Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 174, 5 May 1919 — Page 15
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM MONDAY, MAY 5, 1919.
PAGE FIFTEEN
fcocal and foinsirm
GRAIN QUOTATIONS
E. W. WAGNER 4 CO.'S REVIEW CHICAGO, May 5. Corn opened upvon the advance of 40 cents in hog prices. After the new high in corn
locals became conservative and sold out. Cash corn about 2 cents higher. Gossip turns on expected change to fair weather after Tuesday which may produce a reaction of some kind. Minneapolis reports millers very slow in buying all classes of era in, also Barnes speaks in the Northwest tonight and In Chicago tomorrow noonChicago oats surplus increased 404,000 this week. Oats are still effected by their comparative liberal supply. Weekly forecast for generally lair weather after Monday. CHICAGO GRAIN RANGE Furnished by E. W. WAGNER & CO, 212 Uilon National Bank Building. Phon 1720. CHICAGO, May 5. Following Is the range of futures on Chicago Board
of Trade today
heifers, $9.00911-00; choice fat cows, $10.00 12.00; fair to good fat cows, $8.009.00: bologna cows, $5.00 86.50; butcher bulls. $10.00012.00; bologna bulls, $8.0010.00; calves, $10.00014.00. Sheep Receipts, light; market.
steady. Sheep, $8.00010.00. Lambs, $10.0015.00. . .
Open High Low Close Corn May ......173 173 168 166 July .169 172 162 165 Sept 165 167 155 160 OatsMay M 71 71 67 69 'July ....... 72 73 68 70 Sept ......71 71 67 6f Pork July 6L60 62.00 61.50 61.50 LardJuly 82.20 82.25 82.06 32.10 Ribs July 28.45 2S.45 28.12 28.17
- (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, May 5- Com No. 8 yel
low, $L721.73; No. 4 yellow, $1.71;
No. 5 yellow, $1.70 0)1.71.
Oats No. 3 white, 7173oj stan-
tfard, 72073.
Pork Nominal; ribs, $28.O0328.75;
lard, $33.45. -
TOLEDO SEED PRICES (By Associated Praas)
. Toledo, .O, May . 6.-rCloverseed Prime cash, $26.75; Oct, $19.80. Alsike Prime cash, not quoted. Timothy Prime cash, old, new and May, 1 5.20; Sept., $5.95; Oct., $5.75.
" (By Associated Press)
PITTSBURGH; Pa., May 5. Hogs-
Receipts 6.500; market steady; heavy Yorkers $20.75 20.95; light Yorkers,
119.60019.75; pigs J19.26l9.50.
Cattle Receipts 1,600; market
steady; steers $166017.00; heifers,
$11014; cows $11.50013.00.
Sheep and Lambs Receipts 7,500;
market lower; top sheep $16.25; top
lambs, $16.60.
Calves Receipts 1,100; market steady; top $16.00.
LOCAL QUOTATIONS
Buying Corn, $1.70; oats, 70c; rye,
$1.25; straw, per ton, $8.00. :
Selling Cottonseed meal, per ton, $67.00: per cwt- $S.60t tankaee. 50
pef cent,' per. ton, $93.00; per cwt..
S4.75; 60 per cent $108 per ton; $5.60 per cwt; Quaker dairy feed, per ton.
$50, per cwt. $2.65; linseed oil meal.
per ton, $73; per cwt, $3.75;. salt, per bbL, $2.76; wheat bran, per ton, $50; bran and shorts mixed, per ton. $53; white wheat middlings, per ton, $58, $3 per cwt; white rye middlings, per ton, $57.
fry- va awr-irrwniir r v--r ' 1 " -n
FRUIT & VEGETABLES (Corrected Dally by Eggemeysr's) SELLING PRICK
Is
(By Associated Press) CINCINNATI, O., May 5. Receipts Cattle 1,500; hogs 10,600; sheep 200. Cattle Market steady; shippers, $13.50015.50; butchers steers, extra, $14.25015; good to choice $13014; common to fair $7011.60; heifers, extra $13014.25; good to choice $11.50 $13; common to fair $7011: cows, extra $11012.50; good to choice $8,500
$11; common to fair $6.2505; canners $506; stockers and feeders $8013.50: bulls steady to strong; bologna $8,500 $10.50; fat bulls $11012; milch cows, strong; calves, strong, 25 to 60 cents higher; extra $14014.50; fair to good, $12014; common and large $6011. Hogs Strong, 25 to 50 cents higher; selected heavy shippers, $20.75021.00; pood to choice packers and butchers. $20.75; medium $20020.75; stags $10 013.25; common to choice heavy fat sows $14019; light shippers $18019.25; pigs, 110 pounds and less $12.00 017.25. Sheep Steady; extra $12: good to choice $11011.75; common to fair, $6 010; sheared $4010. Lambs Steady; extra $17.50018; good to choice $16017.50; common to fair $13015; clipped lambB $916; springs $16 0 23.
VEGETABLE New cabbage, 15c lb., green beans, 85c lb., cucumbers, 25c; egg plant 30o lb.; new spring carrots, 16c bunch; spring beets, 10c lb. Asparagus, home grown, 10c bunch; rhubarb, 5c bunch.
Cauliflower, small, 20c lb.; large
cauliflower, 15c lb.; leaf lettuce, 25c
Bermuda onions, 15c per pound; per lb.; head lettuce, trimmed, 35c per lb.; leak, 10c a bunch, parsley, 5c a bunch; mangoes. 5 and 8c each; tomatoes, hot house grown, 30 cents lb. Sweet potatoes, 12 cents per lb.; turnips, 6c 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;parsnips, 6c pound. New green peas, per pounJ, 35c. Miscellaneous. Eggs, 45 cents; creamery butter, 74c; country butter, 60c pound. Produce (Buying). Country butter, 50c pound; eggs, 40c dozen; old chickens, 30c pound; fry chickens, 35c pound. Fruits. Grape fruits, 15c; Winesaps 15c pound, straight; Greenings, 12c pound; white onion Bets, 10c pound. Bananas, 10c lb.; lemons, 40c dozen, oranges, 50 cents per dozen, Florida oranges 60 cents dozen; strawberries, 35c quart; celery, California, 25c bunch; uocoanuts. 20c each.
(By Associated Press) CINCINNATI, C May 5. Wheat No. red $2.8402.85; No. 2 red $2.83 02.84; No. 3 red $2.800.2.82; lower grades as to quality $2.7502.80. Corn No. 2 white $1.7801.81; No. 3 white $1.7501.78; No. 4 white $1.72 01.75; No. 2 yellow $1.7801.81; No. 3 yellow, $1.7501.78; No. 4 yellow, $1.7201.75; No. 2 mixed, $1.7801.81.
LIVE STOCK PRICES'
(By Associated Press) I INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., May 5. Hogs Receipts, 7,000 ; higher. Cattle Receipts, 1,000; higher. Calves Receipts, 600 ; lower. Sheep Receipts 100; steady.
HOGS Good to choice, 160 to 200 lbs., $20.85 020.90; good to choice, 200 to 225 lbs., $20.90021.00; medium and mixed. 160 to 200 lbs., $20.85021.00; fat hogs, $20.0020.50; sows according to quality, $15.00019.50; good to prime $20.80 020.85; bulk of sows, $19.00; poor to best stags, 80 lbs. dock, $15.00018.00; boars, thin sows and skips, no definite prices. CATTLE Kilting Steers Extra good. 1,300 lbs. and upward. $17.00018.00; good
to choice. 1,300 lbs., and upward, $17.50 018.00; common to medium, 1,300 lbs. and upward, $16.00017.00; good to choice, 1,200 to 1.300 lbs., $17.50 $18.60; common to medium. 1,200 to 1,300 lbs., $15016.00; good to choice, 1,000 to 1,150 lbs $14.50016.00; common to medium, 1,000 to 1.150 lbs.. $13.50014.50; poor to good, under 1,000 lbs., $12.00014.00; good to best yearlings, $14.00015.00. Heifers Good to best under 800 lbs, $13.50014.50; com. to medium, 800 lbs. np, $10.00012 00; good to best under 800 lbs., $18.50015.00; common to medium, under 800 lbs, $10013. Cow Good to best 1.050 lbs. upward, $11.00014.25; common to medium, 1,050 lbs., upward, $9.50010.50; good to best under 1,050 lbs, $10.00 1L50; common to medium, under 1,050 lbs., $8.0009.50; canners and cutters, $ 5.50 7.00 ; fair to choice, milkers, $80.000140. ) Bulls Common to best 1.300 lbs. upward, $10.00011.50; good to choice, under 1,300 lbs, $11.00012.00; fair to medium, under 1.300 lbs, $11012.00; common to good bolognas, $8.50010.00. Calves Good to choice veals, under 200 lbs, $14.00015.50; common to teedium veals, under 200 lbs, $10.00 013.50; good to choice heavy calves, $9.60 011.00; 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, $12.50 013 50; common to medium, under 800 lbs, $10.60012.60; medium to good heifers, $9.00010.50; medium to good "cows, $8.0009.50; springers, $9.00 $11.00; stock calves. 250 to 450 lbs, $12015; western fed lambs, $18.00 down; western fed wethers, $13 down: bucks. Der 100 pounds, $7.0007.50;
clipped stock, selling $2 to $3 per 100
lbs. lower than above quotations. SHEEP AND LAMBS. Good to choice sheep, $9.00010.00; common to medium sheep, $7.00p
$8.00; good to choice light lambs, $15.50016.00: common to medium
lambs. $8.50011.00; western fed
lambs. $17 down: western wethers,
$12 down.
(By Associated Press EAST BUFFALO, N. Y, May 5. Cattle Receipts, 4,400; good, slow; 25 to 60 cents lower; others steady. Prime steers, $16.60017.25; shipping steers, $15.50016.00;. butchers, $10.00 015.50; yearlings, 10(315.50; heifers, $8.00014.50; cows, $5.50012.50; bulls,
$7.50015.50; stockers and feeders, $8.00015.50; fresh cows and Bpring-ers.-steady, $650150. Calves Receipts, 3.300, active and steady, $6.00016.50. Hogs Receipts, 9,600; pigs, 60 cts. higher; others 35 cents lower; heavy mixed and Yorkers, $21.50; light Yorkers, $20.50021.00; pigs, $20.50; roughs, $18.60019.00; stags, $12,000 15.00. Sheep and. Lambs Receipts, 8,000'; active; lambs, $10.00017.00; yearlings 10.00014.50: wethers, 13.00013.50; ewes, $5.00012.50; mixed sheep, $12.75013.25.
By Associated Press)' CHICAGO, (United States Bureau of Markets), May 5. Hogs Receipts, 35,000, market unevenly 25 to 50 cents higher than Saturday's general trade: top, $21.05; bulk, $20.75 0 21.00; heavy weight $20.85 0 21.05; medium weight, $20.65021.00; light weight $20,250 $21.00; light lights, $19.00 0 20.50; heavy packing sows, smooth, $20.00(0) $20.50;-packing sows, rough, $19020; pigs, $17.75013.25. Cattle Receipts, 19,000; beef steer3,
steady to strong; butcher cattle strong
to 15 cents nigner; calves, 2a cents higher; feeders, steady; beef steers, medium and heavy weight, choice and prime, $17.75 0 20; medium and good, $13.90 018.00; common, $11.50014.25; light weight good and choice, $14.75
$17.85; common and medium, $10,500 $15.25; butcher cattle, heifers, $8,000 $15.25; cows, $7.75015.00; canners and cuttersr $6.2507.75; veal calves, light and handy weight, $13014; feeding steers, $10.25015.50; stocker steers, $8.50013.75.
Sheep Receipts, 12,000; lambs, unevenly higher, mostly 25 to 50 cents
up; sheep, strong to 15 cents higher;
lambs, 84 pounds down. $18.25 0 20.50; 85 pounds up, $17.75020.40; culls and common, $13.000 17.50; yearling wethers, $16.00018.50; ewes, medium, good and choice, $12.25015:65; culls and common, $6.00012.25.
Corrected by McLean & Company.
Dayton, Ohio. Bell Phone East 2S: Home. 81235.
DAYTON, O, May 5. Hogs Receipts, eight cars; market 25 to 50
cents higher; choice heavies, $20.00.0
$20.50; select packers and butchers,
$20 0 20.50: heavy Yorkers, $19.50020;
light Yorkers. $18018.50; pigs $16.00; 2nd 4
v1k 17; stags $12.00 014.00; lat sows, J 1st 4
Camden, 0.
Mrs. Hannah A. Pierson of Indianapolis, Ind., who visited her sister, Mrs. Frank Kennedy, Wednesday and Thursday, left Friday for Sevenmile and Middletown, where she will visit other relatives. . .Mrs. Wilson, mother
of Mrs. Anna Gift, fell Wednesday eve
ning in the yard at her home and dislocated her shoulder.. . .Mr. and Mrs.
Jesse Eby were business visitors in
Camden Thursday.. . , . .Misses Sarah and May Scott visited friends Wednes
day afternoon .... Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Scott were in Richmond and Dayton Tuesday and Wednesday. .. ..George
Brower of Richmond, Ind, was in
Camden Thursday on business. . . . . .
Mrs. Jackson, who underwent an op
eration for appendicitis Wednesday, is doing well and friends are hoping for speedy xecovery. . .A number of young people of town attended the play given in the auditorium of Dixon Townhip
High school by the senior class, Fri
day night The same play, "Kentucky
Belle," was given Thursday night with music from Richmond. The play was
presented before crowded houses both
evenings. . . .Miss Clara Ramsey of the
Lima High school is at home for a short time on account of the illness of
her mother. ....Webster Neff is out again after several days suffering from blod poison. .. ..Miss Helen Clark of
Oxford will spend the week-end with
her mother, Mrs. Jennie Clark.... Dr.
Dunham, district superintendent of the
M. E. church, addressed the congre
gation on the Centenary Wednesday
night..... Will Francis is at Martins
ville, Ind, being treated for rheumatism . ... Miss Vera Coombs of Miami
University, will spend the week-end
with her parents. Dr. and Mrs. J. W.
Coombs.
PRODUCE MARKET
(By Associated Press)
CHICAGO, May 6. Butter Market Unsettled; creamery firsts 5454.
Eggs Receipts, 40,960 cases; market higher; firsts 42044; lowest 40 W
Live Poultry Market steady; fowls,
35C Potatoes Weak; receipts 109 cars; carlots Northern bulk and sacked whites $1.90 0 2.15; red rivers $1.90 cwt; new stock Florida jobbing Spaulding Rose $9 bbl.
NEW YORK STOCK LIST (By Associated Press)
NEW YORK, May 5 The closing
quotations on the stock exchange
were: American Can. 65. American Locomotive, 75. American Beet Surag, 81. American Smelter, 62. Anaconda, 944. Bethlehem Steel, bid 73. Canadian Pacific, 168. Chesapeake & Ohio, 65. Great Northern Pfd, 94,. New York Central, 77. Northern Pacific, 95. Southern Pacific, 107S4. Pennsylvania, 44. U. S. Steel Com, 99.
LIBERIA BONOS (By Associated Press)
NEW YORK. May 5. Final prices
on Liberty oonds today were:
3i ...$93.63
1st 4 95.80
94.30
96.00
118.50019.00; common and fair sows, i 2nd 4 . ... 94.36
S17.5018.00.
t Cattle Receipts, three cars; mar,XJt 25c lower; fair to good shippers, 4.000 15.00; good to choice butchers, $13.00014.50; fair to medium butch- - ors, $11.00013.00; good to choice
3rd 4 95.4S
4th 44 94.38
BUTTER FAT QUOTATION
Butter fat. delivered In Richmond. is bringing 59 cents this week.
ANNIE'S CHOICE Annie thought She looked at Aunt Moggie and at her clothe. She look
ed around the room. Everything in it
was ideally luxurious to Annie. From
the narrow bed with the "sham" worked with a curlicued 'B" in red cotton and the clean, white spread, to the marble-topped bureau with the long glass, and the "stationary washstand" in the corner, where you could get both hot and cold water by Just turning a tap all the furnishings were exactly what Annie longed for and re
solved to have when she grew up. At
her house, if you wanted hot water.
vou had to heat it on the stove. And
if you wanted to look at the bottom
of your skirt you had to climb on a
chair and peer into a cracked glass in ft dresser T think," said Annie soberly, finishing her appraisal of the room, "I'd rather be you and live in a place like this. Don't you have to be rich, Aunt Moggie, to live in a place like this?" Annie was remembering also the dress
Aunt Moggie had bought her, and the things, at Christmas, and tbe bags of candy in the desk drawer. Annie's sense of money values was vague. A dollar was the most money she had ever seen in her life at one time. "I get paid twelve dollars where I work," said her aunt "but my friend here " she laid her hand on the keyboard of the typewriter those ehiny white discs with letters and figures that fascinated Annie so "my
friend here often helps me to make i sixteen." Annie's eyes became saucers of wonderment Sixteen dollars a week! The sum was too huge, of course, to be grasped fully, but it represented definite wealth. From that moment on Aunt Moggie stood in Annie's mind for Greatness and Success. Annie got up and timidly touched the glossy sides of the machine that made this vast prosperity possible. The thoughts were rushing pellmell through her awakening mind. How had Aunt Moggie learned to do this wonderful thing? Did lots of ladies do it? Why hadn't her mother done it instead of having "the home and husband and children?" Why did anybody want homes where they had to work all the time, and husbands and
children, when they could have a typewriter and a lovely, neat room and pretty clothes and hot water right in the corner, so that you could wash your hands without getting red and chapped? Still all the women in the neighborhood where Annie lived were like her mother. They, too, had homes and husbands and children, and worked
and cooked and sometimes cried, and
"1 ilit
ROCHESTER Dwight Green, stud
ent at Purdue university, and Miss
Fern Laudeman, daughter of the Rev
E. Q. Laudeman, are reported to have
eloped to Michigan to be married.
Victory Gardens
IT'S WARM WORK BUT V The Victory Gardener smiles in spite of the heat. Get a garden book from the National War Garden Commission, at Washington. Banks throughout the United States realize that they are doing a valuable service to their clients when they urge them to plant gardens and help them in this work, for the home food producer In the majority of cases is a thrifty citizen and is likely to be a better customer than he would be otherwise. On this account many banks are cooperating with the National War Garden Commission of Washington and have been distributing thousands of free garden books to their patrons. The New York. State Bankers' Association has urged all its client bank3 throughout the state to back up the victory garden campaign and help spread the message of home food production. Following the lead of the Mercantile Trust and Deposit Company, of Baltimore, more than a score of banks throughout that State have begun campaigning for gardens. A history of the war garden movement which has just been published under the title "The War Garden Victorious" a memorial volume not for sale, but being sent to libraries as a permanent record of this patriotic activity praises highly the part taken by the banks as well as bv btz industrial concerns in utinv.i.
lating interest in this work.
was different? Why wasn't she married like the others and
Annie's flying thoughts were naueaj by Aunt Moggie's voice. "It you'd like to play with it a little, and will be careful not to break anything," she was saying, "I'll put the dictionary under you on this chair and you can write a letter on the typewriter to your mother. There!" And Annie waa plumped upon the chair, her small fingers fluttering helplessly over the pussllng white keys. . She pressed one down gingerly. It didn't strike the paper. She tried again, harder. Behold! It "printed." There was a capital A on the white nnr lutt as rood as Aunt Moggie
could have made it It took an awful
wtatia to find the right letters. Aunt
Moeaie bad to help her out.
But after much trying and failing and laughing and making mistake and rubbing them out and startlm fresh and keeping at it there stooc the letter of her whole name: ANNII HARGAN; She had printed them hei self! It was better than playing Jack straws. More fun than touching th yellow old piano keys at Edith Rom er'i house! (To be continued.) New Paris, 0. The Smith orchestra gave a dance in the K. of P. hall here. May 3 Mrs. Lizzie Miller spent from Tusda until Friday with Mr. and Mrs. Ec Reinhart of Eaton Mr. and Mrs
Clarence Via and family spent Mon day at New Madison with Mr. anc1 Mrs. M. L. Via.... Mr. Royer of near Dayton, spent Thursday with bis brother, Harvey Royer Clarence Via made a trip to Bradford, O, Mon day delivering plants for Martin ... . Harvey Royer, C. W. Northrop and Mr and Mrs. C. A. Northrop visited Mr. and Mrs. George Harter near New Madison, Wednesday evening. Mr Harter who has been so seriously ij: Is showing slight Improvement. Scott Hawley was a business visitor in Dayton Sunday A very pleasan' surprise was given by Mr. and Mrs W. C. Crose, Thursday evening in honor of their daughter, Thresa. the oc easion being her thirteenth birthday An enjoyable evening was spent in music and games and refreshments
were served tne iouowing guesis: Misses Helen and Mary Velts, Helen Harris, Laura Lehman, Kathrlne Reinhelmer, Opal Northrop, Maxlne Mid daugh, Helen Wefler. Violet Collins Mildred Jones, Ruth Engle. Avis and Thresa Crose ..Charles Bennett, who recently returned from overseas, was guest of honor at a family dinner given by his sister, Mrs. Lon Calkins
at their country home south of town
guest of her daughter, Mrs. Vivian Relnheimer and family Wednesday... The local Red Cross held their last meeting for a time on Wednesday and completed a number of garments. They expect to have more sewing a little later. .. .Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Scott are moving into the west half
of the Mrs. Caroline McNeil's proper
ty on West Main street. ...Mr. and Mrs. George Kuth will move to the S. W. Roberts farm north of New Paris
....Mrs. Frank Smelser spent Thurs
day night and Friday with Mrs. Elizabeth King. ...Miss Marjorie McKeon
taught Domestic science in the school Thursday. Miss Bertha Frank being absent on account of sickness.... The Domestic science and Manual training classes of the seventh grade of the school held a class picnic Thursday. . . . . .Absal Barton has purchased - the James Baker property on West Main street O. W. Sherer and Edward Arnold were business visitors in Ea
ton Thursday ... .Mrs. Laura- Via ot New Madison visited relative Thurs
day.
Horse 'And Baggy Stolen
Here From Economy Man Bane Horten. living near Economy, reported to the police the- theft of his horse and buggy from a rack on North V Seventh street, while he was Visiting in Richmond, Sunday evening. , Horten describes the horse as being a small bay, with two white bind feet, a white star in its forehead, and -
the buggy as being a black. Albrandrr.ade vehicle. The rig disappeared between 7, and 9:30 p. m.
Palladium Want Ads Pay
Hot Days are Coming Prepare now for them
OIL COOK STOVES
WickU.,, Val:U,A
Bta rlam. ,
. COOK THE FOOD NOT YOURSELF Florence Oil Cook Stoves are well known, and are used by . many housekeepers in Richmond. You can buy the Florence in 2, S, 4 and 5 burner sizes. Prices start at $18.50.
1 i ft I If -"28 z b n
H
were always saying there was no i Fifty guests were present and enjoyed
money no money no money tnat was the incessant wall! They hadn't money for meat or clothes, or doctor's bills or for rent. And if so many women had homes and husbands and children and trouble instead of the things Aunt Moggie had, how did it happen that Aunt Moggie
the day....Russel Aker. Elmer Comer and David Brown, members of the 332nd division, arrived at Camp Sherman last Sunday morning and expects to be discharged Friday. . . .Rev. Harvey Armacost, of Dayton preached af the M. E. church Thursday night.... Mrs. Cora Hunt of Richmond was the
E
NOTIG
To My Friends and Customers I have severed all connections with the Dickinson Wall Paper Co., and solicit your trade. Your work will be given personal attention. Hod L. Dickinson
efri&erator
Sae
500 POUNDS FREE ICE 500
$34.00
A Leader in Popularity and There's a Reason
120 South 3rd Street
Paper Hanger
People who buy a refrigerator of this type will always recommend their friends to do the same. That is because quality is the outstanding feature. The many separate walls scientifically constructed insure unusually excellent insulation. Other Boxes $12.60, $14.00, $18.00 and up
Indiana "Welcome Home" Celebration Indianapolis, Wed. May 7 Special Limited Train Service via Terre Haute, Indianapolis & Eastern Traction Company Lv. Richmond. ........ .6:00 A. M. .... Lv. Centerville 6:16 A. M. Lv. Pershing. .6 :28 A. M. - Lv. Cambridge City. ... .6:32 A. M. Lv. Dublin 6:40 A. M. Ar. Indianapolis. ...... .8:30 A. M. Lv. Cambridge City. ... .6:00 A. M. Lv. Dublin. ........... .6:08 A. M. Lv. Straughn. ......... .6:15 A. M. Lv. Lewisville 6:20 A. M. Ar. Indianapolis. ...... .8:00 A. M. . - Note early arrival of these Limited trains in Indianapolis. Call local Agent for further information.
y t "" i
H
MAIN STREET. CORNER NINTH
Help Put Over the new Victory Loan
.,uiJM;,ii..,,iii'lii:iJ,U..1;!j1:iii1imi,:ii..imui,,.ii.i,.iiuini.i.1Mur.nui,imiU,i.yaii., .,,!,;i,ipv,;i ' ' - j r f jf 1 f j 1 1 1 H 1 1 f it 11 1 r I HI 1 1
Si
PE
PTONA
Blood and Nutritive Tonic Peptona is pleasant to take and is readily assimilated even by weak stomachs. Its tonic action adapts it for use in convalescence from
Infl
uenza
It will be found beneficial where there is lassitude, loss of flesh or other ailments which have weakened the vitality. Absolutely guaranteed Money refunded if not satisfied. Full directions in box.
FOSLER DRUG CO. Corner Sixth and Main, and 105 Richmond Avenue. , -THE REXALL STORES
