Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 13, 25 November 1919 — Page 12

PAGE TWELVE

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, NOV. 25, 1919.

MARKET

WAGNER GRAIN LETTER CHICAGO. Nov. 5. Corn bulge has followed cash firmness, export Inquiry, and rise in Liverpool basis of 5 to 10 cents above United States prices. Reaction is due, but sentiment remains friendly, Country offerings are light, business being hampered by poor car supply. Coal situation is becoming more serious, but trade figures the miners will return quickly. We believe the bulls will be slow to take hold around $1.30 for May corn and that any further rise may tempt sellers, otherwise against the Saturday session the dips may be mild. The closing tone depends upon the efTect of the weakness m hogs and the ease of cash news from the southwest. CHICAGO GRAIN RANGE Furnished by E. W. WAGNER & CO., 212 Union National Bank Building. Phone 1720. CHICAGO. Nov. 25 Following is the range of futures on Chicago Board of Trade today: Open High Low Com Close

Dee. 132 May 127 Dec 73 May 76 Jan. .... 34.05 .Jan. .... 23.45 Van. 18.42

133 132 12714 133 128T8 73 V2 77 73 77 704 ... 34.25 ... 23.55 18.7! (J3y Associated Press! CINCINNATI. O.. Nov. 25 Wheat No. 1 red $2.332.34; No. 2 red, t2.322.33; No. 3 red $2.292.30; other grades as to quality $202.25. Corn No. 2 white $1.501.52; No. 13 white $1.471.49; No. 4 white $1.43 1.45. Corn No. 2 yellow, $1.49 il.51. No. 3 yellow $1.461.48. No. 4. ; yellow $1.42 1.44. No. 2 mixed $1.47 1.49. (By Associated Press') TOLEDO, O., Nov. 25. Cloverseed Prime cash and Nov., $30.60; Dec. and (Jan.. $30.55; Feb., $30.70; March, $30.50. Alsike Prime cash and Dec, March, $31.00. Timothy Prime cash 1917, 1918, $5.40; 1919, $5.60; Dec, March and April, $5.80. $31.25. $5.40; $5.60; (By Associated Press) CHICAGO. Nov. 25. Corn No. 2 mixed, $1.471.49; No. 2 yellow, $1.50. Oats No. 2 white, 77 77 No. 3 white, 7476. Pork Nominal; ribs, $19.5020.50; lard, $25.15. LIVE STOCK PRICES (Bt Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS, Indiana, Nov. 25. Hogs Receipts, 16,000; lower. Cattle Receipts, 700; steady. Calves Receipts, 500; lower. Sheep Receipts, 700; steady. HOGS. Good mixed, 150 lbs. up, avreage. I' .- ii . " mo 'a W ..h . ,V. ' ,iiViCr 7.7 wl v.r ' V ,i X $13.25fD13.50: fat back pigs, under 140 pounds. $135J3.50; feeding pigs, $13.50 down; sows, according to quality, $1000 11.50; pregnant sows, $8-0010.C0; poor to best stags, SO lbs. dock. $12.00. CATTLE. Kilting Steers Extra good, 1,300 i lbs. and upward, $17.0018.00; good tot choice. 1.200 lbs. and UDward. $16.00 t 17.00; common to medium, 1,300 lbs., -unward. $15.00(fM6.03: good to choice ,5,150 lbs., $14.0015.00; common to I imedium, 1,150 to 1,250 lbs., $12.50 13.50; good to choice, 1,000 to 1,150 lbs., $13.00-14.00; common to medium, 1.000 to 1,150 lbs., $10.0012.50: poor to good under 1.000 lbs., $11.00 ,14.50; good to choice yearlings, $14.00 (if 16.00. Heifers Good to best, S00 lbs., and up. $11.5015.00; common to medium. SOO lbs. up, $9.0011.00; good to best, under 800 lbs., $12.00 16.00; common 'to medium, under S00 lbs., $7.00 rlO.50. Cows Good to best. 1,050 lbs. upward, $9.0012.00; common to med!luin, 1,050 lbs., $$.00 fl 9.00; canners 'and cutters, $5.00 6.50. Bulls Common to best, 1,300 lbs, upward, $8.00 9.00; good to choice, under 1,300 lbs., $7.50 8.75; fair to medium, under 300 lbs., $rt.507.25; common to good bolognas. $6.007.00 Calves Good to choice vealsunder 200 pounds, $17.5019.00; common to medium veals, $13 15; pood medium veals under 200 lbs., $1015; good to i choice heavy calves, $10 12; common to medium heavy calves, $6.50 9.00. Stockera and Feeding Cattle Good to choice steers, 800 lbs. and vp. $12.00; common to fair steers, S00 lbs. and up, $9.50 10.50; good to choice steers, under 800 lbs., $10.00 11.50; common to medium steers, under 800 lbs., $8. 00 9.50; medium to good cows. $6.507.25; good to choice milkers, $110150; fair to medium milkers, $75100; stock calves, 250 to 400 lbs., $7.0010.00. SHEEP AND LAMOS Good to choice sheep, $6.00 6.50; common to med. sheep, $35.n0; good 'to choice lambs, $13.00 14.00: common to medium lambs, $12 50; good to choice yearlings, $7.5058.50; 'oomon to medium yearlings, S6.00 '$7.00; bucks per 100 Ids, $4.505.50. Corrected by McLean & Company. Dayton, Ohio. Bell Phone, East 28: Home 81235 DAYTOX, Ohio, Nov. 25. Hogs . Receipts, four cars: market, 25 cents lower; choice heavies, $13.50; packers and butchers, $13.50 ; heavy Yorkers, $13.0013.50; light. Yorkers, $12.50 13.00; pigs. $11.5012.50; stags, $8.00 (,;10.00; choice fat. sows. $11.5012; common to fair. $11.00 11.50. Cattle Receipts, 10 cars; steadyPair to pood shippers, $11.00 13.00; good to choice butchers. $10.0012.00; lair to medium butchers, $9.0011.00; CVT TTtlt OVT IT'S WORTH MONEY DON'T MISS THIS. Cut out this slip, enclose with Be and mail it to Foley & Co.. 2835 Sheffield Ave-, Chicago, 111., writing your name and address cleari -vnn will receive In return a trial package containing Foley's Honey and Tat Compound, for coughs, colds and ,roup-: Foley Kidney Pills for pain In taldea and back; rheumatism, backache. 1 kidney an bladder ailments; and Foler Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome and thoroughly cleansing cathartic, for Constipation, "biliousness, headache. '. and sluggish bowels. For sale by A. 3. Lukeu & Co. Adv.

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good to choice heifers, $9.0011.00; fair to good heifers, $7.009.00; choice fat cows, $8.009.00; fair to good fat cows, $7.0008.00; bologna cows. $5.005.50; butcher bulls, $8.00 9.00; bologna bulls, $7.008.00; calves, $13.00 17.00. ! Sheep Receipts, light; market, steady. Sheep, $4.00(37.00; lambs $8.00011.00. (By Associated Press) EAST BUFFALO, Nov. 25. Cattle Receipts, 1,600; barely steady. Calves Receipts. 250; steady; $5.00 $20.50. Hogsj Receipts, 4,700; pigs, 75c lower; others. 50c lower; heavy mixed Yorkers, light Yorkers and pigs, $14.00; roughs, $12.0012.50; stags, $8.00011.00. Sheep and I jambs Receipts, 1.400; lambs, 25c higher; lambs, $8.0015.00; others unchanged. (By Associated, Press) CINCINNATI, O., Nov. 25 Receipts Cattle 750. Hogs 5,600. Sheep, 150. Cattle Market slow; shippers $10.50 14.65; butcher steers, extra $11.25 12.50; good to choice $10.2frll; common to fair $6jjl0. Heifers Extra, fll12.50; good to choice $911; common to fair $68.50. Cows Extra, $9.5010.50; good to choice $4.50 525; common to fair $6 11.50; bulls, steady; bologna 16.50 8; fat bulls, $88.50; milch cows, strong. Calves, steady; extra $18.50; fair to good $15 18.25; common and large $612. Hogs 25 50c lower. Selected heavy shippers $13.50(313.75; good to choice packers and butchers $13.75; medium $13.75; stags $910; common to choice heavy fat sows, $1012; light shippers $13.2513.50. Pigs, 110 pounds and less $1113.25. Sheep, unchanged. Lambs, strong; good to choice $13.50 14; fair to good $11.5013.50; common to fair, $7 11.50. (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Nov. 25. Hogs Receipts, 71,000; market, lower; bulk, 1370; top, $13.0013.50; heavier,, $12.8513.50; medium, $13.0013.50; lights, $13.0013.40; light light?, $12.7513.25; heavy packing sows, smooth, $12.2512.75; heavy packing sows, rough, $11.75 12.25; pigs, $12.25 13.00. Cattle Receipts, 17.000; market, higher; beef steers, medium and heavies, choice and prime, $18.2520.25; medium and good, $11.00(5:18.25; common, $9.0011.00; light weight, good and choice, $14.0019.50; common and medium, $7.7514.00; butcher cattle, heifers, $6.5015.00; cows, $6.40 13.50; canners and cutters, $5.35 6.40. Calves. $16.0017.25; feeder steers, $7.2513.00; stocking steers, $6.0010.75: western range beef steers, $7.2515.00; cows and heifers, $6.2512.50. Sheep Receipts, 22.000; market, higher; lambs, $12.7514.S5; culls and common, $8.75 12.50: ewes, medium good and choice, $7.008.50; culls and common, $3.00C.75; breeding, $6.50 11.25. 'Bv Associated Press) PITTSBURG. Pa., Nov. 25.-Hogs-Receipts, 1.500; market, steady: heavies, $13.75 13.90 ; Hght Yorkers, $14.00 14.25; pigs, $14.00 14.2 Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 500: market, steady; top sheep, $10.00; top lambs, $14.50. Calves Receipts, 100; market, steady and active; top, $19.00. PRODUCE MARKET (By Associated PresrO CINCINNATI, Nov. 23 Butter fat. 'higher; whole milk 75c; fancy dairy, fi; creamery, extra eggs higher; prime firsts. 74; firsts 71 73; secspringers 27. onds 63. Poultry, firm; Hens' 26. Turkeys 37. (By Associated Prnss) CHICAGO. Nov. 25. Butter Market, unsettled: creamery first3, 5S 71c. Eggs Market, higher; lowest, 60c; firsts, 7071c. Live poultry Market, higher; fowls. 13U21Vfc; springs, 22c; turkeys, 35c. Potatoes Weak; arrivals S5 cars; Northern whites, sacked, $2.75 2.85; do bulk, $2.903.00; western russets, sacked, $3.85. NEW YORK STOCK LIST. (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, Nov. 2o. The closing quotations on the stock exchange were: American Can, 5514. Am. Smelting, 65. Anaconda, 60. Bethlehem Steel "B", Chesapeake and Ohio, 5"Vi. Chino Copper, 3C1. General Motors, "filVsGoodrich Tires. S2VS. Mexican Petroleum, 203. Pennsylvania, 421,4. Reading, 78 '4Studebaker, 121 U. I'nion Paoific. ICS. tT. S. Steel, 10434. "Utah Copper, 75. LIBERTY BONDS. (By Associated Press) NEW YORK. Nov. 25 Final prices on Liberty bonds today were: 3'4 $100.06 First 4 94.20 Second 4 91.94 First 4U 94.32 Second ii 92.24 Third 41 94.20 Fourth 414 , 92.24 Victory 3i 99.16 Victory 4 99.16 LOCAL HAY MARKET Steady; No. 1 timothy, $2S.5029.00; $2S.00; clover, $30.00. (Tiy Associated Press') INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. 25 HaySteady; No. 1 timothy, $27.5028.00; IT'S UNWISE to put off to-day's duty until to morrow. If your stomach is acid-disturbed take RM3QIQ5 the new aid to digestion comfort today A pleasant relief from the discomfort of acid-dyspepsia. MADE BY SCOTT & BOWNE MAKERS OF SCOTTS EMULSION

ILLINOIS IS HARVESTING BUMPER CROP OF

Illinois is deep in the harvest of a bumper crop of corn, estimated to 4be 300.000,000 bushels. This crop will rive Illinois the lead among the states of the union in corn production. Corn was the only crop which did not deteriorate during the closing weeks of the season.

Girl students at Illinois State Normal University earning pin money shucking corn and specimens of UlinoLj corn being harvested this season. Kuler shows size of ear a

No. 2 timothy, $26.50 27.00; clover, $26.00 26.50. No. 1 BUTTER FAT QUOTATION Butter fat delivered in Richmond is bringing 75 cents this week. FRUIT & VEGETABLES (Furnished By Eggemeyer's) LOCAL PRODUCE Hot. house tomatoes, 25c lb., beets, 10c bunch; leaf lettuce, 25c lb.; head lettuce trimmed, 40c lb.; dry onions, 8c lb.; parsley, 15c bunch; green mangoes, 5c each; garlic, 75c lb.; summer squash, 3c lb.; cucumbers, 25c; cab-j bage, 8c lb.; egg plant, 25c lb.; home grown celery, 5c bunch; cranberries; 13c lb.. 2 for 25c; green beans, 25c lb.; domestic endive. 25c lb.: radishes. 5c bunch; spinach, 20c lb.; Colorado potatoes, 5c lb., 75c pk., $2.50 bu. Kggs, 78c per dozen; creamery butter, 87c lb.; country butter 75c lb. Produce, Buying. Country butter, 65c lb.; eggs, 65c dozen; old chickens, 20c lb.; frying chickens, 20c. Fruits. Bananas, 12c lb.; lemons, 40c doz.; apples. 10c to 15c lb., Tokay grapes, 25 cents pound; Chestnuts, 50c lb; tre?h Cocoanut, 20c; fancy Delicious Apples, 3 for 25c; winter Banana Apples, 3 for 25c. LOCAL QUOTATIONS (Furnished by Whelan) BUYING Oats, 70c; rye, $1.25; straw, per ton, $7.00; new com, $1.25 per bushel. SELLING Cottonseed Meal, per ton. $5.00: per swt., $4.35; Oil Meal, per ton, $S7.00; cwt., $4.50; Tankage, 50, per ton, $93; per cwt, $4.75; 60 per cent, J108 jer ton; cwt., $5.50; Quaker Dairy Feed, per ton, $55.00; per cwt, $2.S5. Salt, per bbl., $2.75. Wheat For Colds or Influenza and as a Preventative take LAXATIVE BROMO QT'IXTXK Tablets. Look for E. W. GROVE'S signature on the box. 30c. Bran, per ton, $48.00; cwt., $2.50. Bran and Shorts mixed, per ton. $53 per cwt., $2.75. Pure Wheat Middungs $o.00 per ton; $3.00 per cwt. tandard Middlings, $55 per ton; $2.85 per cwt. PRODUCE MARKET The following are the Jobbing prices on produce in Richmond today Creamery butter, 72 cents FVets pr rinTien. fiO rents Old chickens, per lb, 20c; frying chickens, lb, 19c. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Richmond flour mills are paving $2.16 for Xo. 1 red wheat; $2.13 for Xo. 2; $2.10 for Xo. 3; Xo. 4. $2.09; Xo. 5, $2.06. SKATING SEASON OPENS. The Richmond roller-skating season will be opened at the Coliseum Wednesday evening and will also be open all day Thursday and Saturday. Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday arc to be the Tegular skating nights at the Coliseum. ST. JOHNS TO ELECT Church officers and members of the parochial school board will be elected by the congregation of St. John's, at a meeting at the church Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. TRUSTEES END SESSION. The board of trustees of Earlham College closed their sefsioiL at the college Monday afternoon. Committees were instructed to consider matters of importance to the college. Committee reports were heard. DEGREE TO BE GIVEN Nine candidates will be given th-3 third rank, in Richmond lodge Xo. S, Knights of Pythias, Wednesday nisrht. Every member of the lodge is urged to attend. Walking Under Difficulties "Believe me, I suffered from stomach and bowel trouble right. This weakened me so that I could scarcely walk. I could do no work. This was my condition when I started taking Mayr's Wonderful Remedy on the advice of a friend. Now I am working every day and feel better than I ever did in my life. It is the only medicine that ever touched me." It is a simple, harmless preparation that removes the catarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract and allays the inflammation which causes practically all stomach, "lver and intestinal ailments, including appendicitis. One dose will convince or money refunded. Clem Thistlethwaites Six Drug Stores, A. G. Luken & Co., and druggists everywhere. Adv.

Vrt4k& t ' J fit v T'mV

Sticking 'Round Where

(From ""Where the Bessemer Blows", by H. S. Hall in the Saturday Evening Post.) Steel, steel in the Bessemer converter, fluid and thin, boiling and bubbling and spitting and sputtering and rolling and swashing a tumbling, tossing, heaving malestrom of liquid fire. Steel in the pouring ladle, creamy with molten slag, blobbed with bursting blisters of glazing gas, placid and calm, and threatening. steel in the ladle nozzle, ripping and cutting and hissing, guggling and gurgling Into the ingot molds, with a j sound as of water poured into giant 'jugs. Steel in the molds, hardening, solidifying, changing from quivering columns of white liquid to stable prisms of chilly red. Steel, dull red and hard, tossed in massive ingots by the mighty hands of tireless cranes, from stripper house to soaking pits. Steel lifted from underground flaming furnaces, honey yellow and slag dripping, and laid upon the delivery tables before the maws of the mill. Steel In the whirling, grinding, groanrolls, beaten and pounded a. id hammered and squeezed into blooms, into slabs, into billets, into bars, into rails and channels and girders, into rounds and squares and flats and ovals and hexagons and angles. Steel on the cooling beds, going black, going blacker, going blue black, gone cold. Steel in the clutch of the cold shears, snapping and popping and cracking as the tempered Jaws of the shears crunch it and munch it. Steel on the Incline conveyors, sheared to lengths, and sawed and chipped and bundled and tied and paint marked, dropping with rattle and bang and clatter into the cars that wait to carry it awav. a thousand miles miles away, to world. away, ten thousand the markets of the Converters Know no Rest. Steel where the Bessemer blows, steel by the tens of thousands of tons! The converters swing and sway on their trunnions, and know no rest. The blowing engines pound and pull and pant and strain at their never finished task. The rumble of the cranes in the overhead gloom of the black J iron buildings never ceases. With unbroken monotony the pig metal ladles rou back and forth, from mixer to vessel to mixer, going filled to the plopping brim, coming drained to the Hinlng of brick. The mold buggies s!!d down the sloping tracks, one after an other, each bearing away its ton of j steel, and noisy little narrow-gauge i locomotl ves come chugging, ehiisrtrinir.

1 4 nugging inrongn tne smoky sheds toiwatcning us dig, trotting and fuming

seize their loads of ingots of steel and

stagger away to the soaking pits. The : in- rude language to go take a run and steel blower with critical eye watches j Jump into a certain Hood of fire rethrough colored glasses the flames j puted to be hotter than the one we are that flicker and flare at the vessel's j puddling in. We cuss them out, we mouth, and leans wearily on his shin- talk bad to them. They grin back at ins levers. us, afraid to rile us, fearful lest we The pourer of the white fluid listens drop our tools and leave the mill; and to the gurgling of the molds, estimates throwing away their half smoked his day's tonnage and his pay, and cigars they come to help us, the white glances often at the clock. The test;sllirt muling with the blue, the soft boy, his face grim streaked, his lipslhand sledging with tho calloused, fallen apart, listlessly lugs his load of rough neck and shaved neck, big guy test pieces to the laboratory and and little dub, long head and bone prays for the whistle to soiind its head, cleaning it up. So we work to-

notice of quitting time. Steel where the Bessemer blows, with everything going smoothlv the giant engines pounding rythmieallv; the converters oscillating as noiselessly as leaves moved by little breezes; the hot metal running right neither too hot nor too cold, not too high in silicon, not too low; the cranes working with precision and dispatch; the molds coming into the pouring station, cleaned and cool; the tracks kept Women Need Swamp-Root Thousands of women have kidney and bladder trouble and never suspect it Women's complaints often provo to be nothing else but kidney trouble, or the result of kidney or bladder disease. If the kidneys are not in a healthy condition, they may cause the other organs to become diseased. Pain in the back, headache, loss of ambition, nervousness, are often times symptoms of kidney trouble. Don't delay starting treatment. Dr. Kilmers Swamp-Root, a physician's prescription, obtained at any drug store, may be just the remedy needed to overcome such conditions. Get a medium or large size bottle immediately from any drug store. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, X. Y for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention the Richmond Palladium. Adv.

CORN, LEADING U. S.

" f i - UJm? 1

the Bessemer Blows ciear Dy efficient hurrying narrow gauges; all the mill in shipshape pits clean, slag pans dumped, refractories bins filled, the stock dock chok ed with pig and scrap and limestone and manganese and coke and sand and clay; and men, plenty of men, a surplus of men to do the work. "Thank the Gods." Oh, the Bessemer isn't such a bad place to work In then not bad at all! We gather together in little groups in quiet corners, and smoke great pipes and talk small talk, and tell tall tales and sing and swear and Josh and Joke, and cuss out everybody and every thing, and thank the gods that are i ours that we are men of the Bessemer and not of the blast furnaces. A dandy place to work the Bessemer? Rather! Steel where the Bessemer blows when things go wrong when iron comes low in silicon, and the vessels froth and foam and slop over, and the spittings rain down In torents; when the heats go cold and freeze in the ladle or run wild and smear the molds, eat off he nozzle stopper rods, splash the platforms and burn men; when the cranes strike and cannot be cudgeled or cajoled into working again; when the narrow gauge engines balk, quit their chugging and die, and mold buggies choke the tracks; when Clancy or Smith, maybe, or Ollnsky comes out to work with half a snootful and an unsteady hand, and tilts a ladle, and there is a spill, a nasty spill a raging flood of white Bteel on the mill floor, pourig over the tracks and standings, running beneath the mold buggies, sloshing in the 6lag holes, trickling into every crack and chink and cranny, fusing everything it touches and welding itself to everything it envelopes. Oh, a rotten place to work then is the Bessemer! We run at the trouble blast of the whistle, and before a heal that blisters our bodies and withers our souls, in an atmosphere saffron with eulphur fumes, acrid and nauseating, we sledge and bar and cut and dig and pry and pull and strain and grunt A greasy, grimy, sweaty, stink ing crew, we kick and growl and yell and curse, and mule and rawhide at ! our task, damning the man who discovered steel, damning the man who invented work, doublt damning: the man Clancy or Smith or Olinsky who tipped that ladle of metaL When the Bosses Come Como the bosses the big boss and ' Hie little boss, the little-big boss and .'he little-little boss looking wise i urging us to hurry, till we invite them gether, all, and mop up the mess, and the Bessemer blows again. A dandy place to work? Who eays so? Tell him he ilies! And some old Jerry or Jim or Mike or Joe, grown old and grav and tot tery in mill service Isn't he always there on hand, be it foul mill weather or fair, snuggled up in a cozy nook berjo. n. Conquers Constipation Don't let constipation poison your blood and curtail your energy If your liver and bowels don't work prop- I g rvrKTrtV e r 1 v take VtATCICKO CARTER'S Little Liver X IITTLE I'VE F? PIUS today rA and your 4 trouble will cease. For dizziness, lack of appetite. headache and blotchy skin nothing can equal them. Purely vegetable. Small Pill Small Dose Small Price DR. CARTER'S IRON PILLS, Nature's great nerve and blood tonic izz Anemia, Rheumatism, Nervousness, Sleeplessness and Female Weakness. Stniac must bear slgaitai

hind a pile of pig iron or a dump of lining stone, holding forth to us Indians on the joys of a Job in the Bessemer? "Ah, me laddy bucks, ye may talk about tasty jobs In the court house, or about a nice soft place in a bank, or behind a bar, or in a candy store; ye can gab about owning a tidy bit of a farm, or a little livery stable, or a

milk route; ye can let yer chops waggle about this good job and that good Job, but me, meself I'll have none of 'em. Gimme the Bessemer every. time for mine, me laddy, bucks, say I, say I.The grunt of the mol' blowing engines; the whoos-ssh-whish-s-Bh of the air in the tuyeres when they turn the vesel up and give her the blast; the ratlin dance of the spittin's on the iron roof; the plop of the steel when they sock the pin through the white Btuff shootin' the molds; the nozzle; the gurgle- gurgle-gurgle of the clink-ety-clank of the bugles droppln down the elopes; the chuggity-chug of them little toy locos, as they snort and ca vort through the sheds with their drags; the bang and the rattle and clatter, the yellln', the cussin. the fightiif, the hip-bip-hnrray-and hurryupness of it all why, me laddy bucks. It's life, it's the life of lifes, say I. say I! Ask me. after my forty years and more of service here, what I'd choose for a snap if I had them years to live over again, and I'll tell ye, I'd hunt me up a job at. a Bessemer. Ask me what kind of a posish I'll be lookln' fer in the next world to this, and I'll inform ye, me lady bucks, that I'm simply goin' to say to the Boss Man there: 'If you please, and if it's all the same to you, Just let me stick around where the Bessemer blows." Richmond Y.MX.A. Men Find Acquaintances at Detroit; Heitbrink on Committee Mark Heitbrink, representing" the older boys of the Richmond Y. M. C. A. at the International conference at Detroit, Michigan, last week, was one of two Americans put on the older boys' resolution committee. The other two members of the committee were Canadians. The resolution committee called upon the conference to create an older boys' section at the next Inter national conference. A report to the board of directors of the Richmond Y" by the Rich mond delegation, will be made soon A number of former Richmond men were present. George L. Goodwin, former general secretary of the Richmond "Y" and now inter-state secretary for Delaware, Maryland. West Virginia and District of Columbia, with headquarters at Washington, J. H. McAfee, formerly a Richmond business man and director of the local association, now general secretary of the Savannah, Georgia, "Y". Roy Horton, formerly local physical director and now of Youngstown, Ohio, were present O. M. Brunson, formerly boys' work secretary here, and L. A. Schwan, formerly physical director were both representing Fort Wayne. Circuit Court News j The court allowed $15 as suit money on the condition that the case of John Pherson vs. Sylvia Pherson, for divorce, be dismissed. Two divorce cases, Lucile Wherling vs. John Wherling. and Edgar Wade vs. Hazel Wade, both were dismissed at the cost of the plaintiff. Julia McClain filed suit against the estate of Delidi Hurley, deceased, claim for services rendered, demanding $6,700. MARRIAGE LICENSES. Harry A. Wilson, underwear knitter, Richmond, to Heln O. Smithmeyer, at home. Richmond. Horatio M. Land, manufacturer. Richmond, to Thelma Schillinger, at home, Richmond. Maxr In M. Clark, auto assembler, Xew Paris. Ohio, to Helen A. Vosmeier, bookkeeper. Richmond. Wayne O. Cook, hodcarrier, Richmond, to Nettie McKinley, at home, Richmond. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Myrtle Hageman to Michael Mittcrt, a part of lot 139, Hayne's addition; $2,500. Harvey Johnson to Marcus A. McAllister, a part of the northwest quarter section 21, township 18, range 12; $6,000. Funeral Arrangements Reid Funeral services for Jennio i E. Reid will be held from her resid ence at 2 o clock Wednesday afternoon. Burial in Earlham. The Rev. Burbanck will officiate. Lindley Accepts Friends' Post in Oklahoma Lawrence Lindley, of Russiaville, a graduate of Earlham college In 1916, and for over a year in Reconstruction work in France, has accepted an appointment with the Home Mission board of the Five Years' Meeting, to work among the Indians in Oklahoma. .Lindley is spending several days at the central offices before taking up his new work Dec. 1. During December and January he will be in training. Llndley's engagement to Miss Amelia Reuger, a student in Earlham. was recently announced. WHEN YOU SUFFER FROM RHEUMATISM Sloan's Liniment should be kept handy for aches and pains WHY wait for a severe painan ache, a twinge following exposure, a sore muscle, sciatica, or lumbago to leave naturally when you should keep Sloan's Liniment handy to help curb it and keep you active and fit? Without rubbini, for it penetrates, apply a bit today to the afflicted part. Note the gratifying, clean, prompt relief that follows. Sloan's Liniment couldn't keep its many thousands of friends the world over if it didn't make good. That's worth remembering. All druggists three sizes the largest for utmost economy. 35c, 70c., $1.40.

Teachers From Here WiU Attend Rural School Meet

Several of the township trustees ; are planning to attend the Sixth district conference on Rural Education, to be held in Rusaville, Dec. 4. County Superintendent Williams said Tuesday. L. N. HInes. state superintendent of schools, will address the conference on "Better Rural Schools," while several' other prominent state ducatlonal men will speak on rural education. News of the Counties CEXTERVILLE Whfle painting at the Helms Garage, Friday, John Smelser fell from a ladder and received some very painful bruises. No bone were broken but It is feared thi sciatio nerve has been injured as ha suffers much pain from the injury. A Union Thanksgiving Service win be held at the Friends' church Thursday morning. The Rev. Marie Castle will deliver the sermon- A music committee from the three churches is arranging for special music Everyone is nrged to be present and enjoy a service In keeping with the day. BLOOMrx-GPORT Mrs. Susannah Bales died at 1:30 Tuesday morninir at the home of her daughter, Mrs. John Hockett. She had been in failing health for several months. If she had lived until Wednesday she would have been 63 years old. Funeral services win be held at 10:30 o'clock Thurs day at the Liberty Church. Rev. Zelma Mills afficiating. Burial will be in th nearby cemetery. Three daughters and one eon survive. FOUNTAIN CITY. Ind. The Young People's C A- of Hopewell, will give a pie social at the Hopewell school house, Thursday evening, December L Every body Is cordially invited. Ladies bring pies. 100 Expected at Hi-Y Sapper Wednesday Eve Plates for 100 persons will be set at the special supper meeting of the Hl-Y club in honor of the high school football team at the Y. M. C. A. at 6:15 p. m. Wednesday. High school girls will servo the 6upper. Coach Mowe, of Earlham is to make the principal talk, and will be followed by Coach Rock. Harold Latta will speak on the high school's attitude towards the team. Each member of the team is to be called upon for a short impromptu talk. Coach Fries will ba asked to tell the basketball prospects. Merril Scovll and his committer have charge of the ticket sale after chapel Wednesday. Principal Bate will speak on the organization at Wednesday's chapel. Mrs. Thomas P. Wilson, wife of the new Y. M. C. A. assistant general secretary, will play a piano solo. Wilson is to sing a vocal solo and the Hi-Y orchestra will furnish the music. Shannon Neff is to give a whistling number. Practically every male member of the high school faculty Is expected to be present. Joseph SwearInger is to act as toastmaster. BARTEL FACTORY WORK SLOW Scarcity of labor and bad weather conditions have caused considerable delay in the erection of the new factory building of Adam H. Bartel company, at South Eighth and B streets. Plans had been made by the companv to open the factory by March 1, 1920. but according to Adam H. Bartel. the building will not be ready for cupancy at that time. THEATORIUM GOES DOWN .. Work of demolishing the Theatorium began Monday, preparatory to the erection of a modern movie theatre, by Forest Mills, of New Lebanon, o. Mills has bought the place from Louis Morgan. The new theatre will seat 400. and is expected to be completed early In 1920. DRIVES OUT RHEUMATISM "Nentrono Prescription 89 for rheumatism! Nothing like It In the wide world. It is a prescription that everybody is talking about, and when one takes it, it penetrates to the muscles and Joints and Quickly drives out the causes of the painful trouble. Druggists are selling a whole lot of "Neutrone Prescription 89" to people who must have free and strong muscles to support a vigorous body for work. Got "Neutrono Prescription 99" lor weary, stiff and painful muscles and joints. Get it to take out the agony rom those painful limbs. Use this sure relief, not only for rheumatim, but to clear up the kidneys, make tho liver work and purify the blood. A week's treatment for 6O0. Largo bottle, $1.00. For eala by r Con key Drug company, and leading druggists everywhere. Adv. Wear New Method's Solid leather work shoes. Union made Up-Stalrs Colonial Bldg. MONEY TO LOAN 46 Why SELL and SACRIFICE YOUR LIBERTY BONDS We will loan $45 on a 50 bond, or 90 on a $100 bond, at a small rats of interest IF YOU MUST SELL. WE WILL BUY OUTRIGHT WELFARE LOAN SOCIETY 9 N. Tenth SL. Phone 259 f

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