Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 245, 28 July 1919 — Page 13
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, JULY 28, 1913.
PAGE THIRTEEN
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aiiJioreian
GRAIN QUOTATIONS
WAGNER'S GRAIN LETTER CHICAGO. July 28.. December corn tola at $1,73 on talk of bis reduction of wheat crop and continued dry and bot weather and report! by lnglis.of corn injury." The India report suggests that it no break in current weather crop may" drift to the 2.600 to 2,600 million class. We believe the Inglis tears are somewhat overdone. Corn is a hot weather plant. The July 1 condition was 88 per cent, and real condition of the crop cannot
plant can revive with fair August rains. CHICAGO GRAIN RANGE Furnished by E. W. WAGNER A CO., 212 Union National Bank Building. Phone 1720. CHICAGO. July 28. Following is the range of futures on Chicago Board
of Trade today: Open High Low Close Corn July 196 19T 196 197 Sept. 196 197 196 197 Dec. 169 172 167 172 Oats July 81 81 80 80 Sept 80 81 80 81 Dec 83 84 83 84 Pork Sept. 51.90 51.90 Lard Sept. 34.70 34.72 34.65 34.65 Ribs Sept. 28.65 28.65 28.57 28.62 (By .Associated Press) Toledo. Ohio. July 28. Cloverseed: prime cash, $29.50; Oct., $32.50; Dec. $31.25. Alsike: Prime cash, $25.75; Oct., $26.00; Dec, $26.00. Timothy: Old and new, $5.40; Sept., $5.80; Oct., $5.70; Dec. $5.80; Mar.. $6.00. (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, July 28. Corn No. 2, mixed, $1.992.03; No. 2 yellow, $2.01 52.03. Oats No. 2 white, 8182c; No. 3 white. 8081c. Pork, nominal; ribs, $28.25(0)29.25; lard, $34.50.
steady; fair to good shippers. $12.00 S14.00; good to choice butchers, $12.00 013.60; fair to medium butchers. $10 O12.00; good to choice heifers, $9.00 12.00; choice fat cows, $9.00 10.00; fair to good (at cows, $7.00 8.60; bologna cows, $5.00 0 6.00; butcher bulla, $9.00010.00: b0l6gna bulla $7.0039.00; calves. $10017.00. Sheep 'Receipts, light; market, steady. Sheep, $6.000 8.00. Lambs, $10.00014.00.
(By Associated Press)
CINCINNATI, O.. July 28. Wheat
No. 1 red, $2.2502.26; No. 2 red. $2.2302-24; No. 3 red, $2.212.22; other grades as to quality, $2.00 2.21. Corn No. 2 white, $2.16 2.17; No. 3 white, $2.15 2.16; No. 4 white. $2.122.14. Corn No. 2 yellow, $2.10
2.12; No. 3 yellow, $2.082.10; No. 4
yellow. $2.052.07. Corn No. 2 mix ed, $2.082.10.
(By Associated Press)
EAST BUFFALO, July 28. Cattle
F.eoelpts, 5,300; good. 25 to 350 higher; others 25 to 50c lower; prime steers, $16.60 0 18.10; shipping steers, $15.60 $16.25; butchers. $9.00015.50; yrlings, $10.50016.00; heifers. $9,000 $14.00; cows. $4.5011.25; bulls. $8.00 O12.00; stockers and feeder. $8.00 $10.60; fresh cows and springers. $30
165. Calves Receipts. 1,700; active.
50c lower,-$6.00019.50. Hogs Receipts, 6.400; 25c lower;
heavy, mixed and Yorkers, $23.75;
light Yorkers, $22.7523.00; pigs.
$22.6023.00; roughs, $21.0021.25; stags, $12.00018.00. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 1,400; -yearlings, steady: wethers, strong:
lambs, $12.00 17.00; yearlings, $8.00
Ort.OO; wethers. $10.50011.00; ewes, $4.0010.00; mixed sheep, $10.00 $10.50.
FRUIT & VEGETABLES (Corrected Dally by Eggemeyer'a) - SELLING PRICES -
Candidacy Oi Bowman
Beets, 5c per bunch; honey dew melons, each, 76 cents; leaf lettuce, per pound, 15 cents; head lettuce, trimmed, per lb., 35c; tomatoes, per
lb., 20c; Bermuda onions, per. lb... 12c;
parsley, per bunch, 15c; mangoes.
each, 3 for 5 cents; turnips, 8 cents per pound; breakfast radishes, bunch, 6c; new green peas, home grown, 20c lb.; garlic, $1 per lb.; summer squash, lb., 15c; new potatoes, 4 lbs. 25c, 90c
pk.; new corn, home grown, 40c doz.; Michigan celery, per bunch, 5c; green beans, 10c lb. Eggs, dozen, 50c; creamery butter per lb., 60c; country butter, per lb., 56C; spring chickens, 76o lb. Produce (Buying) Country butter, per lb., 45c; eggs, 42 per dozen; old chickens, per lb. 26c; frying chickens, per lb., 35c. Fruits Bananas, per pound, 12c; lemons, per dozen, 40c; limes, per dozen, 50c; oranges, per dozen, 60c; cocoanuts, each, 20c; watermelons, 3c per pound; cantaloupes, 10c; California plums, 25c per pound; apricots, 25c pound; pineapples 30c; peaches, 13c, or 2 lbs. for 25c; huckleberries, 40c quart; new
apples, 10c pound; Malaga grapes, 40c
pound.
Efforts were made today to start a
demonstration at the Republican dis
trict rally at Magnesia Springs, August 1, in favor of the candidacy of L. S. Bowman, formerly county auditor, for the nomination as state auditor. Ed Paul and Will Woodard, county chairman, both of Cambridge City, and Karl Meyers, county treasurer, held a conference yesterday to discuss arrangements for sending a big Wayne county delegation to the meeting to whoop up sentiment for Bowman. They were unable late today to obtain a leader for the movement. Meyers said that Henry county waa willing to assist Wayne in the demonstration. Some Republicans opposed the project on the theory that the rally was to be a "love feast" and that the injection of a Bowman boom might be misconstrued.
PROMOTES TRADE ALLIANCE BETWEEN U. S. AND POLAND
(By Associated Press) CINCINNATI. O.. July 28 Receipts Cattle, 3,100; hogs, 5.300; sheep, 3,500. Cattle Market weak; shippers, $11.60015.50; butchers steers, extra, $12.00014.00; good to choice, $11.00 12.00; common to fair, $7.5010.50. Heifers Extra, $12.000 12.50; good to choice, $11.00011.75; common to fair. $7.00010.50; cows, extra, $10.00 11.50; good to choice. $7.5010.00; common to fair, $6 7; canners, $50 $5.75; stockers and feeders. $7010.50; bulls, lower; bologna, $8.00 9.00; fat bulls, $9.500 10.50; milch cows, steady. Calves, steady to strong; extra, J18.TO;
fair to good, $13.00 17.75; common andflarge. $7.0012.00. Hogs Steady; selected heavy shippers, $23.25; good to choice packers and butchers, $23.25; medium. $23.00 023.25; stags. $10.0014.00; common to choice heavy fat sows, $14.00 19.50; light shippers, $21.50022.00; pigs. 110 pounds and less. $14.00 20.76. Sheep Strong; good to choice, $8 8.60; fair, , $3.006.50; fair to good, $6.50 8.00; lambs, slow and lower; good to choice, $16.50 17.00; fair to good, $11.50016.50; common to fair, $6.00011.60.
Local Grain Market
Richmond flour mills are paying $2.11 for No. 1 red wheat; $2.08 for No. 2; $2.04 for No. 3; No. 4, $2.00; No. 5. $1.92.
LOCAL QUOTATIONS (Furnished by Whelan) SELLING PRICES
BUYING Corn, $2.00; oats 70c; straw, per ton $8.
rye $1.65;
LIVE STOCK PRICES
28.
lbs., 225 and fat
(By Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS. Ind., July Hogs Receipts 5,000, steady
Cattle Receipts 1,500; lower. . Calves Receipts 400; steady. Sheep Receipts 300; weak. HOGS Good to choice, 160 to 200 $23.10 good to choice, 200 to pounds, $23.1023.20; medium mixed, 160 to 200 lbs., $23.10;
hogs. $21.0021.50; good to prime, $23.1023.20; bulk of sows, $20.00 $20.50; fat back pigs. $20.2520.50; feeding pigs, $20.50 down; poor to best stags, 80 pounds dock, $21.00; pregnant sows, $15.0017.00; feeding pigs, $20.50 down; boars, thin sows and skips not quoted. CATTLE Killing steers extra good, 1,300 lbs. and upward. $17.0018.00; good to choice, 1,300 lbs. and upward, g 16.25; common to medium, 1,150 to 1,300 lbs. and upward, $15.0016.00; pood to choice, 1150 to 1250 lbs., $15.50 16.256; common to medium, 1,150 to 1,250 lbs., $14.5015; good to choice 1.000 to 1.150 lbs., $1415.25; common to medium, 1,000 to 1,150 lbs., S14.00; poor to good, under 1,000 lbs., $13.50; good to best, under 1,000 lbs., $10.5012.00; yearlings, $12,500 14. Heifers Good to best, 800 lbs. and up, $13.50 and $14.50; common to medium, 800 lbs. and up, $11.00 good to best under 800 lbs., $14.00 15.25; common to medium, under 800 lbs., $8.50 12.50. Cows Good to best, 1,050 lbs. upward, $13.50; common to medium, 1,050 lbs., upward, $9.00 10.00, good to best under 1,050 pounds, $9.50 $11.00; common to medium, under 1050 lbs., $8.00 9.00; canners and cutters. $6.007.50; fair to choice upward, $11.00 and $12.50: good to choice milkers. $90.000140.00. Bulls Common to best. 1.300 lbs. upward, $1012; good to choice, $10 $11; fair to medium, under 1,300 lbs.. $9.00 0 9.75; common to good bolognas, $809. Calves Good to choice veals, under 200 pounds, $17.6018.5O; common to medium veals, $9.0017.00; good to choice heavy calves, $10.0012.00; common to medium heavy calves, $5.00 O9.00. 8tockers and Feeding Cattle Good to choice steers, 800 lbs., and up. $10.2510.75; common to fair steers. 800 lbs. and up. $9 10.00; good to choice steers under 800 lbs., $10.50; common to medium, under 800 lbs.. $8.00 9.00; medium to good heifers. $7.508.50; medium to good cows, $7.008.00; springers, $3.50 10.50; stock calves, 250 to 450 lbs., $7.5011.50; western fed lambs, $18 down; western fed wethers. $13 down: bucks, per 100 pounds, $7,000)7.50: fair to choice milkers, $75150; clipped stock, selling $2 to $3 per 100 lbs. lower than above quotations. SHEEP AND LAMBS. Spring lambs, $16.00; bucks, per 100 lbs., 6.00O6.00.
Good to choice sheep, $6.007.00:
luouiiuu io niemum sneep, 33. ou a $5.50; breeding ewes, $9.00 12.00; good to choice light lambs, $14.5015.00; common to medium lambs, $10.0011.00; western . fed lambs. $16.00 down; western fed wethers, $11.00 down.
(By Associated Press) CHICAGO, 111., July 5S. Hogs Receipts, 3,900; weak, lower; bulk, $21.25 0 23.00; heavy weight. $21.6523.00; medium weight, $21.6523.15; light weight. $21.50 23.15; light lights.
$21.0022.65; beavy packing sows.
smooth, $21.0021.60; rough, $19.7520.75; $21.50.
Cattle Receipts,
SELLING Cottonseed Meal, per ton $80; per cwt. $4.25. Oil Meal, per ton $82; per cwt. $4.25. Tankage 50 per ton $93; per cwt. $4.75; 60 per cent, $108 per ton; cwt. $3.50; Quaker City Dairy Feed, per ton $52.00; per cwt. $2.75. Schumaker Feed, ton $63.50; cwt. $3.25. Salt, per bbl., $2.75. Wheat Bran, per ton $48.50; cwt. $2.5TT Bran and Shorts mixed, per ton $57.50, per cwt. $3.00. White Wheat Middlings, per ton $65.00; per cwt.v$3.35. Barley Feed, per ton $65; cwt. $3.35. Standard Middlings, per ton $60.00; per cwt. $3.10.
ICS
PRODUCE MARKET
packing sows, pigs, $20.00
Corrected 'by McLean & Company, Dayton, Ohio. Bell Phone, East 28; Home 81235.
DAYTON. O., July 28 Hogs Re
ceipts, four cars; market steady; packers and butchers,; $23.00;
Veavy Yorkers. $21.75 22.25; light
Yorkers S21.2521.75; pigs. $18.25 19.75; stags $14017; choice fat sows, $19.7520.25; common and fair sows, $18.7519.73. Cattle Receipts Six cars;
28,000; unset
tled; beef steers, light and handy
weight choice and prime $16.8518.50; medium and good, $12.25 16.85; common, $10.2512.25; light weight, good and choice, $14.60 14.75; common and medium, $9.6014.60; butcher cattle, heifers, $7.25 14.50; cows. $7.25 3 13.50; canners and cutters, $5.75 $7.25; veal calves, light and handy weight, $15.7517.00; feeder steers, $7.75 13.75; stocker steers. $7.00 $11.25; western range steers, $11.50 116.25; cows and heifers, $8.5012.75. Sheep Receipts, 24.000; slow; lambs. 84 lbs. down, $13.50 16.75; culls and common, $9.00 13.25; yearling wethers, $10.5013.25; ewes, medium, good and choice, $7.009.00; culls and common, $2.75 06.50.
The following are the jobbing prices on produce in Richmond today Eggs Dozen, candled, 45 cents; creamery butter, 55 cents. The following prices are being paid today for produce by Richmond Jobbers:
Constantin Nadkewics. V Constantin Nadkewics of Warsaw, Poland, reputed to be one of the wealthiest men in Europe, has arrived in this country to promote a close commercial alliance between America and the newly formed republic of Poland. He states that the Paderewski regime has made the new Polish government one of. the most stable in Europe.
Eggs, per dozen, 40 cents; old chick
ens, per lb., 25 cents; frying chickens,
per lb. 32 cents.
Eggs, per dozen, 40c; old chickens
25C lb.; frying chickens, per lb. 32c.
(By Associated Press) PITTSBURG, Pa., July 28. HogsReceipts, 2.500; market, higher; heavies, $23.00 23.50; heavy Yorkers, $23.7524.00; light Yorkers, 23.00 23.25; pigs, $22.50 23.00. Cattle Receipts, 2,400; market, lower, $15.50 $16.00; heifers and cows, $9.50011-50. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 3,100; market, steady; top sheep, $11.00; top lambs, $16.00. Calves Receipts, 1,200; market, lower; top, $19.00.
PRODUCE MARKET
(By Associated Press) CHICAGO, July 28 Butter market higher; creamery firsts, 46 1-4 52 1-4. Eggs Market steady; firsts 42 1-2 43 1-2; lowest, 38. Live poultry, market higher; fowls, 31c; springs, 3035. Potatoes Steady, arrivals 7S cars: new (car lots) Kansas, Missouri and Illinois, Early Ohios, sacked, $3,000 3.20 cwt: Louisiana Bliss Triumphs, sacked, $3.30 cwt; Irish cobblers, Kentucky, sacked, $3.75 cwt.
NEW YORK STOCK LIST NEW YORK, July 28. The closing quotations on the stock exchange were : American Can.. 59. American Locomotive, 92Ji. American Beet Sugar, 92. American Smelter, 86 Anaconda, 75. Atchison, 100. Bethlehem Steel, B., 100. Canadian Pacific, 162. Chesapeake and Ohio, 64 V Great Northern Pfd.. 94. New York Central. 80. Northern Pacific, 94 . Southern Pacific, 1064. Pennsylvania, 46. U. S. Steel Com., 113.
LIBERTY BONOS (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, July 28. Final prices on Liberty Bonds today were: 3 99.52; 1st 494.10; 2nd 493.62; 1st 4 94.88; 2nd 4 94.08; 3rd 4 95.02; 4th 4 93.94. Victory. 3 99.92; Victory 4 99.86.
LOCAL HAY MARKET New Hay Timothy, $28.00; mixed, $25.00; clover, $20.00. (By Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS, July 28. Hay Firm; No. 1 timothy, $35.0036.00; No. 2 timothy $3535.50; No. 1 clover, $27.60028.00.
BUTTER FAT QUOTATION Butter fat delivered in Richmond Is bringing 65c this week.
L"
Let Hogs Harvest Part of the Com Crop Pigs Gain More in Field Than in Any Other Way 8 P. G. HOLDEN
ET the hogs harvest part of the corn. There Is no place where a hog
will make more gain from a bushed of corn than right in the cornfield
harvesting it himself. It costs as much to harvest a crop as it does to grow it, and the saving in labor, to say nothing of the gain per bushel,
Is a great item in this time of labor scarcity and high cost of farm production.
Pigs of about 100 pounds weight will make the best use of the cornfield.
When they have reached that weight and the corn Is ready they can be turned
In after getting on "full feed." They can be brought to full feed gradually and in the course of 10 days or two weeks be ready to go into the corn. Get them accustomed to the corn by first cutting some corn, stalks and all, and throwing it to them on pasture, gradually increasing the feed. Fence Off Part of Field. It Is well to fence off part of the cornfield and hog it off before the corn Is ripe, then set the fence over, taking in another plot, and so on until the hogs are finished. This prevents the pigs from tearing down the corn faster than they clean It up. A temporary fence can be built through the cornfield by using 26-inch woven wire fence. Cut off each alternate hill of corn at about
HOG MARKET SLOW HERE; $22.00 TOP; LIGHT JES HIGH Shurley Predicts That Top Has Been Reached Cow and Heifer Bring $301. BY WILLIAM R. SANBORN The receipts of hogs at the Glen
Miller yards last week totaled 561; head, for which $28,194.17 was checked out; 27 calves which cost $1,220 and 18 spring lambs, for, which the
owners collected $176.40. While the hog market was slow lo
cally, compared with the previous week, the prices averaged the same.
the top being $22, the same as the week before. A noteworthy feature of
last week's market was the fact that
180 to 200 pound hogs sold a' dollar
higher than hogs weighing 250 to 300 pounds, the former being in greatest favor at central markets.
With reference to the future of hog
prices Rome Shurley said: "Speculators and packers are predicting that, with the threshing practically done, the unusual lot of sows
in the country that will market soon, the highest prices have been reach
ed, although there are many wagers that hogs will sell at $25 In August But no one as yet will contract for hogs lor future delivery."
Shurley referred, of course, to win
ter wheat threshing, generally, and
not to local conditions, for if one-halt
the wheat In this county has been threshed, we are pretty poor guessers.
A number of rings have not seen the
shadow of a thresher hereabouts, so far.
The lightest receipts of calves on
any Saturday in 1919, is the report at
Glen Miller for Saturday, July 26. This was partly due, Shurley says, to the break of the previous week, in which $5 to $S per 100 pounds was taken Off compared with the high spots in earlier market days.
Spring lambs-were about a dollar
tower, with light and buck lambs hard
to sell at $8 to $10, and choice, fat ones going at $12 per hundred. This would indicate that less than a week's
salary should now buy a lambchop breakfast for the average family.
Cornfed Cattle Scarce and High. Cornfed cattle ruled higher, because
of scarcity, while common half fat sold at from $1 to $2 lower than during the previous week. This is the essence of the reports from all stock yard centers. The total shipments at
the Glen Miller yards last week were nine carloads.
The largest check given out at the
yards last week was banked by Bert Isenberger of Lynn, who sold D. Hoc kett 169 head of hogs for $8402.60. Other large deliveries were made by Ott Rich, 92 head, $4,(50; Colonel Thomas Conniff, $0 head, $3,257; Joe Thompson, 42 head. $2,254: Fred Brown. 27 head. $1,221; Fred Mitchell. 24 head. $1,018.60; J. W. Carter, 29 head. $1,100, and Lorln Hill, 40 head, for $1,877.30. Harry Osborne of Lynn, was paid $438.40 for 14 veal calves on Saturday. Everett Gardner, of Union county shipped in one cow and one heifer
which sold for $301; the heifer, a two-
year-old weighing 1,300 pounds. The
heifer, which was purchased by a local butcher was bought for 13c per
pound and dressed 830 lbs., thus establishing a record that has never been equalled on any local killing
floor, according to Shurley.
Who Divided the Money Live stock deliveries were made at Glen Miller last week by the following
farmers and shippers: W. A. McClure,
J. F. Edwards, Thos. Davis. E. A. Petry, John Branson, O. H. Pierce. Lawler Deitemeyer, Jess Townsend, O. Cranor. John Flattley. D. R. Funk, Roy Roberts, Theodore Roberts. Fred Mit
chell. Everett Roberts. Henry Ed
wards, W. S. Norton, John Thorn, Dan Miller, Virgil Martin, A. J. Murray. Stephen Hinshaw. H. J. Thorpe, Wm. McAdams, Charles Hill, Charles LaFuse. E. S. Ewlng. Cattle Conditions at Chicago The average price of native beef cattle struck the top at Chicago last week at $16.60, against an average, of $16 the previous week. Never in all the history of the Chicago market has this high average been reached, this average being $3 higher than at the low spot of the year, which was but five weeks ago. The previous high record was made in February last, and was $15.95 per 100 weight. This does not refer to the "tops", simply the average of cornfed steers, prime cattle going at $18 to $18.40 on Saturday, on a quiet market. In view of what has been said It
may surprise you to know that native
cows anq heifers averaged the lowest of the year, at $9.40, that being actually more than a dollar under the price
prevailing the week before. About
one-fifth of the cattle taken In at Chicago last week were western rangers, most of the 14,600 being received from the dry districts of Montana, Wyoming and North Dakota. These cattle were mostly sold to farmers in the fattening districts. The largest receipts
from the western ranges thus early in the season are now coming in at
Chicago for lack of rain. Hogs Make a Record
The average price of hogs at Chicago last week, $22.20, is also a record.
and stood $1.90 above three weeks ago. The bulk of sales on Saturday at the Chicago yards went at $21.40 to $23.10.
The top of theday was $23.20 and for the week $23.50. The receipts for the week with the exception of Christmas
week, were the smallest of the year, being only 118.600 head. The. estimates are (7.000 cattle. 1X6 000 hogs and 100,000 sheep. Armour & Co., bought 14.500 hogs the last week and nave purchased 818400 so far this year. The Swift house comes next in quantity with 653,700 head for the year to date. East Buffalo. New Yorkvsold hogs as high -as $24.35 last Friday, and up to $24 on Saturday, the top on the week being $1.35 over that of the preceding week.
CAUSE OF If
(Continued from Page One)
an teed by all the world against attack
from the outside.
Senator Walsh said the sentiment
in the United States for Irish freedom was almost unanimous, but that
the. same senators who said Article
X closed the way to American aid in an Irish resolution always added in the same breath "that we must
keep out of the quarrels of Europe."
Taking up the Shantung provision, he continued:
"President Wilson eventually yielded that Japan might be induced to come into the league. Bat if the treaty is rejected. Shantung remains with Japan and will remain with Japan nntll ahe restores It to China of her own free will or until ahe Is compelled to do so by force of arms. Are senators prepared to make war upon Japan to compel the evacuation of Shantung? China loses no territory by the treaty; she simply does not get back what ahe lost to Germany 21 years ago. Aggressors Against China "But what does China gain by Article X? Germany' haa not seen the only aggressor against China. England and France have despoiled her. Russia and Japan fought over Manchuria, a Chinese province.' Replying to an assertion by Senator Reed, Democrat, Mo., that should Bulgaria Invade Roumania under the article, American soldiers would have to help repel the imvader, Mr. Walsh said. "It apparently never occured to him that the boys of Great Britain equally would have to go indeed the boys of every part of the far flung British empire as also the boys of France and Italy and Spain and Brazil and those of half a hundred other nations; and that Bulgaria, in that situation, would counsel with herself , and decide that after all it would be more proitable to submit whatever differences she may have with. Roumania to the arbitrament of the executive council of the league."
For automobile repair men an Indiana inventor has patented a frame into which a car may be run and clamped, then turned on one side to afford access to its mechanism.
f , r . -3a.
In
em
Hogs
Alfalfa There Is No Better Combination for Fattening Hogs
Than Corn and Alfalfa. three feet high In the row where the fence should be, unroll the wire along this row, set the wire up along the row of corn, setting It over the hills that are cut off. This places the fence on one side of one hill in the row and on the opposite side of the next hill, weaving It, so to speak. Now break over the top of the cut stalks and ruck them Into the mesh of the fence. This holds the fence in place and the hogs will not get out, proTiding they have all they want to eat Inside. It doesn't take much fencing to hold pigs if they have enough to eat. Hogs Need Protein Feed. Pigs do not make economical gains on corn alone. They must have protein feed also. An ideal combination for fattening hogs is a cornfield and an alfalfa field, so the hogs can have their choice corn and clover. Corn and soy beans are also good. The corn-soy bean combination Is being provided for pigs more each year by bog feeders where soy beans do well, by planting corn and beans together. If no legume feed is available the hogs should have tankage. There is ho better way to feed tankage to hogs In the cornfield than to place it In selffeeders and allow the hogs access to 1L When there Is an abundance of alfalfa, clover, beans or Legume pasture, It is doubtful whether in the long run It pays to feed additional pasture In the form of tankage to pigs after they have reached 123 pounds In weight. When the rainy season comes the hogs can be taken out of the cornfield until it dries off a bit. Provision should be made for this to prevent the hogs from muddying so much corn. Hogging down corn is a twentieth century practice and should be made use of more than it is. ' - After the fattened hogs are out of the cornfield, turn the sows and little pigs in and let them gather up the crumbs.
FINAL CLEAN-UP .ON ALL
- TJSHJ y - save -
After two weeks of rapid-fire selling, we find that, while hundreds of pairs.of shoes have been moved, we still have a number of extra good values in odd and broken lots. These will all . be placed on sale Tuesday moraine; and early buyers will find the best shoe bargains of the season.
20 DISCOUNT On Rubber-Soled Shoes and Oxfords. All Patent Pumps and Oxfords. All White Pumps, Oxfords and Lace Boots. All Tan Oxfords and Pumps. All Men's Low Shoes. 20 DISCOUNT On all Tennis and Rubber-soled Outing Shoes and Oxfords and all Men's Low Shoes.
EXTRA SPECIAL Gray Fabric Lace Boot Louis heel- with aluminum plate, newest pattern, suitable for Summer and early Fall. Nearly all sizes and widths. Sale price
Special lot of Ladies' Patent Oxfords and Strap Slippers, mostly small (J"1 QQ sizes, at S)Xea0 All $8.00 Ladies' Tan and Patent Pumps and QQ Oxfords tpOsOt All $6.00 Ladies' Tan and Patent Pumps and Qtl '7Q Oxfords tP'dte I All $7.00 Ladies Tan and Patent Pumps and QfT PA Oxfords PDDJ All $5.00 Ladies' Tan and Patent Pumps and CQ QQ Oxfords fPOVO All $4.00 Ladies Tan and Patent Pumps and Q 1Q Oxfords j 'JJOeX
All $6.00 Ladies' White Pumps, Oxfords and (J A rTQ Boots tDrte 4 U All $5.00 Ladies' White Pumps, Oxfords and (J0 QQ Boots pOet0 EXTRA SPECIAL Slippers, Pumps and Oxfords, values up to (J" AO $5.00, at tP-LoaO All $4.00 Ladies' White Pumps, Oxfords and (Q "I O Boots 4)OeX All $3.00 Ladies' White Pumps, Oxfords and (L?0 QQ Boots PeOe7 All $2.50 Ladies' White Pumps, Oxfords and (1 AO Boots ..,fDlee70
10 DISCOUNT On All Children's Oxfords, Slippers, Sandals and Pumps.
' 10 DISCOUNT On All Ladies' Kid and Gun Metal Oxfords and Pumps.
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