

CHOICE SIR-LOIN STEAK, lb. ... ........ .24c HAMBURGER, lb. . . . . 20c LEAN PORK ROAST, lb.. .30c FRESH SLICED LIVER, lb. . . .. ...i ...... . . .5c BRAINS, lb. ,.10c FRESH HEART, b. . . . . : . : . . . . . .12i2c SAUER KRAUT, per can. ...... . ... . . . .... 10c BULK SAUER KRAUT, 3 lbs......... 10 c .... ' .. . - -"i

tmm

715 Main BE E323SS335

NEW LAW PROVIDES -FAIRER VALUATION

For the first time, the state tax commission holds an effective club, to compel just assessments by the county and township assessors, as the result of a clause in the new tax law. '. For being too "easy," a deputy or assessor may be removed, and the county ordered to make a re-valuation of property, at its own expense, - if the tax commission is not satisfied. In former years, an assessment once made had to be accepted, no matter how ridiculous the values shown thereon, and tax assessors were allowed to assess just about as they pleased, as there was no way to compel them to revalue property. Since the county is responsible for the cost of any revaluation ordered by the tax board, and since any deputy can be removed for cause, a general tightening up Is expected. Roof Fire Causes $100 Damage at Hagerstown HAGERSTOWN, Ind., March 14. An overheated stove or a defective fine probably caused the burning of a large hole In the roof near the chimney, of the residence on West Clay street, belonging to Edgar Pollard and occupied by Hoyt Main and by the Bennett brothers. The Mains had left home in the morning for Indianapolis, leaving a fire in the heating stove. About 1 o'clock a blaze was discovered in the roof and the fire alarm was given. The fire department responded quickly and in a short time had the flames extinguished. It will probably cost $100 to repair the damage. The Mains have their household goods packed to move to Indianapolis. Edgar Pollard moved out of the house this week to the tuberculosis farm near Richmond. ' Food Heads and Packers Favor $1 7J50 Hog Price (By Associated Pret -" CHICAGO. March. 14. It was reported today that the concensus of packers and representatives of the food administration in conference here was in favor of fixing a maximum price of not more than $18, and more probably $17.50 for hogs. It was said that no official announcement would be made until the question had been submitted to Washington. - - LABOR MEET IN OCTOBER PARIS.. March 14. The labor, commission has decided to recommend that the first meeting of the internalabor conference be held in Washington In October if the U. S. go. eminent will consent to convene it. Carry An Accurate Time-keeper The daily waste of time caused by carrying a watch that does not keep good time, is more costly, in a year, than the price of . An Elgin Streamline Watch that. will last you a lifetime. Price S25.00 Our watch assortment contains all the essential grades good enough to stand our guarantee of absolute satisfaction. Haner's Store 810 Main Street ROS

k

asis 20c & 22c

Street

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