Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 143, 26 April 1920 — Page 12
PAGE TWELVE
MARKETS
GRAIN PRICES CHICAG. April 26 Main feature today is bad weather and 11 cents rise in May rye to $2.16. The large upturn In corn and oats have again rendered cash sellers ve.ry convervative. A fair Tuesday break is due if the weather turns dry but rye and wheat are the leaders. The trade largely believes the financial nervousness of last week was entirely due to a temporary letup in business due to 'the switchmen's strike. Oats reports are . bearish but looks as if 75 of oats are seeded in moet of the central west. Forecast is for more cold and some moisture. Immediate problem is to find new bulls on a five to six cent rise in corn and three cents in oats. We do not advise buying on such sharp rallies. A strong Monday upturn invites reactions Tuesday. CHICAGO GRAIN RANGE Furnished by E. W. WAGNER & CO, 212 Union National Bank Building. Phone 1720. CHICAGO, April 26. Following is the range of futures on Chicago Board of Trade today: Open High Rye. May 208 Vi 216 July 203 206 Corn. May 171 173 July 165 166 Sept 167 153 Low Close 208 201 170 162 156 97 i 75 213 204 173 166 159io 99U 76 36.60 Oats. .. 98 99V . . 76 77V. Pork. . . 37.25 May Sept. May May May Lard. ..19.90 19.80 Ribs. . . 18.30 18.02 CHICAGO, April 26. Wheat No. 2 spring $3.05. Corn No. 3 mixed, $1.71-1.71; No. 2 yellow, $1.75 1.78. Oats No. 2 white, $1.08; No. 3 white, $1.0612. Fork, nominal; ribs, $17,50 18.25; lard, $19.16. (By Associated Press) CINCINNATI. April 26. WheatNo. 2 red, $2.96(52.98; No. 3 red, $2.93(fi2.95; other grades as to quality, $2.75(ft 2.90. Corn No. 2 white, $1.88(1.89; No. $1.891.87; No. 4 whte. $1.8118.3; No. 2 yellow, $1.801.81; No. 3 yellow, $1.80; No. 4 yellow, $1.771.79; No. 2 mixed. $1.791.80. Oats Higher; $1.091.11; RyeHigher; $2.142.16. (By Associated Press) TOLEDO, O., April 26 Cloverseed Prime cash and April, $28.50; Sept. $23.25; Dec, $22.25. Alsike Prime cash and April, $30. Timothy Prime cash, 1917, $5.35; 1918, $5.35; 1919. and April $5.50, May $5.45, Stpa. $5.70, Oct., $5.50, Dec, $5.50. LIVE STOCK PRICES (By Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS, April 26. HogsReceipts, 400; higher. Cattle Receipts, 1,200; slow. Calves Receipts, 770; steady. Sheep Receipts, 100; steady. HOGS. Good mixed, 140 lbs. up, average, $15.0015.25; assorted, J40 to 225 lbs., average, $14.75(ri 15.50; assorted, 225 to 275 lbs., average, $14.2515.00; fat back pigs, $14.75 down; fat hogs, under 140 lbs., $14.50 down; feeding pigs, $14.50 down; sows, according to quality, Sll.7512.00; poor to best stags, 80 lbs. dock, $10.0012.00; in trucks market, $14.5015.25; of sows, $15.0016.00; light sales bulk pigs, $14.00 down. Best heavy, a year ago, $21.10; best light hogs, a year ago. $21.00; of sales a year ago, $21.00. CATTLE. Killing Steers Extra good, lbs. and upward, $13.7514.00; most 1.300 good to choice, 1250 lbs. and upward, $13.25 13.50; common to medium, 1250 lbs. $13.00013.25; good to choice, 1100 to 1200 lbs., $13.00 13.25; common to medium, 1,100 to 1,200 lbs,. $11. 50(g) $12.50; good to choice, 1,000 to 1,100 pounds, $12.5013.00; common to medium. 1,000 to i.100 lbs., $12.2512.50; fair to good, under 1,000 lbs., SILOOO1 13.00; good to choice yearlings, $13.00 14.00. Heifers Good to best, under 800 lbs. and up, $11.0013.00; common to medium, 800 lbs. up, $10.00(7811; good to best, under 800 lbs., $11.50 13.00; common to medium, under 800 lbs., $9.00 11.00. Cows. Good to best, 1,050 lbs. upward, $10.50 11.50; common to medium, 1,050 lbs.. $9.50(g 10.50; good to best, under 1.050 lbs., $10.00; common to medium under 1,050 lbs.. $8 50 (fx) $9.50; canners and cutters. $5.008.00. Bui Is. Good to best, 1,300 lbs., upward, $1011.25; good to choice, under 1,300 lbs.. $10.00(311; fair to medium, under 1,300 lbs., $9.0010.00; common to good bolognas, $8.25oTi9.50. Calves Good to choice veals, under 200 pounds, $14.0015.()0; common to medium reals, under 200 lbs., $11.00 13.00; good to choice heavy calves, $9.0011.00; common to medium heavy calves, $8.009.50. Stockers and Feeding Cattle Good to choice steers, 800 lbs. and up, $10.00 11.00; common to fair steers. 800 lbs., and up, $9.5010.00; good to choice Bteers, under 800 lbs., $9.50 10.00; common to fair steers, under 800 lbs., $8.009.00; medium to good heifers, $7.008.00; medium to good cows, $6.007.00; good to choice milkers, $110.00(fi135.0u; fair to medium milkers, $75.00100.00; springers. $7.50(0)9.50: stock calves, 250 to 400 lbs., $7.00 10.50. 1 SHEEP AND LAMBS ! Good to choice sheep, $9.00(??10.01; western fed lambs, $19.0021.00; good to choice lambs, $1819. common to medium lambs, $12.00 36.00; bucks, per 100 lbs., $7.008.00. Shorn stock valued about $2 a 100 pounds lower than wool stock. DAYTON MARKET Corrected by McLean & Company, Dayton. Ohio. Bell Phone, East 28; Home 81235 DAYTON. O., April 26 Hogs Receipts 4 cars, 50c lower; choice heavies, $14.75(3)15.00; butchers and packers, $14.75 15.00; light Yorkers, $14.0014.50; heavy Yorkers. $14.75 J15.00; pigs, $12.00(?J13.00; choice fat lows, $11.5012.00; common to fair lows, $11.0011.50; stags, $7.00 19.00. (Keep out all light hogs under 150 lbs., so long as the strike embargo b on.) Cattle Receipts, 8 cars; steady;
fair to good shippers, $12.0013.00; good to choice butchers, $11.0012.00; fair to medium butchers, $1011.00; good to choice heifers, $10.0012.00; fair to good heifers, $9.00 1000; choice fat cows, $9.0010.00; fair to good fat cows, $6.007.50; bologna cows, $68; butcher bulls, $9.0011; bologna bulls, $8.00a9.00; calves, $10 14.00. Sheep Receipts, light; market, steady; sheep, S5.009.00; lambs, $12.0015.00. (By Associated Press) CINCINNATI. O.. April 26. Receipts Cattle 490; hogs, 1.727, steady. Cattle Steady; butchers steers, good to choice $11.5013.25; fair to good $10'11.50; common to fair $7.00 10; heifers, good to choice $12 $13.50; common to fair $69; cows, good to choice, $10ll; fair to good, $810; cutters $6.007.50; canners, $4.505.25; stock steers $7.5011.00; stock heifers $6.50 8.50; stock cows, $6(fJ8; bulls steady; bologna $8.50(fl 10.00; fat bulls, $10.5011.50; milch cows, strong, $50 125; calves, steady; extra $1516; fair to good $1115; common and large, $610. Hogs Heavies, $1415; good to choice packers and butchers $15.25 $16.50; medium $15.5016; stags, 7.00 8.50; common to choice heavy fat sows, $811.50; light shippers $16.75; pigs. 110 pounds and less. $1015. Sheep Steady; good to choice lights $1213; fair to good $912; common to fair $58; bucks $49; lambs steady; good -to choice SI 9 20; seconds $1618; fair to good $18(S19; common skips $1215; clipped lambs $917; spring lambs $2025. CHICAGO, April 26 (United States Bureau of Markets report) Cattle Receipts 11,000; butcher cattle strong, 25c higher; steers, $11.0012.25; most cows $8.00$10.50; canners strong; dealers lower dollar bulk around $13; feeders dull. Hogs Receipts 34,000; slow, 25 to 50c higher; early cop $15.70; pigs 25 cents higher. Bulk desirable lots $14.00(g)15.00. Sheep Receipts 16,000; slow uneven handy weight wool lambs, $20.50; prime wool one to three years old, $17.50. (By Associated Press) PITTSBURG, April 26 Hogs Receipts 9,000; market steady; heavies, $14.00 14.25; heavy Yorkers and light Yorkers, $15.50 15.75; pigs, $15.25 $15.50. Cattle Receipts 2,400; market lower; steers, $13.5014.50; heifers, $11 12.50; cows, $9.00 11.00. Sheep and Lambs Receipts 5,000; market lower; top sheep, $14.00; top lambs, $17.50. Calves Receipts 2,500; market is lower; top, $16.50. EAST BUFFALO, N. Y April 26 Cattle Receipts 4,500; slow; generally 50 cents lower; shipping steers, $12 13.25; butchers, $911.50; yearlings $1212.50; heifers, $6(310; cows, $4 10.50; bulls $6.5010; feeders, $6 $10; fresh cows and springers slow, $65150; calves, receipts 4,200; 50 cents lower, $617. Hogs Receipts 20,800; 75 cents lower; heavies $14.7515.00; mixed yorkers, light ditto and pigs, $15. 25; a few at $15.35; roughs $12.00; stags, $7.009.00. Sheep and Lambs Receipts 9,400; lambs 50 cents lower; wool lambs $13 21.00; clipped $1214; others unchanged. PRODUCE MARKET CHICAGO, April 26 Butter market lower; creamery firsts, 47651. Eggs Receipts 36,000 cases; market steady; lowest 38c; firsts, 41 42 c. Live Poultry Market unchanged; springs 35c. Potatoes firm; northern white, sacked and bulk, $7.257.50; new Florida Spaulding Rose, barrel. No. 1, $25.00; No. 2, $22.00. (By Associated Press) CINCINNAI, April 26. Butter fat Steady. Eggs Steady; prime firsts, 40c; firsts, '3938c; seconds, 36c. Toultry Quiet; Springers, 55c; hens, 34c; turkeys, 40c. LIBERTY BONDS (By Associated Press)
NEW YORK, April 26 Final prices on Liberty bonds today were: 3 1-2 $93.12 First 4 85.00 Second 4 85.50 First 4 1-4 86.40 Second 4 1-4 85.86 Third 4 1-4 90.44 Fourth 4 1-4 86.88 Victory 3 3-4 96.52 Victory 4 3-4 96.50 NEW YORK STOCKS (Markets by E. W. Wagner & Co., 212 union Bank Bldg.) NEW YORK, April 26 Open Close American Can 42 42',4 Am. Smelting 62 Anaconda 57 Baldwin Locomotive ....116 Bethlehem Steel, B 88 Chesapeake and Ohio .... 52 G2 58 141171,4 90 53V4 General Motors 307 317 Goodrich Tires 66 67 Mexican Petroleum 172 1724 Reading 86 92 Republic Iron & Steel.... 96 98 Sinclair Oil 34 3514 Stromberg Carburetor ... 82 82 Studebaker 112 112 Union Pacific 117 119 U. S. Rubber 102 102 U. S. Steel 97 97 White Motors 58 58 LOCAL HAY MARKET Steady No. 1 timothy, $30.00 31.00; clover, $32.0033.00. (By Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., April 26.Hay No. 1 timothy, $39.5040.00 No. 2 timothy, $38.5039.00; No. 1 clover, $38.0038.50. BUTTER QUOTATIONS. The wholesale price for creamery butter is 68 cents a pound. Butter fats delivered in Richmond, bring 70 cents a pound. FRUIT & VEGETABLES Beets, 5c buncch; leaf lettuce, 30c lb.; head lettuce, trimmed, 30c lb.: dry onions, 10c lb. ; parsley, 15c bunch; green mangoes,. 8c each; gar
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM,
lic, 75c lb.: new cabbage, 10c lb.; cel ery 25c bunch; spinach 25c lb.; sweet potatoes, 10c lb.; rutabagas, 5c lb.; Spanish onions, 15c lb.; shallotts, 10c bunch; white radishes, Sc bunch; red radishes, 15c bunch; Brussells sprouts, 40c quart; cauliflower, 30c lb.; cucum bers, 35c each; Irish potatoes, 10c lb.; parsnips, 3 lbs. for 25c; onion sets, white or yellow, 15c lb.; ripe toma toes, 25c lb. Eggs, 45 cents per dozen; creamery butter, 78c lb.; country butter, 65c lb.; turkeys, 65c lb.; chickens, 65c. Fruits. Bananas, 12 to 12c lb.; lemons, iOc dozen; walnuts, 10c lb.; apples, 10c lb.; grape fruit, 5c to 10c each; oranges, 60c to 75c doz.; tangerines, 60c doz.; strawberries, 60c quart; rhubarb, 30c lb.; pears, 5c each; large eating apples, 5c and 10c each; pineapples, 50c each; cocoanut, 25c each. Produce, Buying. Country butter, 50c to 55c lb.; eggs, 38c dozen; old chickens, 30c lb.; frying chickens, 30c lb.; turkeys, 45c lb. LOCAL QUOTATIONS (Furnished by Whelan) BUYING Oats, 95c; rye, $1.50; straw, per ton, $8.00; new corn, $1.60 per bushel SELLING Cottonseed Meal, per ton, $80; per cwjt., $4.15; Oil Meal, per ton, $80.00; cwt., $4.25; Tankage 60 per cent, $118 per ton; cwt., $6.00; Quaker Dairy Feed, per ton, $56.00; per cwt. $3.00; Salt, per bbl., $3.00. Wheat bran, per ton, $60.00; cwt., $3.00; pure wheat middlings, per ton, $65.00; per cwt., $3.35; standard middlings, per ton, $61.00; per cwt., $3.15. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Richmond flour mills are paying $2.78 for No. 1 Red wheat; $2.75 for No. 2; $2.71 for No. 3; No. 4, $2.61. 350 Children Attend 6th Grade Program at Gallery Three hundred and fifty school children of the sixth grade attended the exhibit in the public art gallery of paintings by members of the New York Society of Painters, Sunday afternoon. Pupils of the fifth grade at the Joseph Moore school, where there is no sixth grade, "were also guests. A program prepared by Miss Florence Williams, head of the fine arts department of the public schools, was given. GOVERNOR ALLEN WILLING TO DEBATE WITH- GOMPERS NEW YORK April 26 Governor Henry J. Allen of Kansas, Sunday expressed his willingness to meet Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, in a debate on the merits of the Kansas court of industrial relations. Although it had been reported that he had accepted a challenge to meet Mr. Gompers in debate, Governor Allen said no such challenge has yet been received by him. ONE BIG STRIKE WILL PARALYZE PARIS MAY 1 (By Associated Press) PARIS, April 26. This city faces an almost complete paralysis of business on Saturday, May 1, as the result of a large number of unions voting to join the labor demonstration by calling a general strike. Hotel, postoffice, telephone and telegraph, local surface transportation and gas and electrical workers, all unionized workers on the payrolls of the municipality, with the exception of health officers, and a large number of less important branches of labor, will participate in the strike. Work in most lines will be resumed after 24 hours. SCIENTISTS GET TOGETHER TO SOLVE THE UNIVERSE (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, April 26. Scientists representing colleges and universities in every section of the country attended the opening here today of the annual meeting of the National Academy of Science. Three sessions are to be held daily. Tonight two California astronomers will discuss the size of the universe, presenting their views as to whether there is only one universe or several. 3Z09 A SERVICEABLE TWO PIECE MORNING GARMENT Pattern 3209 is here portrayed. It is cut in 7 Sizes: 36, 38, 40. 42, 44, 46 and 48 inches bust measure. A Medium size will require 73 yards of 27 inch material. This would be attractive in cotton crepe with binding of mercerized braid or "wash" ribbon. It is also nice for percale, lawn, figured voile, challie, albatross, silk and crepe de chine. The w idth of the kirt at its lower edge is 2 yards. A pattern of this illustration mailed to any address on receipt of 12 cents. Name
Address City Size Address Pattern Department, Palladium. Patterns will be mailed to your address within one week. .
Five Minutes with Our Presidents
By JAMES
XVI. A DIPLOMAT AT 14
,!
JOHN QUINCY AMONG the Presidents. John Quincy Adams holds the record of having been the youngest and oldest public servant. From boyhood, when he was a secretary of legation at the extraordinary age af 14 until he fell at his post in the halls of Congress in his 81st year, he was in the service of his country 55 of those 87 years. A President and the son of a President, all the other 15 Presidents from Washington to Johnson were his associates. From the day he climbed a height near his Massachusetts birthplace to see the battle of Bunker Hill, 15 miles away, he was a witness to! nearly every great event in the his-1 tory oi tne Na,tion until the close or the Mexican War. When John Quincy stood beside his mother watching the smoke of the first pitched battle for American independence, he was not yet 8. At 9, he heard the windows rattle from the storming of Dorchester Heights. Soon he stood again on the neighboring hill, looking off to Boston Harbor, where he beheld the glad sight of the British ships sailing away from the rebel town, which had been the first to defy and the first to vanquish the King. The boy was aglow with patriotism. In the siege of Boston, a musket had been placed in his little hands by an officer of a company passing the Adams home to join WTashington's army and he went through the man-
uai or arms, vwtn cruae arawings oi;isystem found ln narry j. James autosoldiers and frigates, he covered the I mobile repair shop after he had been pages of his diary, which he began , kined in a fight with policemen. They before he was 9 and which he kept said they believed robberies totaling until the end, when 12 prmted vol-1 ?500 000 wouW be revealed, and that umes were required to hold this most j more than $ioo,000 worth of loot al-
remarKame personal aocumeni m an America. WTith John Adams in Congress the child had to be the man of the fam - ily, and at 9 he regularly rode his horse to Boston to fetch the mail. At 10 his father took him with him . on his mission to France. By 12 he had crossed the Atlantic four" times. running the British blockade in leaky ; tubs and passing through the perils of shipwreck on the Spanish coast. I At 14, an American Minister appointed the "mature youngster" his j secretary of legation. By 17, the ; youth had traveled over much of Europe, and he came home to enter Harvard. After graduation, he open- i ed a law office in Boston. But busi- j ness was only beginning when the ; young attorney was appointed by i Washington, Minister at The Hague, j where the Government to which he : was accredited fled before the armies ; of France and left him in the midst ! of the triumphant revolutionists. Meeting the daughter of the American Consul in London, a Marylander, she and the young diplomat were married on the eve of his departure for Berlin, to which capital he had been promoted. As the first American Minister to knock at the Brandenburg Gate, he was held up until a Prussian lieutenant wa3 assured by private soldiers that there really was a United States of America, Among his last acts as President, John Adams removed his son from office to deprive Jefferson of the malicious satisfaction of dismissing him. When the recalled diplomat was elected to the Senate he displayed his family trait of independence by taking sides with his father's hated rival and supporting the Jefferson Administration. The infuriated Federalists of Massachusetts savagely turned upon him as a traitor to his party and a renegade from his class. They drove him from the Senate, and when he came home he found himself in his Boston house, which stood where the Hotel Touraine now stands, a social outcast on a lonely island entirely surrounded by ice. The bitter feud was carried beyond the grave, and the old Brahmins of Beacon Hill bequeathed to children and grandchildren an unrelenting hatred of the man who had dared to break caste. With his name erased forever from the Boston blue book, John Quincy was no longer a gentleman, and the Jeffersonians, who were not gentlemen, but only democrats, took him up. By their favor he became Minister to Russia, a negotiator of the peace of Ghent in 1814, and Minister to England. As if it had been the unpleasant duty of John Adams to be the First Min ister in London after the Revolution, and as it was to be the even more unpleasant duty of his grandson, Charles Franci3 Adams, to be the Minister in the trying time of the Civil War, it fell to his son, John Quncy, to brave the frowns of the Court of St. James when he appeared there at the close of the War of 1812. But no other American was more ready and able to stand up to the critics of his country than this plain-spoken, single-minded, unflinching champion of America. From London, John Quincy was called home to be Secretary of State In the Monroe Administration. In that post, he played the leading part In obtaining Florida from Spain and in
MONDAY, APRIL 26, 1920.
MORGAN .fit ADAMS AT 16 1767 July 11, John Quincy Adam3 born in Braintree, but what is now a part of Quincy, Mass. 1781 Secretary of Legation at St. Petersburg. 1787 Graduated at Harvard. 1790 Admitted to the Bar. 1794-7 Minister to The Hague. 1797 Married Louise Catherine Johnson. 1797-1801 Minister to Prussia. 1802 In Massachusetts Senate. 1803- 8 In National Senate. 1809-14 Minister to Russia. 1814 Peace Commissioner at Ghent. 1815- 17 Minister to England. 1817-25 Secretary of State. shaping the Monroe Doctrine. In his retirement John Adams had watched with fond admiration the rise of John Quincy until he was only one rung from the top. Although, in his crabbedness, he complained that "my son will never get a chance at the Presidency until the last Virginian is in his grave," fortune agreeably surprised the aged ex-President in next the last of his 90 years, when he saw the scepter of the Republic pass to a lineal hand. t CARD INDEX MAY LEAD POLICE TO CRIMINALS CHICAGO, April 26. Police today investigated an extensive card index ready had been recovered. The index contained lists of places robbed, goods iob ined. of stolen articles sold to j pawn shops
-5 .-Kit.. 3E1
Frank O
Governor of Illinois Candidate for President
COLISEUM
Tuiesday Evenim
Beginning at 7:30 p.m. EVERYBODY INVITED Governor Lowden's present strength since the recent primaries in the several states insures 320 pledged votes for his nomination at the Chicago convention. His friends are now predicting that he will be the next President of the United States. JOHN H. TAYLOR, Mgr. E. 0. PAUL, Executive Committee WALTER COMMONS
South Eighth Street Friends
Oversubscribe the Forward Move Quota; U. S. Success Reports came from all parts of the country into the national headquarters of Friends in Richmond Monday of the financial campaign Sunday. South Eighth Street Friends church of this city over-subscribed its quota of $4,000, although exact figures are not yet obtainable. The Friends Meeting in Greensboro, N. C, oversubscribed its quota more than $1,000. Deep River and High Point, N. C, made their quotas and more. 5. Andrew's Benevolent Body Has 60th Birthday St. Joseph's Benevolent association observed its 60th anniversary Sunday at the St. Andrew's church. The association attended the 7:30 a. m. service, and the 3 p. m. service, receiving communion at the former. The Rev. F. A. Roell, pastor of St. Andrew's, addressed the body. He declared against anarchy. Thirty-five thousand dollars have been spent by the association in its 60 years of work for the sick, charity and death claims. During the last 12 months, the following members have died: Henry J. Pardieck, Henry Epping. Sr.. John Rottinghaus, Bernard Rottinghaus and William Behnen. A special meeting will be held Monday to adopt a new constitution. FIRST D. & W. CAR FOR YEARS ARRIVES FROM DAYTON The first car from Dayton, operated under the Davton and Western Trac tion mmraiw arrived ner spmIo in Richmond Sunday. No rhanirps in
equipment or schedule will be madein Saturday night her condition was s . u i t- I sprimis hut kVia has hpin rfistine' eas-
in the division for the present ?tfiTiin time ago, the Ohio Electric Railway went into the hands of a receiver. This organization had leased this division from the Dayton and Western, and the line reverted to the D. and W. T. P. A. TO ELECT STATE PRESIDENT FROM CITY Twenty-one delegates from Post C, Travelers' Protective Association, will attend the state convention of the or - ganization at Indianapolis on May 14: and 15. Efforts are to be made to elect a Richmond man state president. The organization meets on the last Saturday of the month. NO SUCCESSOR YET NAMED TO HART, SCHOOL MANAGER No success has been named to L. E. Hart, business manager of Rich mond public schools, who resigned Saturday. The resignation will take effect on April 30. Mr. Hart came to Richmond about four years ago as manager of a Kresge store. Last August he severed his connection with that store to accept the school position. Mr. Hart says he will engage in an electrical fixture business at 1027 Main street about May 10. Suburban HAGERSTOWN, Ind. Mrs. Jesse Rinehart returned to her home at Connersville Monday after spending a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Twitchel, both of whom are sick. Mr. Twitchel is in a serious condition. Mrs. Twitchel is ill with a severe cold Miss Ada Ballenger was the guest Sunday of Miss Pauline Knapp The Aid society of the Christian church will meet Tuesday afternoon at the church :.. .Mrs. o Will Speak at the
April
27th
Laura Gebhart went to Franklin, Thursday. . .Bernetha Leavell, daugh or rxt .( Mra T T IaDVOII. fell
last week at their home on Walnut H . . . . . . . i i
sireei ana Drone ner coiiar wuo. GREENS FORK, Ind. Earl Law. rence Myers returned to his home in Oklahoma after visiting his mother, Mrs. Clark Charaness Mr. and Mrs. Carl BIsh returned to their home in Piqua, Ohio, after being called here on account of the sickness and death of Mrs. Bish Mrs. Charles Thorn? burg and daughter, Melba, Mrs. Charles Cummins and daughter, Esther, Mrs. Jane Benson, Mrs. North and two children and Mrs. Webb and daughter. Louisa, spent Friday in Richmond Mrs. Charles Thornburg and daughter. Melba, spent Saturday in Hagerstown. . . .Mrs. Walter Downing and daughter, Helen, of Elwood, came Friday evening to visit relatives. CAMPBELLSTOWN. O. Edward Banker visited Germantown relatives the past week Several persons from this place attended grange at New Paris Saturday evening, as the Jackson grange third and fourth degree team put on the work Mr. Ramsey's condition does not improve and he is still a very sick man Leonard Barnhart and wife, of near Eaton, spent Sunday with Leland Campbell and wife Darrell Swisher attended the Masonic work at Dayton several days the past week Mrs. McDivitt and two sons spent Thursday in Eaton with relatives..." Mrs. Carl Johns and Mrs. Leland Campbell were Cincinnati shoppers on Thursday. .. .A large crowd from tnis place attended the literary contest at ! West Alexandria Friday evening Mrs. Frank Earman is very poorly. , -' ' ' ier since. Her trouble is thought to be gallstones. CAMBRIDGE CITY. Ind. Charies Morris of Indianapolis, is visiting jiarry worns ana iaraiiy. . . ..-nrs. uur Bocker of Dublin, recently visited her sister. Mrs. John Hoover David Wissler of Newcastle, spent over Sun day with M. L. Young and family. 1 Dentist Convention was held at the M. E. church Wednesday night. About ' out oi lown guesis were present. The members of the M. E. social union served a fine supper to those present. Mr. and Mrs. Elam Barefoot, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barefoot, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Barefoot of Cowen, Ind., are j visiting relatives Mrs. James B. i Wilson and Miss Jennie McGrew visited friends at Straughns Sunday. Miss Marie Crull of near Hiser's Station vis?t;d her sister, Mrs. Claude i McMullen last week Mrs. Ruth Groves of Connersville visited her mother, Mrs. Horace Hamilton, over Sunday Will Wissler and family, north of town, visited M. L. Young and family Sunday. . .Mrs. Orville Thalls, who recently underwent an operation at Reid Hospital at Richmond, is home and reported as getting along very well. . . .Mrs. Charles Boyer was called to Cincinnati last week on account of f the serious illness of her mother, Mrs. Sullivan John Martin, who has been ill for some time, died at the hospital at Connersville. and was brought to his home at Mt. Auburn for burial. He was in the blacksmith business for years in Cambridge Mr. and Mrs. Peter Zehring and Mrs. Cora Bailey recently spent a few days with Harry Zehring at Connersville.. . Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fancher and children spent over Sunday with relatives in Ohio. .. .Glenn Butte of Steubenville, Ohio, is the guest of Harry Morris and family. f
owdee
