Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 250, 30 August 1920 — Page 10

PAGE TEN"

MARKETS

GRAIN PRICES CHICAGO. Aug. 30. - Lateness of corn crop and bullish tak in wheat sustains corn. Bears also have an Idea that September com holds considerable long Interest. Export and domestic grain demand slow. Some of the cash corn grades are off Fix to eight cents. Cotton market shows further signs of unease. Rears refuse to press corn on the dips. Bulls predict no deliveries of torn and oats on Wednesday. Sept. 1. The question arises as to whether Sept. corn at $1.20 represents bearish news for the present; otherwise locals prefer bulge sales. Overnight lower. RANGE OF FUTURES (Markets by E. W. Wagner & Co., 212 Union Bank Building) CHICAGO, Aug. 30. Following is th range of futures on Chicago board

Open High Low Close Wheat 2.36t-4 2.36 2.33 2.33 Mar 2:1 .2 32 229 229 Ryo Sept. ...1.87 1.87T4 1.84 1.I5V4 Corn Sept ...1.44 1.44 1.40 1.40 Pec 1.19H 1.194 1.1 1.1S4 May ....1.16 1.16 1W 1-15 Oats Sept 7 -66 Dec r,T .67 .66 .6Ci May 69 .69 .68 4 .68, Pork Sept. ..24.23 24.10 Lard Sept ..18.60 18.45 Ribs Sept ..15.22 15.05

(By Associated Press) TOLEDO, O.. Aug. 30. Cloverseed: Prime cash, $18; Feb., and March, $18.80; Oct., $18.70; Dec, $18.47. AJftUte; Prime cash, $18; March, $19: Oct $1840; JDec, $18 10. Timothy: Prime cash 1917 and 1918, $4; 1919, $410; Mar., $4.26; Sept $4.16; Oct and Dec.. $4.10. (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Au. 30. Wheat No. 2 red. $2.64. Corn No. 2 mixed. $1.53 1.6$; No. 2 yeUow. $1.531.60. Oats No. 2 white, 68Vi70c; No. 3 white, 6614 69. Pork, nominal; ribs, $14.5015.50; lard. $18.45. (By Associated Press) CINCINNATI. Aug. 30. Wheat No. 2 red, $2.602.61; No. 3 red, $2.55 2.57; other grades as to quality, $2.40 2.55. Corn No. 2 white, $1.561.57; No. 3 white, $1.551.56; No. 4 while, $1.54g1.55; No. 2 yellow. $1.661.57; No. 3 yellow, $1.551.56; No. 4 yellow. $1.54 1.55; No. 2 Mixed. $1.55 (51.56. Oats 6670c. Uye $2.02 2.03. Hay $26.OO34.50. LIVE STOCK PRICES (By Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 30. HogsReceipts, 7.500; lower. Cattle Receipts, 1,100; steady. Calves Receipts, 800; lower. Sheep Receipts, 500; steady. Hogs Good mixed, 160 lbs. up. average, $15.7516.00; assorted, 160 to 250 lbs., average, $15.7516.25: uniform, 250 to 300 lbs. up, $15.50?t 15.75; extra big hogs, $15.50 down; fat hogs, weighing down to 140 lbs., $15.7516.00; fat back pigs, under -40 lbs., $15.75 down; light pigs, $15.25 down; feeding pigs $15.50 down; apws, according to quality, $12.00 14.25; most good sows, $13.5014.00. Best heavy hogs a year ago, $20.50; best light hogs a year ago. $20 50; most of sales a year ago, $20.3525. Cattle Killing steers Extra good, 1.300 lbs. up, $16.50 17.00; good to choice, 1,250 lbs. up, $15.50 16 50; common to medium, 1250 lbs. up. $14.5015.50; good to choice, 1,100 to 1.200, $14.5015 50; common to medium. 1,110 to 1,250 lbs., $13.5014.5O; good to choice, 1,000 to 1,100 lbs, $13.50 15.00; common to medium, 1.000 to 1,100 lbs., $1J.00(S13.25; good to best under 1,000 lbs., $ll.o0i13 50; poor to fair, under 1.000 lbs., $s.ou t 10 50; good to best yearlings, $13.5u(ii $15.50. Heifers Good to best, S00 lbs. up, $11.60(13.50; common to nit-ilium, under 800 lbs., $9.0011.00; good to best, under 800 lbs., $7.00 lo.oo; poor to fair, under 1,000 lbs., $10 00 (ct 12.00; good to choice, under 1,000 lbs., $11.75 13.75. Cows Good to best, 1,050 lbs. up, $10.00 $ 11.60; common to medium. 1,050 lbs up, $S. 50 $9.50; choice, under 1.050 lbs., $9.00 10.00; poor to good cutters, $5.006.50; poor to good canners, $4.004.50. Bulls Good to best, 1300 lbs. up. $8.00(fi8.75; good to choice, under 1.300 lbs., $8.00 8.50; fair to medium, under 1.300 ibis., $6.50(37.50; common to good bolognas, $5.007.00. Calves Good to cnoice veals undet 200 lbs.. $16.00018.00; good bolognas, $6.00; good to choice heavy calves, $7.50 9.00; common to medium, heavy calves, $6.007.00; common to medium veals under 200 lbs, $913. Stockers and Feeders Cattle Good to choice steers, 800 lbs. up. $90C ia9.50; common to fair steers, 800 lbs. up. $7.508.50. Good to choice steers under 800 lbs., $8.009.00; common to fair steers. 800 lbs. up, $8.0009.00; medium to good heifers, $6.50 7.50; medium to good cows. $6.006.60; good to choice steers, under 800 lbs.. $8.50 9.00; common to fair steers, under 800 lbs., $7.00 7.50; stock calves. 250 to 400 lbs,. $7.0010.00. Native Sheep and lambs Good to choice wether sheep. $6.007.00; good to choice ewe sheep, $5.0006.50; selected ewes and wether lambs, $12.00 12.50; bucks, per 100 lbs., $3.0004; good to choice Iambs, $11.00011.50; common to medium, $8.00010.50. DAYTON MARKET Corrected by McLean & Company. Dayton, O. Bell Phone, East 28. Home 81235. DAYTON, O.. Aug. 30. Hogs Receipts, four cars; harket steady; choice heavies, 170 pounds and up. $15.60; butchers and packers, $15.50; heavy Yorkers, $14.00015.00; light Yorkers. $$13.50014.50; choice fat sows, $11.5012.50; common to fair sows. $10.501150; pigs. $13.00 $14.00; stags. $7.009.00. Cattle Market lower; fair to good shippers, $12.0014.00; good to choice butchers, $11.0012.00; fair to medium butchers, $10.00011.00; good to

choice heifers. $10.00012.00; fair to good heifers, $7.00 & 9.00; fair to good fat cows, $7.00 8.00; bologna cows, mills. $3.005.00; butcher bulls. $7.00 8.60; bologna bulls, $7.00 8.00; calves. $12.0016.00. Sheep Market steady; lambs, $8.00 11.00.

(By Associated Press) CINCINNATI, Aug. 30 Receipts : Cattle. 300; hogs, 4,200; sheep, 3,600. Cattle Market good; steady; shippers, common, weak; butcher steers, $12014; fair to good, $812; common to fair, $5.5008; heifers, $10013.50; fair to good, $710. Cows Good to choice, $8.2508.50; fair Jo good, $6.5008.50; cutters, $5 6; canners, $3.5004.60; stock steers, $6010.60; stock heifers, $5.6007.00; 6tock cows, $506. Bulls Bologna, $6.50 7.50; fat bulls, $S09. Milch Cows Steady. $400125.00; calves, strong, $1 higher; extra, $18 19; fair to good, $14018; common and large, $6013. Hogs Strong:. 25cff60o higher; selected heavy shippers, $16.75016.25; good to choice packers asd butchers, $16.25; medium, $16.26; stars. $8010; common to choice heavy fat sows, $10 13.60; light shipper. $15.60016.75; pigs, 110 pounds and less, $10013.50. Sheep Steady; good to choice lights, $5.5006.50; fair to good. $3.25 05.50; common to fair, $103; bucks, $206. umbs Slow, 50c$l lower; good to choice, $1515.50; seconds, $9011; fair to good. $12015; common skips, $608. (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Aug. 30. (U. S. Bureau of Markets) Cattle Receipts 23,000; slow; choice Bteers, steady to strong; good steady to 25 cents lower; unevenly 25 to 60 cents lower; prime steers, bid $17.76; bulk good and choice, $16,250)17.40; grassy kinds, $9014.60; mostly; bulls slow, steady; good and choice oows at $9.50012.75; mostly steady; medium kinds Irregular, lower $6.6008.60; canners slow, $404 50; bulk choice veal calves $16.5017 25; stockers 26 cents lower; 6,000 western offered quality very common; draggy. Hogs Receipts 24,000; generally 15 025 cents higher; desirable lights scarce: top $16; bulk light and butchers, $5.25015.90; bulk, packing sows, $14014.25; pigs strong at 25 cents higher. Sheep Receipts 28.000; lambs, steady to 25 cents lower; packers, top native lambs $13.75; good Washington $14.50; sheep 6teady; best fat native ewes, $7.60; feeders slow. (By Associated Press) EAST BUFFALO, N. Y.. Aug. 30. Cattle Receipts 2,800; active. 25 to 50 cents higher; no dry fed cattle here, all grass; shipping sters, $15015.75; butchers, $9015; yearlings. $15.50 16; heifers $6012; cows, $3010.50; bulls, $5.5009.50; stocker feeders, $6 9.50; fresh cows, springers active, $600140; calves, $22.00; active and steady, $6021.00. Hogs Receipts 9,600; active strong, heavy $16016.50; mixed $16.55017; Yorkers $17, few at $17.10; light ditto $17.00; pigs $17.00; roughs $1313 25; stags, $8010. Sheepa nd Lambs Receipts 7,200; slow; lambs, yearlings $1 lower; sheep 60 cents lower; lambs $6015; yearlings, $609.50; wethers $87.50; ewes $307.50; mixed sheep $7.5008. (By Associated Press) PITTSBURGH, Aug. 30. CattleReceipts, 1,700; steady. Cattle. $15.00 016.00; heifers, $11.00012.00; cows, $S.OO10.00. Hogs Receipts, 6.000; higher. Heavies, $15.5015.60: heavy Yorkers, $16.75017.00; light Yorkers, $15.75 0 16.25; pigs, $15.00 15.50. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 5,500; lower. Top sheep, $9.00; top lambs, $15.00. Calves Receipts, 1,500; Market, steady; top, $19.00. PRODUCE MARKET (By Associated Tress) INDIANAPOLIS. Aug. 30. ButterFresh prints, 57060c. Butter Fresh prints, 5760c. Poultry Large broilers. 32 (a) 35c; turkeys, 3135c; flunks, 17 0 20c; young geese, 23c; squabs, per dozen, 11 lbs. to dozen. $6; roosters, $15017; fowls, 3031c; (Hy Associated Press) CHICAGO, Aug 30. --Butter Market Weak; creamery firsts 4355'2. Eggs Receipts 6.382 cases; market higher; lowest 45Va4GV4; firsts 49 50 V,. Live Poultry Market higher; fowls, 26322; springs 32 Vfc. Potato Market Weak; receipts 45 cars; Jersey Cobblers $3.10 3 25; Minnesota Early Ohios, $2.5002.65. (By Associated Press) CINCINNATI, Aug. 30 Butter fatSteady. Eggs Steady; prime firsts. 49c; firsts, 47c; ordinary firsts, 45c; seconds. 40c. Poultry Steady; springers, 35; hens, 33c; turkeys, 60c. NEW YORK STOCKS (Markets by E. W. Wagner & Co., 212 Union Bank Building) NEW YORK, Aug. 30. Open American Can 35 Close. 35 56 62 107 76 60 28 21 54 160 4iy3 921,4 84 28 74 62 121 85 88 68 45 Anaconda 524 Balwin Locomotive 1074 Bethlehem Steel, B 76 Chesapeake and Ohio.... 58 V Chino Copper 28 General Motors 21i Goodrich Tires 54 Mexican Petroleum 160 Pennsylvania 41 Reading 91 M Republic Iron and Steel.. 84 Sinclair Oil 29 Stromberg Carburetor . . 72 Union Pacific 121 U. S. Rubber 85 U. S. Steel . .. 89 Utah Copper 68 White Motors 45 LIBERTY BONDS NEW YORK, Aug. 30 Prices on Liberty bonds today were: 3 1-2 $89.82 First 4 84.70 Second 4 . '. 84.30 First 4 1-4 85.10 Second 4 1-4 84.48 Third 4 1-4 87.78 Fourth 4 1-4 84.90 Victory 3 3-4 95.34 Victory 4 3-4 95.38

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND

LIBERTY BONDS. , LOCAL HAY MARKET. Steady; No. 1 Timothy, $26.00; Clover, $22.000 25.00. BUTTER QUOTATIONS. The wholesale price for creamery butter Is 69 cents a pound. Butter fate delivered in Richmond bring 65 cents a pound. FRUIT & VEGETABLES Beets, 8c bunch, 2 for 15c; leaf lettuce, 20c lb.; onions, 8c lb; parsley, 15c bunch; green, mangoes 2 for 5c garlic 60c pound; new cabbage, 5c pound; sweet potatoes. 15c lb.; spring onions, 6c bunch; cucumbers, 5c; ripe tomatoes, 6c lb.; fancy canning tomatoes, $1.49 bu.; green beans, 8c lb., 2 lb. 15c; turnips, 10 cents bunch; carrots, 8c bunch, 2 bunches 15c; egg plant, 25c each; new potatoes, 5c lb., 68c peck; green corn, home grown, 30c dozen; cauliflower, 30c lb; celery, 10c bunch, 3 for 25c; Lima beans, 20c lb. FRUITS. Bananas, 15c pound; lemons, 29c a dozen; oranges. 60c dozen; canteloupes, 10c and 12c each; fresh peaches, 15 cents per pound; fresh plums, 15c lb.; fresh plums, 30c lb.; Maiden Blush apples, 10c lb; honey dew melons. 50c each ; Bartlett pears, 2 lbs. for 25c; white grapes, 40c lb.; Backemeyer Tiptop melons, 7c lb. PRODUCE BUYING Country Butter. 40c pound; eggs, 44c dozen; old chickens, 27c pound; try chickens, S60 pound. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Richmond flour mills are paying $2.40 for No. 2. LOCAL QUOTATIONS (Furnished by Whelan) BUYINU Oats, 55c; rye, $1.65; straw, ton, $9.00; corn $1.35 per bushel. per bushel. SELLING cwt., $3.75; Oil meal, per ton, $77.50, cwt., $4.00; Tankage 60 per cent, $105 cwt., $4.25; Tankage 60 per cent. $105 per ton, cwt., $5.35; Tankage 60 per cent. $118 per ton; cwt., $6.0p; Quaker Dairy Feed, per ton, $63.00; per cwt, $3.25. Cavalry Horses Seen As Troop Stops Off at Glen Miller for Feed A detachment of United States artillery, in charge of Lieutenant Cruse, having two or three cars of cannon and 100 head of horses, arrived at Richmond about 8 a. m. Sunday enroute to Pittsburgh. They stopped over here to feed and water their horses, at the Glen Miller stock yards, all the horse cars being run in on the yard's siding. There were 163 men in the outfit, a soldiery looking bunch, and the horses were in the pink of condition. Before leaving, and in the midst of a pouring rain, the men were lined up for inspection and for the benefit of a crowd of Richmondites who came to see them off, as well as to load the horses quickly. About five hours were used for feeding and resting, after which the horses were loaded in exactly 12 minutes from the sounding of the signal. Lieutenant Cruse, who has been in charge of transportation and remount stations for nine years, told Rome Shurley that in all that time he had never fed and watered in transit at a more convenient and better arranged yards for that purpose. Price of News Print Advanced 13 Per Cent CHICAGO. Aug. 30. The Interna tional Paper Co., the largest producers of print paper in the United States, announced today that they would in crease tlio price of print paper on Oct 1, 13 per cent, which will make the price $6. 50 a hundred pounds. On July 1, of this year, the price of paper advanced 9 per cent. A few weeks ago the same company announced that publishers now being suplied with print paper would in 1921 be sold only 80 per cent of the amount purchased in 1920. Geier. Funeral services for John Osier, who died Friday, in Saginaw, Mich., will be conducted Tuesday, at 9 a. m . from the St. Andrew's church. Burial will be in St. Andrew's cemetery. The Rev. F. A. Roell will officiate. Friendg may call at any time at the home of Mrs. Peter Geier, 616 South Ninth street, where tb.e was taken Sunday. body $5,000,000 TO (Continued from Page One) were campaigning for Governor Cox, with their expenses paid out of government funds. 'Examination Three Days. Examination of the witnesses already summoned will take at least three days, Mr. Kenyon estimated. Their testimony is expected to revenl many ansrles which the committee will wish to follow, and persons mentioned in their testimony as having knowledge of campaign financial affairs will be subpoenaed, committee men said. Te senate committee has dropped, for present, its investigation of preconvention, state and congressional campaign expenditures, but will reopen phase of its task after completing the inquiry evoked by the charges of Governor Cox and Mr. Roosevelt. No definite plans have been made beyond the hearing opening here today, but Senator Kenyon expects to hold sessions later in Missouri, where Edward F. Coltra, Democratic national committeeman, is to be heard in connection with the campaign in behalg of Attorney-General A. Mitchell Paimer for the Democratic nomination for president. Hearings may also be held in Kansas, Oklahoma and several other states. MUSTAPHA KEMEL ILL. (By Associated Press) CONSTANTINOPLE, Aug. 30. Mustapha Kemal Pasha, head of the Turkish Nationalist government at Angora, Is 111 of chronic malaria, his condition being made worse by worry and overwork. Physicians are in constant attendance. He refuses to see many foreign visitors, partly because of his health and partly because of a feeling that he has nothing to gain from them. He is quoted as saying, however: "I will fight to the end of the world."

f " Funeral Arrangements V j

SUN - TELEGRAM. RICHMOND,

PONZI ON mm Charlee Ponzi. RIGA IS SELECTED AS HEADQUARTERS OF PEACE MEETING (By Associated Press) WARSAW, Aug. 30While Riga has been agreed upon by the Polish and Russian soviet governments as the place tor future peace negotiations, it was said At the foreign mission last night that no word had been received from the Letvian government regarding the Poles' request for permission to hold the conference in Riga. MINSK, Aug. 22 Members of the Polish peace delegation, who came to this city to arrange an armistice and negotiate a treaty ending the war between Poland and soviet Russia, have been engaged in a continual controversy with Bolshevik officials since arriving here. Disagreements between the delegation and the soviet commissar in command of the quarters where the Poles are virtual prisoners have reached bewildering proportions regarding the use of a wireless plant by the Poles and the regulations to be observed in the house where the delegation is living. Some indication of the treatment in store for the delegates was seen in the action of the Bolsheviki when the Poles reached this city. The delegation was escorted by a detachment of mounted soviet troops to a residence near the center of the city, about which guards were posted with orders to allow no one to leave without a soviet escort. Correspondent Is Prisoner The correspondent of The Associated Press has found it difficult to obtain an exact view of the situation, owing to the fact that he is a prisoned, lik" the rest of the Polish party. visit was made to a local official, the correspondent being accompanied by a guard and the official stated that, inasmuch as the correspondent had accompanied the Warsaw delegation to Minsk, he was identified with it. "It is too bad you came with the Poles," he was told. The Polish delegation set up a wireless plant soon after its arrival, but was forced to move it three times in an endeavor to obtain a situation from which it might communicate with Warsaw. The list location was made this morning and prospects of sending messages to the Polish capital were good, but when an attempt was made to use the apparatus, it was found the soviet commandant had sealed it. Bolshevik Attitude Offensive The Poles are impatient under the confinement, while the attitude of the Bolsheviki seem3 to grow more offensive as news of Polish victories filters through the lines. Members of the Polish mission said today the soviet terms presented yesterday were not acceptable. They added they expected more favorable terms if the Polish military successes continued and that if concessions were not made by the soviet delegation, "there would be no peace at all." This contingency would not surprise anybody here. It has been recalled that when the Bolshevik delegation appointed to negotiate a peace with Esthonia went to Dorpat last autumn, the Bolsheviki

IP"

WW

i n

1

6

Si

. .V.V.V

HAVING LOST BULK OF HIS SUBJECTS, BULGARIAN KING TURNS TO LIVESTOCK This is a, new photograph of

IND - MONDAY, AUG. 30, 1920.

STAND SHOWS AMAZING Testifying- in his own behalf at a once known as a "wizard finance,1 financial subjects, especially foreign had not invested the tnonev on which fp cent interest in ninety days. In the

the receivers, who is questioning Ponzi, is seen standing with his back

Svsis.aKi.''1! v jrr 'Wiry,? -rtc rvtsi

tmm s a.

at extreme right, testifying; at hearing IRISH MESS IS NONE . M'COMB TELLS "The .United States has no more right to go into England and tell the British parliament how to run Ireland than the British have to come to the United States senate and say what America shall do with the PhiUiplnes," said Dr. C. Jeffares McComb, Sunday evening In a lecture delivered at the Richmond Chautauqua. "Many people have asked me as an Irishman, now living in the United States," continued Dr. McComb, "whether or not the United States should reciprocate the action of Ireland at the time of the American Revolution when she helped America to win her independence. "Bear in mind that one-sixth the colonists were from Ulster, and that had it not been that the best Englishmen were with the colonists the United States would never have won her independence. "Sinn Fein is Selfishness." "I am absolutely opposed to Sinn Fein," said Dr. McCombs. "It is an impossibility as a working principle. It means selfishness. Sinn Fein has a fine element so long as It means the development and the betterment of the economical, religious, social conditions of Ireland. But Sinn Fein means that everything English will be boycotted ir. Ireland. She will shut herself off from the rest of the world and with her fine harbors and fine ports be grabbed off by Germany. "Sinn Fein in Ireland will not mean nearly so much self determination as self extermination. It is an absurd impossibility and cannot come to its fullest fruitition in Ireland. Its charter sets forth an absolute boycott of all things English. When any United States senator or congressman is prepared to take up arms against England for Ireland and recognize a Sinn Fein government with its present character were kept under strict guard and were not permitted to appear in the streets without an armed escort. Correspondents accompanying the soviet mission at that time were confined in the Bolshewik headquarters for more than a week before being given their liberty. LONDON, Aug. 30. Russian soviet forces engaged in a counter offensive against the Poles east of Brest-Litovsk have occupied four villages in that vicinity. Near Lemberg there is heavy fighting going on, and in the Vlodava and Grubeshoff regions there is local fighting. This information was received here this morning in a wireless dispatch from Moscow containing an official statement issued there yesterday. rAKis, Aug. 30. Military opera-1 uons in rotana seem tor tn moment at least to be limited to local actions, and Polish commanders are utilizing the period in activity along the front to re-grouping their forces, which were separated during the recent rapid advance. Advances from Warsaw state a wireless message from the Bolshevik commander-in-chief to Moscow was intercepted and that in it he made protests against the sending of unarmed reinforcements to the Polish front. . Kinjr Boris, ruler of remnants of the once powerful Balkan state of Bulgaria, which made the mistate of allying with Germany in the war. Having lost the bulk of his subjects, the king has turned his attention to livestock, some of which he is seen inspecting.

IGNORANCE

hearing in Boston, Charles Ponzl, showed amazing ignorance on all exchange. He revealed that he ha' had . nromii tn nnv Kfl photo Robert G. Dodge, counsel for in Boston. OF OUR BUSINESS, CHAUTAUQUA AUDIENCE as a basis I am prepared to take up arras against him. Is Radical Element "Sinn Fein is the radical element of the home rule party that wants to build a wall around Ireland. No man, nation, church or society can liberate Itself from the rest of the universe. One third of the nation Is opposed to Sinn Fein. The northern part of Ireland is not represented. And the struggle is not between Ireland and England, or England and America, but between Ireland and Ireland. "If Ireland should be given Sinn Fein government would not it be possible for the Unionists to secede from the Sinn Fein government, which has never shown any hope for the people in the north of Ireland? Says DeValera Misrepresents "DeValera, puppet of an Irish president, was never chosen to represent the republic. He misrepresented things to America. He was sent over here to get $10,000,000 and he was offered a half million dollars if he would get a Sinn Fein plank in either of the political parties and one mil lion dollars if he could secure the rec ognition of the Sinn Fein government by the United States government. "The great trouble is the lack of co hesive elements in the north and south of Ireland. The six largest concerns in the world are In Ulster. Belfast pays one half the taxes of the nation, and Ulster says 'we will not submit to a parliament in Dublin'. "The north and south of Ireland are unlike in practical ideas, political policy, religious sentiment, industry, etc. In the south the Sinn Fein are separatists and in the north they are unionists. If the Nationalists do not trust England why should the Unionists trust the Nationalists? "The plea of the Sinn Felnlsts is based on misleading facts of the English treatment of Ireland. The English are a splendid bunch when the truth is told. All Ireland lovs England except the portion in the south. Ireland surpasses Scotland, Wales and England in representation in parliament, because she is represented for every 40,000, while the other three are represented for every 75.000. No country is in a more prosperous condition, "Sinn Fein is an impossibility and is a German proposition. If Ireland is cut adrift from the rest of the world Germany will be ready to reach out for her. The hope of the world lies in the union of the English speaking peoples." Monday morning, at 9:30 a. m.. Dr. McCombs lectured on "Why We Have a Bible." Each morning at 9:30, this week, he will give a lecture for half an Hour preceding the lectures to be given by Mrs. Houston. "The Bible we have because we have religion and we do not have religion because we have the Bible," was the theme of his talk. "Why do we have literature of any kind? All literature is the outgrowth of a great occasion. When Paul told about the dynamic, cyclonic sustaining power of the grace of God it was because he had felt it. All deathless literature is born out of a death-defying experience and ihe Bible is like all other pieces of deathless literature. It would be a violation of all laws if we did not have the Bible." Will Lecture to Women Mrs. Alice Sherfy Houston, of the Runford department of Home Economics, will give a lecture every day at 10 a. m. A large crowd of women atended the first lecture Monday morning on foods and their use. Mrs. Houston explained the purpose of all the foods and their building and sustaining powers. A practical kitchen has been arranged, in a tent near the big tent and the women will be taken there for demonstrations. Monday afternoon, preceding the Welsh Glee singers. Dr. McComb talked on "America, Her Supreme Treasure and Her Primary Task." "America has great institutions and great documents, and great symbols, but her supreme treasure is the 25.000,000 boys and girls of the nation," he said. The primary task of America is not the construction of sky scrapers, th construction of railroads, the cultivation of wheat fields, but the building, moulding and polishing of her treasure into kingly men and queenly women. The speaker challenged the teachers and ministers of the nation and others who will be responsible for the development of the child life of the country.

CARBOLA, THE DISINFECTING GERM KILLER WHITE PAINT Good for poultry houses. Kills lice and mites, prevents the start and spread of contagious disease. Increases the lights. Paints and disinfects at one operation. Harmless to small chicks. Applied with brush or spray pump to wood brick, stone or cement or over whitewash. OMER G. WHELAN 31 and 33 S. 6th St. THE FEED MAN Phone 1679

STOCK SELLS HIGHER AT GLEN MILLER YARD; BIG LOTS MARKETED

Nearly 600 hogs, 113 sheep and 61 calves were marketed at Glen Miller stock yards last week at a slight advance In prices over those of the week ending Saturday, Aug. 21. The markets averaged better at all western points. Chicago being 75 cents to $1 better at the week-end on hogs. Mlth cattle In good demand at higher prices. As Rome Shurley said Monday, the big herds of hogs have bexn largely marketed, and a change in price trend was, and is, still due. One Wa"ne county man. Ben Foreman, contributed a Folid car of hogs to the receipts at the Glen last week. He marketed 75 head weighing 17.320 pounds and netting him $2,633. T. F. McDonnell, a Richmond druggist, sold 20 head at $15 per 100. and Harry Brown. of . Holla nsburg. received $2,008 for 53 hogs weighing 12.970 pounds. 7 Cars of Hogs, $17,806 The following shipments of car lots of hogs can be figured to show average weights and prices paid: Ninety bead, weight 22.430 pounds, $$,196; 84 head. 17,380 pounds. $2,473; 71 head. 16,255 pounds, $2,306: 87 head. 16,610 pounds, $2,465; 76 head, 16.S20 pounds, $2,488; 75 head. 17,320 pounds, $2,633; 80 head .15.070 pounds, $2,245. Sixty-one calves. weight 9,470 pounds, sold for $1,336.25, and US sheep and lambs, weight 9,890 pounds, brought $762.60. The week's receipts represented a large number of farmers, among whom were: Charles Showalter, D. E. Thorne, Sam Glunt, Harry Crome, Frank Johnson, Ralph Jones, Percy Bennett, Dick Smelser, John BatcheJor. John Hanley, O. H. Pierce, Chas. Stiggleman, M. L. Lamotte, Ed. Parshall, O. M. Jennings, Dick Conway, Bert Skinner, Huddleeoa Bros-. Floyd Hunt. Howard Turner, W. A. William son, xxl steins, uea Kuhuaan, C EL Maddox, J. C Bhowalten "8. Chxnkle, Harry Jordan. Walter Brumfleld. Earlham college, James Busby, M. Horner, Lawler Dietemeyer and William Wilcoxen. A number of cars were fed tn transit. Including 100 head of cavalry horses, enroute to Pittsburgh, on Sunday. 331Z A POPULAR ONE-PIECE MODEL. Pattern 3342 is here portrayed. It is cut in three sizes: 16, 1 and 20 years. A 16 year size will require 4 yards of 36 inch materiaL The width of the skirt at the lower edge is 134 yard. Jersey cloth in a new weave ws used for this design. It is attractive in sports silk, taffeta, pongee, lineu, serge, gingham, percale or gabardine. Address City 0X 1 9 Size A pattern of this illustration mailed to any address on receipt of 12 cents in silver or stamps. Addrest Pattern Department Palladium. Patterns will he mailed to your address within one weec Weisbrod's have Just received a very few of the Columbia Record . "Let The Rest of the World Go By" (Campbell and Burr) Please call at once If your name is on the waiting list for this vocal duet record. Watch for This Sign

isiilp) Watcn NSrnr Thi Sign