Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 157, 15 April 1919 — Page 15
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 1919.
PAGE FIFTEEN
ocai GRAIN QUOTATIONS E. W. WAGNER & CO.'S REVIEW CHICAGO. April 15. A new high record was made for May corn at the opening, but the bulge was short lived. There wan free selling and a sharp reaction followed- The selling was led by locals and an Omana house. Wet weather over the belt and high provision prices were the bullish influences. ' Slow cash demand and the prospects of increased receipts and continued offerings of Argentine corn were bearish factors. Oats inclined to follow corn with volume of buying light. The continued wet weather is delaying seeding operations and making friends for oats. The May delivery for provisions advanced to new high levels but reacted on selling by packers. Absorbatlve power for the corn market was a surprise to the leading element and bears run qu'ck when market fails to respond to selling. CHICAGO GRAIN RANGE Furnished by E. W. WAGNER & CO, 212 Union National Bank Building. Phone 1720. CHICAGO. April 15. Following Is the range of futures on Chicago Board of Trade today: i Open High Low Close Corn May 160 161 158 158 tluly 153 154 1524 152 A5ept 148 149 147 147 Oats May 69 . 70 68 68 July 68 68 67 67 Pork May 63.35 63.75 52.55 63.50 Lard May 30.85 30.85 30.45 30.45 RiDS May 28.87 28.87 28.60 28.85 CHICAGO. April 15. Corn No. 3 yellow ?159161; No. 4 yellow, 1.57159; No. 5 yellow. $1.66. Oata No. 3 white 6869; standard 6970. Pork Nominal. Lard $30.45. Ribs $27.75028.75. TOLEDO, April 15. Cloverseed: Prime cash, $29.70; April. $26.00; Oct., $17.90. Alsike Prime cash, $26.00. Timothy Prime cash, old. $5.12; new, $3.22; April, $5.27; May, $5.17; Sept, $5.65; Oct., $5.45. CINCINNATI. O., April 15 WheatNo. 1 red. $2.7002.72: No. 2 rd. lii.tiS 02.70; No. 3 red, $2.6602.68; lower grades as to Quality, .bOia.G'j. Corn No. 2 white. $1.6601.67; No. 3 white, $1.6401.66; No. 4 white, $1.62 01.64; No. 2 yellow, $1.6701.69; No. 3 yellow, $1.6301.65; No. 4 yellow, $1.6101.63; No. 2 mixed, $1.6501.67. LIVE STOCK PRICES INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.. April 15. Hogs Receipts, 7,000; strong. . Cattle Receipts, 1,600; uneven. V. Calves Receipts, , 500; steady to higher. Sheep Receipts, 200; steady. HOGS Good to choice, 160 to 200 lbs., $20.50 $20.65; mixd and medium, 160 to 200 lbs., $20.50020.70; fat hogB, $19,500 $19.50 down; feeding pigs, under 130 lbs., $19.00 down; sows, according to quality, $15.00019.00; good to prime, $20.65020.85; bulk of sows, $1S.5O0 $18.75; poor to best stags. 80 lbs. dock, $15.00018.00; boars, thin sows and skips, no definite prices. CATTLE Killing Steers Extra good. 1,300 lbs. and upward. $17.00018.00; good to choice, 1,300 lbs., and upward, $17.50 tf1S.Q0: common to medium, 1,300 lbs. and upward, $16.00017.00; good to choice, 1,200 to 1,300 lbs., $17,500 $18.50; common to medium, 1,200 to l.SOft Ibe.. $1516.00; good to choice. 1,000 to 1,150 lbs., $14.50016.00; comiticn lr nindium, 1,000 to 1.150 lbs., $13.50014.50; poor to good, under 1.000 lbe., $12.00014.00; good to best yearlings, $14.00015.00. Heifers Good to best, under 800 lbs., $14014.50; common to medium, 800 lbs. up, $10.00012.00; gond to best, iin,1fr firm lha . 114 OOffJ 15.00: common to medium, under 800 lbs., $10013. Cows Good to best, 1,050 lbs. upward, $12.00015.00; common to medium, 1,050 lbs. upwards, $10011.50; good to best, under 1,050 lbs., $10,500 $12.50; common to medium, under 1,050 lbs., $8.00010.00; canners and cutters, $5.00 0 7.50; fair to choice milkers, $90.000140. Bulls Common to best. 1,300 lbs. upward, $10.00 011.50; good to choice, undor 1,300 lbs.. $11.00013.00; fair to medium, under 1,300 lbs., $11012.00; common to good bolognas, $8.50 0 10.00. Calves (inort to choice veals, under A.200 lbs., $155.00016.00; common to medium veals, under 200 lbs., $9.00 14.50; good to choice heavy calves $9.50011.00; common to medium heavy calves, $7.0009.00. Stockers and Feeding Cattle Good to choice steers. 800 lbs., and up. $13 00014.00; common to fair steers, 800 lbs., and up, $12.00013.00; good to choice steers under 800 lbs., $12.60 013.50; common to medium, under 800 lbs., $10.50012.60: medium to good heifers, $9.00(fi:10.50; medium to good cows, $8.0009.50; springers, $8.50 950; stock calves. 250 to 450 lbs., $8.50011.00. SHEEP AND LAMBS. Good to choice sheep, $10.00011.00: common to medium 6heep, $7,000 9.00; good to choice light lambs, $17.50 0 18.00; common to medium lambs, U2017; western fed lambs, $18.50 down; western fed wethers. Ill down; bucks, per 100 pounds, $7.0007.50; clipped stock, selling $2 to $.3 per 100 lbs. lower than above quotations. Corrected by McLean & Company, Dayton, Ohio. Bell Phone East 28; Home. 81235. DAYTON, O.. April 15. Hogs Rsceipts, four cars; market, 15 to 25c higher; choice neavies, $20.00020.25; select packers and butchers. $20,000 $20.20; heavy Yorkers, $18.50019.50; light Yorkers, JU.50 13.50; pigs. $15 16.50; stags. $12.00014.00; fat sows, $18.00018.50; common and fair sows, y17.5018.00. . Cattle Receipts, nine cars; market, lower; fair to good shippers, $14.00 .16.00; good to choice butchers, $14 A? 15; fair to medium butchers, $12 14; good to chotee heifers, $11013;
and foreian
fair to good heifers, $9 11; choice fat cows, $10(812; bologna cows, $5 $7; butcher bulls, $1012; bologna bulls, $8 11; calves, $10(14. Sheep Receipts, light; market, strong. Sheep, $8010. Lambs, $10 15.00. PITTSBURGH, Pa., April 15 Hogs Receipts 1,000; market higher; heavies, $20.75 (S 20.85; heavy yorkers, $20.7520.85; light yorkers, $20,000 20.25; pigs, $19.75020.00. Sheep and Lambs Receipts 300: market steady; top sheep, $13.00; top lambs, $16.00. Calves Receipts 88; market steady; top, $17.50. EAST BUFFALO, April 15. Cattle Receipts, 900; slow. Calves Receipts, 300 ; 50c higher; $6.00017.50; a few at $18.00. Hogs Receipts, 1,800; 'v pigs, 25c higher; others, 15c higher; heavy and mixed, $20.75020.85; Yorkers, $20.65 20.75;light Yorkers and pigs, $19.75 020.00; roughs, $17.75018.00; stags, $12.00015.00. Sheep and Lambs Receipts 1,800; slow; clipped lambs. $10.00016.901 others unchanged. No wool stock offered. CINCINNATI. April 15. ReceiptsCattle, 600; hogs, 2,000; Sheep, 50. Cattle Market, steady; shippers, $13.50016.00; butchers steers, extra, $14.00015.00; good to choice, $12,500 13.75; common to fair, $7.00011.50; Heifers extra, 13.00014.00; good to choice, $11.50013.00; common to fair, $7.00010.50. Cows extra, $11.00012.50; good to choice, $8.50010.50; common to fair, $5,7508.00; canners, $5.00 0 5.75; stockers and feeders, $7.50013.00. Bulls, steady; bologna, $9.00011.00; fat bulls, $11.00012.00. Milch cows, steady; calves, 50 cents lower; extra, $15015.50; fair to good, $13.00015.00; common to large, $7.00 012.00. Hogs Market, strong; 25c higher. Selected heavy shippers, $20.75; good to choice packers and butchers, $20.75. medium, $20.00020.75; stags, $10.00 013.00; common to choice heavy fat sows, $14.00018.50; light shippers, $18.5O019.5O;pigs, 110 pounds and less, $12.00 0 17.00. Sheep steady; extra, $12.50013.00; good to choice,$ll. 00 12.50; common to fair, $6.00010.00. Lambs steady; extra, $18.00018.50; good to choice$18.OO0 18.25; common to fair, $13.00017.00; clipped Iambs, $9.00016.50. I .1, .... i CHICAGO, April 15. Hogs Rei ceipts 28,000; market strong, mostly ! 10 cents lower than yesterday's best time; top $20.70; bulk of sales $20.40 020.65; heavy weight $20.55020.70; I j: M K 0(1 7(1- Hirht weight $20020.55; light lights $18.90 020.30; sows $18.50020.10; pigs $17.60019.10. Cattle Receipts 9,000; medium beef steers and all ehe-stock strong; others slow; calves slow to 50 cents lower; feeders strong; heavy beef steers $11.65020.10; light beef steers, $10.15018.50; butcher cows and heifers $7.65015.50; canners and cutters, $6010.15; veal calves $14 15.75; stocker and feeder steers $8.50015.50. Sheep Receipts 11,000; early sales of fat lambs mostly 10 to 15 cents higher; some prime shorn lambs 25 cents up; fat shorn $17.00; sheep steady; lambs, 84 pounds or less $18.1020.00; 85 pounds or better, $17.85 19.90; culls $14017.75; ewes, medium and good, $12015.50; culls and common, $6012. produce Market CHICAGO, April 15. Butter Market, unchanged. Eggs Receipts, 62,932 cases; market, steady; firsts, 38 40c; lowest, 38c. Live poultry Market, unchanged. Potato market, unsettled; receipts, 92 cars; northern bulk and sacked, white stock, U. S. grade, $1.7001.90; western Russets, $2.1502.25 per cwt. NEW YORK STOCK LIST NEW YORK, April 15. The closing Quotations on the stock exchange were: American Can, 51 1-8. American Locomotive, 69. American Beet Sugar, 76 7-8. American Smelter, 71 1-8. Anaconda, 62 1-8. Atchison, 91 3-4. Bethlehem Steel, bid, 76 3-8. Canadian Pacific, 160. Chesapeake and Ohio, 53. Great Northern, pfd, 91. New York Central, 74. Northern Pacific, 91 7-8. Southern Pacific, 105. Pennsylvania, 44. U. S. Steel Com. 99 5-8. LIBERITr BONDS NEW YORK, April 15. The final prices on Liberty Bonds today were: 3 1-2 99.00 First 4 95.70 Second 4 93.60 First 4 1-4 95.70 Second 4 1-4 95.50 Third 4 1-4 95.56 Fourth 4 1-4 93.56 BUTTER FAT QUOTATION Butter fat, delivered in Richmond, is bringing 64 cents this week. LOCAL QUOTATIONS l ! Buying Corn. $1.65; oats, 65c; rye, $1.25; 6traw. peV ton, $7.00. Seiling Cottonseed meal, per ton, $67.00; 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, $50, per cwt., $2.65; linseed oil meal, per ton, $72; per cwt, $3.75; salt, per bbl., z.7o; wneai Dran, per ion, ou; bran and shorts mixed, per ton, $53; white wheat middlings, per ton, $58, $3 per cwt.; white rye middlings, per ton, FRUIT & VEGETABLES (Corrected Dally by Eggemayar'a) SELLING PRICE . VEGETABLES New cabbage, 15c lb., green beans.
OHIO TOBACCO GROWERS WILL TRIM ACREAGE
Miami Valley Producers Decide to Plant Ground to More Profitable Crops. DAYTON, O., Apr., 15 Leaf tobacco acreage of the Miami valley will be decreased about 25 per cent this year and much land will be turned to other agricultural purposes, according to members of the Miami Valley Growers' association who attended a lively meeting yesterday afternoon In the Army and Navy clubrooms. ( Growers indicated that because of unsatisfactory conditions they felt they could make more money raising crops other than tobacco. The organization, however, will sfand out for 25 and 30-cent tobacco. O. M. Johnson, state leader of county agricultural agents, gave the 200 growers an inspirational address, declaring that while county agents should not be permanent officers of growers' leagues, they could reasonably assist growers in the solution of production and marketing problems. Now Permanent. The temporary organization formed a few weeks ago became permanent with the election of C. I. Gilbert, of Germantown, as president; Oscar Pearson, of Troy, as vice-president, and O. J. McKee, of Lewisburg, as secretary and treasurer. A constitution was adopted making provision for a board of trustees consisting of three members each from Montgomery, Miami, Darke, Preble, Warren and Butler counties. Each community, according to the plans, is to maintain a committee to which is to be referred offers of purchase from buyers. Financial assistance, mutual in character, for growers is also planned to enable them to hold out for the prices the community boards regard reasonable. IN THE LEGISLATURE. COLUMBUS, April 15. Dry leaders in the senate announced that a vote would be taken today on the Crabbe prohibition enforcement bill and an effort would be made to pass it as an emergency measure. Even with one dry member absent, Senator Ritter, of Miami, drys were still hopeful of getting the necessary 22 votes, Senator Miller, chairman of the temperance committee, said today. The bill passed the house, but minus the emergency clause. Should the emergency clause fail in the senate, the bill would become a law in 90 days, unless knocked out by a referendum vote which the wets will institute. Senator Latham, of Huron county, was having prepared a substitute bill for the one drawn by the Anti-Saloon league to provide machinery for enforcing prohibition after May 27. Latham's proposal is to continue the presence liquor license , commission for enforcing prohibition until January, 1920, when nation-wide prohibition becomes effective. t DEATHS Norris John P. Norris, 86 years old, died of senility at his home, three miles north of the city at 3 o'clock Monday afternoon. He was born in Maryland in 1833 and had lived in Richmond for eighty-five years. He is survived by the widow, Hannah, five sons and two daughters. The deceased was a member of the Friends church. Funeral services will be held at 2 o'clock Wednesday afternoon at the home. The Rev. A. F. Mitchell will officiate. Burial will be at Goshen. Friends may pall any time. Judkins Funeral services for Carl N. Judkins, 52 years old, of Fort Thomas, Ky., son-in-law of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Marlatt of this city, will be held at the grave at Earlham cemetery at 10:30 o'clock Wednesday morning. Burial will be in Earlham. The body will arrive here from Cincinnati Wednesday morning. Wallace Elizabeth Wallace, 73 years old, died at 6:30 o'clock Monday .evening at her home near White water. She was born April 9, 1846, i and had lived in the vicinity of Richmond about 32 years. Mrs. Wallace took a prominent part in the affairs of the community. She was a member of the Methodist church. She is survived by the husband, Jeremiah Wallace, one son, Fred Wallace, five daughters, Mrs. Matilda Harr, Mrs. Mary A. Hilton, Mrs. Emma Anderson, Alice Booker, Mrs. Almita Folkner, and two step sons, Joseph Wallace and William F. Wallace. Funeral services will be held at the Methodist church at Whitewater at 2 o'clock Thursday afternon. Burial will be in the Whitewater cemetery. Friends may call any time. 35c lb., cucumbers, 25c; egg plant, 30c lb.; new spring carrots, 15c bunch; spring beets, 15c lb. Asparagus, 15c bunch; rhubarb, 5c bunch. Cauliflower, small, 20c lb.; large cauliflower, 15c lb.; leaf lettuce, 25c per lb.; head lettuce, trimmed, 35c per lb.; leak, 10c a bunch. Bermuda onions, 15c per pound; parsley, 5c a bunch; mangoes, 5 and 8c each; tomatoes, hot house grown, 30 cents lb. Sweet potatoes, 12y2 cents per lb.; turnips, 5c lb.; old, 5c lb; potatoes, old, $1.75 bu; young onions, 3 bunches 10c; Shallots, 10c bunch; breakfast radishes, 5c bunch. Button mushrooms, $1.25 a pound; sprouts, 35c; parsnips, 5c lb. New green peas, per pounl, 35c. Miscellaneous. Eggs, 42 cents; creamery butter, f 74 cents; country butter, 5o cents a pound. Produce (Buying). Country butter, 45c lb.; eggs, 37c dozen; old chickens, 30c pound; fry chickens, 35c pound. Fruits. Grape fruit, 10c and 15c; Winesaps 12 V&c lb. straight; Greenings. 10c lb.; yellow onion sets, 5c lb. Bananas, 10c lb.; lemons, 40c dozen, oranges, 60 cents per dozen; Florida oranges 60 cents dozen; strawberries, 40c quart; celery, California, 25c bunch; cocoanuts, 20c each.
Wayne County Veterans Oppose Markethouse For War Memorial
Wayne county world war veterans went on record, Monday night, as opposed to. a memorial building which would include a markethouse. Articles of Incorporation were read and adopted, a board of directors, consisting of Frank Strayer, Clem McConaha, Raymond Kelly, Paul Beckett and Raymond Mather was appointed, and Beckett, Strayer and Kelly were empowered to draft a constitution and by-laws. , Almost every man who spoke about the memorial project, after Strayer had introduced it, was opposed to the markethouse, and Captain Walter Davis finally moved that the sense of the meeting be that while the veterans were In favor of a memorial building, they did not think a market appropriate, i Adolph Getz has been appointed to organize a band. April 28 was set as the date of the next meeting. Articles of incorporation were sent to Indianapolis Tuesday. Following is the list of charter members: Ralph H. Rogers, Gordon A. Borton, Thomas Wood, Charles Leslie Sinex, Victor H. Bloemke, Russell D. McMinn, Robert H. Yott, George L. Mendenhall, C. J. Fitzgibbons, Robert L. Kluesner, George C. Morrison, Harley W. Noggle, Maro J. Justice, W. B. Conway, Rayburn E. Caskey, Evan J. Martin, William H. Nichols, Alvin El
WIFE ON BICYCLE SETS PACE FOR WILDE
" 1 - ' ifj -i. ' II
Jimmy Wilde, British flyweight boxer, doing; road work in England, wiu. Mrs. Wilde pacing him on a bicycle. Mrs. Wilde wife of Jimmy Wilde, the British flyweight champ, Is another wife of a ring; star who takes credit for helping train her nusband for his battles. Mrs. Ritchie makes Willie Ritchie, ex-lightweight champ, dance to keep in trim. The picture shows Mrs. Wilde with her husband. Her assistance must be valuable. Wilde recently outpointed Joe Lynch, U. S. boxer, in a fifteen-round bout in London.
WOMAN INJURED IN COLLISION WIU CAR Miss Mode Brown, timekeeper at the Wayne Works, was injured Monday afternoon at 5 o'clock when the truck in which she was riding with Ellis Shippet, mail carrier for the Wayne Works, collided with a city street car at the corner of North Fif teenth and E streets. Miss Brown sus tained a fractured right arm and a bad laceration of the scalp. She was taken in the city ambulance to the office of Dr. F. W. Kreuger, who saw that it would be necessary for the wounds to be dressed at the hospital. She was immediately sent to Reid Memorial hospital where she is recovering. Shippet was badly shaken up and slightly bruised. He is in the habit of getting the mail for the Wayne Works at that time of day and was in the Wayne Works truck with Miss Brown. They were crossing E street at North Fifteenth when they were struck by a street car coming from the east. The occupants cf the truck said that the car was running at a rapid rate and the motorman did not ring the bell. The motorman on the other hand contends that the occupants of the truck did not hear the bell. There were no witnesses to the accident but several persons heard the noise and rushed to the scene. RUSSIAN ROYALTY LAND IN TURKEY PARIS, April 15. Twenty members of the former Russian imperial family, including Dowager Empress Marie, reached Constantinople from the Crimea several days ago, according to Marcel Huttin in the Echo de Paris. The party also included the former Grand Duke Nicholas at one time com mander-in-chief of the Russian army, and Peter NIcholaevitch, Lieut. General in the Russian imperial army and a brother of Nicholas. Nicholas and Peter, who married sisters of the Queen of Italy, having been invited to reside in Rome, have left Constantinople for the Italian capital on an Italian steamship. The others in the party, including the Dowager Empress, will go to Malta on board a British warship where they will await the decision of the British government as to their future place of residenca.
lis, Mahlon B. Sheridan, Robert F. Smith, Jesse E. Beals, Paul G. Nolte, Cleveland E. Phillips, Howard H. Elliott Harold F. Taggart, Harold C. Yager, Frank R. Sowers, Vernon D. Sowers, Simon Miller, Rudolph J. Price. Guy W. Jones, Everett E. Ray, John L. Livingstone, R. M. Fossenkemper, R. B. Mather, Henry Wilbur Fox, Walter C. Davis, Laurence Schuette, Fred B. Pickett, Daniel P. Van Etten, Clifford B. Umpleby, Carl H. Schepmann, Orville J. Teaford, Clem McConaha. Thomas O. King, Frank R, Ryan, Adolph J. Getz, Vernon F. Elleman, Horace H. Parker, Charles N. Twigg, W. B. Williams, H. B. Williams, Ray E. Jones, William E. Dpan. L; S. Harper, Raymond G. Kelly, Jesse W. Matthews, Raymond J. Schnelle, Frank J. Gatzek, Eugene H. Schwegman, Cedrio N. Johnson, Laurence McCona-
ha, Herbert F. Weisbrod, Jethro P. Davis, Carl J. Ainsworth, Whitney S. Kempton, Edward H. Brinker, Charles J. Donner, John R. Hasecoster, A. C. Jordan, Silvestre Murray, Albert J. Llnneman, Wayne O. Beeson, Roscoe R. Manning, James N. Fitzgibbons, A. P. Etten, J. E. Carroll, Walter G. Cronin, Robert S. Peelle, W. F. Kinsella, Dr. Charles Duffin, Dr. Julius Grosvenor, Frank Strayer, Paul Beckett. MS Russel Joy Pays Visit to Mediterranean Coast 1 Russell S. Joy has been granted a ten days' leave of absence with 1,200 other boys from the Twenty-ninth Division, and is visiting Southern France the Spanish border and the Mediterranean coast. in a letter to Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Clements of 306 Richmond avenue he writes: "Our stopping place is Lamalou-les-Bains. We each have a room to ourselves with white sheets and blankets. Our host must have a good of patience for one hundred and fifty of us struck him, hobnail shoes, full packs and all. "Breakfast today was tea, bread, butter and sausage, while dinner consisted of soup, baked beans, roast beef, fried potatoes, fruit, nuts and tea. After dinner we wandered down to the 'Y' and stocked up on chocolate and so forth. This place is noted for its mineral baths and natural historic scenery. "We did not have much drilling be fore wo left a3 the French are ready to work the ground. "This evening, March 9th, finds me feeling fine after a mountain hike. The view was well worth the climb." SUNDAY SCHOOLS TO MARION The state Sunday school convention will be held at Marion, Ind., June 26-27-28, E. H. Hasemeier, president of the association said Tuesday. The board of directors, of which Mr. Hasemeier is president, will meet Monday in Indianapolis to make final arrange ments for the convention. Mr. Hasemeifir is thft nnlv rpnrpspntativn nn the board from Richmond. A new government ruling in Burma requires all Burman girls twelve years of age and over to attend a girls' school, if one exists in the town, rather than the mixed chool, as heretofore. EAGLES Initiation and smoker Wednesday evening, April 1 6th. Lunch and refreshments served. Committee. Come.
BRIEFS
Conrt Records
Sam Duncan, Willie and Frank Goodwin, all of Cambridge City, have been taken into custody on a statutory charge. Jimmie Skates, already in jail for stealing chickens, is also held on the same charge. This case, the Sima murder case, and that against Alfred Underbill, which is also on a statutory charge, are all that are now scheduled to be heard by the grand jury when it bogins it3 spring term hearing Wednesday, but others will doubtless come up. Real Estate Transfers. Mary M. Wallace to Anna Bymaster, lot 22, J. Cox' addition to Richmond, $1Everett H. Englebert to Cora D. Rush, lot 22, Bungalow Hill, Richmond, $1. Lewis O. Mansfield to Harry W, Chenoweth, N. W.. section 20, township 14, ranpe 1, $1. John Z. Miller to Charles Y. Miller and Anna M. .Miller, lot 36, J. Roberts' addition to Richmond, $1. Alvin C. Gaston to Albert W. Gregg, lot 50, T. Woodnutts' addition to Richmond, $1. Mellie T. WTogaman to Frederick and Anna W. Lindeman, lot 13, C. H. Coffins' addition to Richmond, $1. Absorption Process Makes Faces Young Success at last has come to scientists who for years have soug-ht some method of removing: the outer veil of facial skin in cases of unsightly complexions, which would be both painless and harmless. The new process Is so simple, so Inexpensive, the wonder is no one bad discovered it long-ago. It has been amply demonstrated that common mercolized wax (sold by druggists in ounce packages) entirely removes, bygentle absorption, the withered, lifeless surface skin, showing the youthful, roselike skin beneath. The wax is applied at night, like cold cream, and washed off in the morning:. The absorption also cleanses clogged pores. Increasing the skin's breathing capacity and preserving tone, color and natural beauty of the new skin. A simple and harmless wrinkle-remover which has also proved quite successful can easily be made at home in an ounce of powdered saxolite in a a jiffy. All one need do is to dissolve half pint of wich hazel and bathe the face in the solution once a dav for awhile. After the very first application the finer lines disappear and the deeper ones soon follow. Adv. THE ART OF VULCANIZING We put all kinds of tires in safe and sound running condition from the smallest repair up to the big blowout. Try us and be convinced that we know how to vulcanize tires. Inner tubes receive careful attention here. We trace even the smallest leak no tube repair too big or difficult if worth doing at all.
SECURELY VULCANIZED
We repair cuts and breaks $SO& part of the upper. Also
wfii'-"iS soles and heels vulcanized on. rvo Ew3f tacks or leather. Absolutely leakRlf!'?i proof. This work is a decided
mAX-iiz. success. NO. 8 SOUTH 7TH ST. 307 Nat Road West
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A limit of one sack of flour with each $5 order' Flour 7 brands, Spring, Fall and Winter Wheat $1.52 Potatoes Seed stock, per sack approximate bu.$1.49
PRUNES, large size, per pound 21 Cooking Figs, lb... 27J Dried Peaches, lb...21 Evaporated Apples, per pound 21 yz$ Dried Apricots, extra choice, lb, 27 Just a few fancy Apricots and Figs left at this price. Can Corn 13i Drinking Cider 20c 5 Lb. Pennant Syrup, 45 Log Cabin Syr., 25S 50c Baked Beans, can . .12C Vick's Salve 22 Rit Dye, 4 for 25c Sardines, large size..20 in Mayonnaise Dressing, 3
Max Cohn to Lewis C. LowalL S. lot 24, Brown's adition to Richmond, $1.00. ' Charles Walters entered suit Tuesday against the Gennett corporation for about $600. which he says is due him for his work in blasting stumps, purchase of dynamite, and fuses used in the work, supposed to have been done on a farm owned by the Gennett corporation.
The full title of the Bolshevik alleged government is "the Russian Federative Socialistic Republic of Soviets." Ice Cream for Easter m We are making, special for Easter, Individual Easter Lilies, Rabbits and Chicks. Order your Ice Cream for Easter Dinner early in order to insure prompt delivery. For the best Ice Cream in the city go to S3 i! rice s "Quality Always" Our 54th Year 916 Main St. WE WANT 5000 OLD and USED ' TIPwES We have a big outlet for worn and used tires in our 2 In 1 DOUBLE TREAD work and are in a position to allow the greatest amount in exchange for our new tires. We accept any kind or make. Don't buy a new tire until you get our exchange offer. We can save you money. TIRES and TUBES We carry a vast stock from "Seconds" up to the highest grade. You can easily pick the tire and size you want here. In any rubber
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WAL F. LEE
Richmond's Tire Man First Door South from Irvin Reed's Hardware Sfore
D. 0. HODGIN, Prop. for $1.75; each 59? Peanut Butter, lb. ..19 Crackers, lb 18c Oleo, 3 kinds, lb 31 Eggs, dozen 40c Coffee, 2 lbs 75c Mrs. Rorer's 50c grade. Can Sweet Potatoes. .25 Cheaper than Fresh ones. Can Hominy, large, 122 1 lb. Tall Salmon. . .182 Can Tomatoes .... .12f2 Scrap Tobacco, 3 for ,25 Can Sauerkraut iO Pop Corn, lb 15c Toilet Paper, 6 for...25 Brooms, 4-sewed Free One package with each order. JEWELRY for Easter GIFTS Is becoming more and more popular. People like to give something that will Insure lasting remembrance and the recipients of course are more than pleased. Especially is the Jewelry given Is of the beauty and character of that exhibited here. We invite all who plan an Easter offering to some fair one to see our display, which contains many ideal gifts from the very Inexpensive to those more costly. 41 North Eighth Street
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