Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 256, 6 September 1920 — Page 13
THE PALLADIUM CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Standardised and Indexed for quick reference, according to The Basil JU Smith System (Copyright).
Advertising Rates to eents per line, per Insertion. words to the line. No ad taken for less than 20 cents cash or less than 30 cents charge. No ads accepted after 11 o'clock on day of publication. For contract, call phone 2834 or 2873. PHONE 2834 MONUMENTS 1B JOHN P. EMRLIE Monuments 15 South Tenth Street Phone 4032 SPECIAL NOTICE 3 NOTICE On and after this date I will not be resoonslble for any debts Incurred by "Mrs. Anabel Frist." PAUL H. FRIST. LOST AND FOUND FOUND Ladles' pocket book at Will Gregg's market stand. Owner can have same by describing their property. Call Will Gregg, Refute 22, Greensfork, Ind. HELP WANTED MALE YOUNG MAN to help take care of college rooms. Requires some work every morning and every evening. Allow 50 cents per hour to apply on tuition. nn.,irh tn r.a v for course. Fall term Just starting. Richmond Business College, Colonial Bids. Phone 2040. WANTED Younjr man with drucr store experience. Apply at Thistlethwaite's, 914 Main street. WANTED ExDerienced male stenog rapher for factory office work permanent position; good salary. Address
jiex nianuiaciuruiB --., - Indiana. d
MEN WANTED In Cracker Department RICHMOND BAKING CO. HELP WANTEDFEMALE 6 nr-ni.a n-nnteA in Advertising Depart ment. Apply Jenkins Vulcan Spring Company. SALESLADIES WANTE Those with experience preferred. Lee B. Nusbaum Co DISHWASHER wanted. 919 Main. Kandy Shop. WANTED Lady clerk to assist in toilet and rubber good ae partment. Thistlethwaite, 914 Main. Girls Wanted AUBURN IGNITION MFG. CO. 7th and South H GIRLS WANTED RICHMOND BAKING CO. PASTRY COOK wanted. "919 Main. Kandy Snop SITUATIONS WANTED FIRST-CLASS dressmaking, sewing a specialty. 216 So. Children's 13th St. ROOMS FOR RENT 10TH ST., NORTH. 618 Furnished rooms with bath gentlemen only. 4TH ST., SOUTH. 116 Furnished room. THREE unfurnished rooms. Phone 3525 MODERN furnished room. 130 South Uth. Phone 1065. LIOHT housekeeping C13 So. B St. suite; modern 8TH ST., NORTH. 111with heat and bath. -Sleeping room FOR RENT 3 modern furnished light housekeeping rooms. 416 South West Third St. 9TH ST., NORTH, 226for rent. -Furnished rooms BUSINESS SERVICE 12 DON'T LET OTHER PEOPLE EXPERIMENT ON YOUR TYPEWRITER Phone 1010 and lot experienced m chanics do your work. THE RICHMOND TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE Multlgraph Letters and Printing 17 North Seventh St. Special Designing and Pattern Work, Wood and Metal Patterns, Metal Plates. Richmond Engineering and Pattern Co. iorth West Third and Penn. R. R. SHEET METAL WORK 14 R. J. BEHRINGER For Sheet Metal Work OF QUALITY S12 S. C St. Phone 1929 HEATING AND PLUMBING 14 PT.lTMniXG. heating and lighting contracting; repairing and supplies, at Meerlioffs, 9 South 9th. Phone 1236. MOVING AND STORAGE 16 FORREST MONGER For local and long distance Furniture crated, stored or hauling, shipped. AUTO MOVING VAN '200 South "th St. Phone 2608 MIRRORS RESILVERED 17 Auto Reflectors Resilvered Why buy new ones? Lahmann Plating Works Across the Bridge 209 West Main Phone 275S for 1 ALL KINDS OP PLATING o MISCELLANEOUS REPAIRING 17B LAWN MOWERS sharpened; baby cabs re-tlred; all kinds of repairs. Work railed for and delivered. Pictures framed. New bicycles; reasonable trtr. j. c Darnell 0. Phone 1936.
MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 21
MUSIC ROLLS for sale; q. r. a IK South 4th. SEWING MACHINES; In rood condition. 40 So. 16th St Phone 2416. COOK STOVE, gas range, shades, etc 204 Williams St. Phone 3084. CLOSET TANK for sale: oak: excellent valves, but needs rellnihgr. $4.00; music stand and leather case, $1.50. 400 College Ave. Phone 3244. FOR SALE Wagons, harness, corn . binders, 12 wheat drills and vehicles of all kinds. 317 N. A St. RANGE for sale. Globe" ; wood or coal. Harry Williams, Spring Grove. Phone 4428. FEATHER BED. new tick, $25.00; 6x13 fluff rug, $20. 908 H Main. Phone 1Z0B. WE BUY, SELL, OR TRADE for Used Watches also complete line of new watches, priced very low. Buy your high-grade spectacles of us at about half the usual price. C. E. KEEVER, 7 South 11th. FOR SALE Lloyd Loom gray reed baby cab; excellent condition. 205 8. 18. SHOES for sale, 2 good pairs; silk skirt. wool skirt and coat. 47 South 11th. MISCELLANEOUS WANTED 22 FURNITURE AND STOVES All kinds; good prices. Home Suply Store, 181 Ft. Wayne Ave. Phone 1862. FURNITURE WANTED We pay high est prices for Used Goods, Stoves, etc. Brammer & Foster, 17 S. 7th. Phone 1876. GOOD USED FURNITURE of all kinds wanted. See us before you sell. Town eend's Used Goods. 633 Main. Phone 1296 EL.IASON FURNITURE EXCHANGE Good used furniture bought and sold. See us before you buy or sell. We pay highest prices. Ellason Furniture Exchange. 620 Main St. Phone 1469. JUNK Before disposing of any Junk, call Richmond Junk Yard. Highest prices will be paid. Prompt attention. 1001 N. 10th- Phone 3498. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS 23 Expert Piano and Pipe Organ Tuning and Repairing Herbert S. Mikesell, headquarters Walter B. Fulghum's Victrola Store, 1000 Main St. Phone No. 2275. UPRIGHT PIANO, walnut case; good condition. 440 West Main. WE CAN SAVE YOU DEALER'S PROFIT ON A USED PIANO OR CAN TRADE YOUR SILENT PIANO FOR A VICTROLA Our salesman, Mr. J. R. Jones, has had fifteen years piano experience. Ills advice Is free. WALTER B. FULOHUM. 1000 Main St. We have in stock or can make parts to repair any piano or player piano. Piano Refinishing We can refinlsh any piano the same as new, no matter how badly dam aged. Piano Tuning Our men are experts and we guarantee all work. ESTIMATES FREE Opp. Postoffice Phone 1653 RECORD EXCHANGE 23A USED records bought, sold, exchanged. Nellie A Booker, Miller Harnes Store. MACHINERY AND TOOLS 24 NEW Swayne-Robinson ensilage cutter at a great bargain. 805 S. E. Shoe Store. SPECIALS AT THE STORES 25 GUARANTEED SHOE REPAIRING OUTFIT Stand 24 Inches high. 6 lasta. This new cobbler set is abso1 u t e 1 y guaranteed. Small outfit. 89c. Leather soles. 15c to 25c; hc-el, leather, 40c lb.; 0O2 Cats - Paw Rubber Heels, 30c to 40c pair. BIRCK'S HARNESS STORE. 11 Main FURNACES 25B WOLVERINE FURNACES E. J. Knapp. Ph. 1876. Office 17 S. 7th. BUILDING MATERIALS 28 IS IT A FARM BUILDING? Btrild & with Concrete Bjgae LIVE STOCK AND VEHICLES 31 13 STOCK HOGS for sale. Voyles. north of Easthaven. Wm. PET STOCK AND POULTRY 32 HENS for sale; White Leghorn yearlings. Phone 4428 or 3494. AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE 33 SPEEDSTER For sale; good chassis for truck. 836 North 10th St. AUBURN Beauty Six 2476. for sale. Phone LITTLE NARROW GAUGE Automobile for sale. 415 N. loth St. Phone 2657. 1 FORD TOURING Excellent condition; priced right. C. E. Buhl, 311 S. 11th. Phone 1011. FOR SALE OR TRADE 1 Lexington Six, closed top, 1750; 1 Light Ford truck; 1-17 Ford Touring, $350; 1 Davis Touring, $150. Geo. Worley Garage, 15 South 9th. Phone 2906. FORD TOURING Late model. See Ed. Brinker, 700 South 7th. 5-passenger Touring car. 46 Laurel St. BOOST YOUR FARM SALE WITH AN AD IN TOE PALLADIUM
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.HE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. RICHMOND, IND, MONDAY, SEPT. 6, 1920.
RE-BUILT TIRES 35 To Make Money Watch Your Buying GRANT REBUILT TIRES Exchange Fabric Prices Non-Sktd 30x3 . $ 9.60 30x3 ... 111.95 Rib 30x3 $ 9.60 30x3 ... $11.90 Larger sizes 1 n proportion. Why Pay More? Feltman's Cigar Store Grant Rebuilt Tire Exchange 603 Main Phone 2039 VEHICLE REPAIRS 35A BODY BUILDING Auto repairing, woodworking. Sedan tops. A good hardwood closed truck cab at $98. Work guaranteed. H. M. KENDRIC 900 South West A Phone 4848 TAXI 33 TAXI, Truck' and Transfer. See Harris Bros. Phone 5294. Hdq. Golden Cigar Store. Anderson's Taxi Service MULL & WILLIAMS, Proprietors Special attention paid to merchants' delivery and transfer. Day and allnight service. 28 North 7th Phone 1370 GARAGES FOR RENT 36 LARGE BRICK BARN. 109 N. GARAGE for rent. "310 N.16. 10. MOTORCYCLES AND BICYCLES 37 INDIAN MOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES Second-Hand Motorcycles MEYERS & TROXEL Opposite City Hall We don't FIX 'cm-we REPAIR 'em BUSINESS ROOMS FOR RENT 39 HEATED OFFICE ROOM. 1016 Main. WANTED TO RENT 41 WANTED A large street-level room for the employment of 75 colored ladies forthwith. MORGAN Sixth and .Main REAL ESTATE FOR SALE 42 BRADBURY & BAILEY Peal Estate. Insurance, Loans and Surety Bonds. 20 2-2 03 Colonial Bldg. FOR SALE LIKE RENT 3 -room house, $13.50 mo. Call 325 W. Main St. FOREST H. MEEK, auctioneer and real estate. Phone 4095. 6-ROOM house, 3 lots adjoining; 1330 Ridge St.. Benton Heights; fruit, all kinds; chl-ken yard and house. FOR REAL "ESTATE AND FARMS, see A. M. ROBERTS, 18 S. 8th. Phone 4171. QOOD CITY HOMES PORTER FIELD, Colonial Bldg. GRKEN & RAMSEY Real Estate. Rentals, Auctioneering and Insurance Hlttle Block. 9th & Main. Phone 2676. TURNER W. HADLEY. 2nd Nat. Bank Bldg., buys and sells properties. Homes sold on payments like rent. C. C. HAWLEY & SON New Paris. Ohio For Farms and Real Estate of all kinds C. E. KEEVER CO. has a fine list of houses. Office phone 1641; res. 2169. Office 7 S. 11th St. See ua for bargains. iFOR QUICK SALE Good 5-room house and one acre of ground; electric lights and water; one block from car line, eight from Union Station. Gilt-edge title; no encumbrance. Three years' prepaid insurance. Quick possession. Ideal spot for truck and poultry and right in the city. Owner going west. A real bargain. SEE Bradbury & Bailey Colonial Eldg. Rooms 202-3 FARMS FOR SALE FARM FOR SALE 91 Acres, close to Richmond, good grain and stock farm. Possession immediately. For particulars address BOX B 2139, care Palladium. FOR SALE Farm of (4 four acres 3Vi miles from Eaton. New six-room house, furnished: fine cement cellar; trough with running spring water in cellar; two kinds of water In house. New barn will hold four acres of to- 1 bacco; fruit of all kinds; 200 chickens! and 40 ducks; one horse, one cow, four hogs; one rubber tire buggy and harness, one 1-horse wagon and harness. An ideal chicken or truck farm; located on good road. For further information call or write. Dr. J. P. King, t,aton, unio. ruone 188. For Sale A FINE 80-ACRE FARM Level, all tillable and very fertile. Good 6-room dwelling.bank barn 40 by 60, silo, double crib, new poultry house, good young orchard, cistern, 2 good wells; on good road, 4 miles from Richmond. A good farm and a bargain. Price only 13,000, and on easy terms. C. C Hawley & Son New Paris, Ohio FARMS FOR SALE AND -TRADE See Harris & Korteweg S. W. Cor. Main and Sixth Sts. Phone 2278
Five Minutes with
By JAMES A. JOHNSON'S Never has there been a change in the white house so untimely and unwelcome as when, in the flash of Booth's pistol, the presidency passed from Abraham Lincoln to Andrew Johnson. That sudden shift in pilots was dreaded by all the people, South and North, except for a radical faction in Lincoln's own party, which confidently expected to see his noble watchwords of "Malice Toward None" and "Charity for All," replaced by the slogan that the vice president had WISCONSIN FARM LANDS LAN DOLOG Y Special Number Just out. containing; 1920 facts of Clover I.and in Marinette County, Wisconsin. If for a home or as an investment you are thinking of buying good farm lands where farmers grow rich, send at once for this special number of LANDOLOGY. It is free on request. Address: SKIDMORE - R1.KHLE LAND COMPANY, 406 Skidmore - Rlehle Bldg., Marinette, Wisconsin. MONEY TO LOAN 46 S $ LOANS $ $ On Furniture, Pianos, Live Stock, Autos. Talking Machines, Etc. Get our terms before borrowing. ONE TO 20 MONTHS TO PAY All Transactions Strictly Private The State Investment & Loan Company Room 40, 3rd Floor Colonial Bldg. Phone 2560 FARM LOANS 5 years at 6 and small commission. See me before a raise in rates. H, Bo CUSTER 710 Main St. Phone 2962 LEGAL NOTICE Stato of Indiana, Wayne County, ss.: Benjamin F. Harris vs. Ida May Carmin, et al. j Wayne Circuit Court, April Term, 1920. No. 19181. BE IT KNOWN. That on the 21st day of August, 1920, the above named plaintiff by his attorney, filed in the office of the Clerk of the Wayne Circuit Court his complaint against said Defendants in the above entitled cause, Complaint on note and mortgage, together with the affidavit of a competent person, showing that said defendants not residents of the State of Indiana. Said Defendants, Ida May Carmin and John E. Carmin therefore are hereby notified of the filing and pendency of said complaint against them and that unless they appear and answer or demur thereto, at the calling of the said cause, on the 16th day of October, 1920, a day of the October Term of said Court to be begun and held at the Court House in the City of Richmond on the first Monday of October 1920, next, said Complaint and the matters and things therein contained and alleged, will be taken as true, and the said cause will be heard and determined in their absence. WITNESS the Clerk and seal of said Court at the City of Richmond this 21st day of August, 1920. LINUS P. MEREDITH, Clerk. WINDSOR B. HARRIS, Attorney lor Plaintiff. Aug. 23-30: Sept. 6. NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the Circuit Court of Wayne County, Indiana as Administrator with the will annexed of the estate of Susan Beard, deceased, late of said County. Said estate is probably solvent. GLENN B. HEARD. Administrator. BENJAMIN F. HARRIS. Attorney. Aug. 30, Sept. 6-13. PUBLIC SACE PUBLIC
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Albert Gilmer, having sold his farm, the undersigned will sell at public auction on the premises, 2 miles south of Economy and 4 miles west of Williamsburg, on the Economy and Greensfork pike, on FRIDAY, SEPTo 11 C, 1920 at 10:30 a. m., the following personal property: 3 HEAD OF HORSES 3 One bay gelding, 6 years old, weighing 1400, sound and a good worker; one gray horse, 10 years old, weighing 1500, sound and an extra good worker; one brown horse, 13 years old, weighing 1500, good worker. 6 HEAD OF CATTLE 6 5 head of milk cows, 4 of them giving good flow of milk and one will be fresh about Oct. 1st.; one Shorthorn bull, long yearling. 56 HEAD OF HOGS 56 9 open sows, 9 shoats weighing over 100 pounds, and 38 spring pigs. FARMING IMPLEMENTS, ETC. One walking breaking plow, 1 Ohio corn plow, 1 Janesville corn planter, 1 spike-tooth harrow, 1 log bolster, 1 wagon and flat bed, 1 manure spreader, 3 lpg fountains, 2 with heaters for winter use; hod feeder, breaking cart, straw knife, good rubber-tire buggy, has never been used since having been repainted and re-rubbered, work harness for 3 horses, set buggy harness, 9 rods of 4inch tile, feed cooker, water tank, slop cart, single trees, doubla trees, collars, and other articles not mentioned. Twenty-four acres corn in field. GRAIN, HAY & STRAW 4 tons of mixed hay, 6 tons of timothy hay, 180 bales of straw, 400 bushels of oats, more or less the oats were sowed In wheat and have some wheat in them and are excellent feed. 150 chickens, part of them Leghorn pullets. HOUSEHOLD GOODS 2 beds, 1 chiffonier, 1 rocking chair, 1 chair. No. 3 DeLaval cream separator and other articles. Terms made known on day of sale Lunch by Sugar Grove U. B. Aid Society ALBERT GILMER, GEORGE HILL Albert Hindman and Simon Weddle, Aucts. Ray Swallow, Clerk.
Our Presidents
MORGAN TAILOR SHOP 1808 Dec. ,29, Andrew Johnson born at Raleigh, N. C. 1818 Bound out to a tailor. 1825 A runaway bound-boy. 1826 Opened a tailor shop at Greenville, Tenn. 1827 Married Eliza McCari. 1828 Sleeted Alderman. 1830-33 Mayor of Greenville. 1835-39 Member of Legislature. 1841-3 State Senator. 1 843-53 Congressman. 1853-57 Governor of Tennessee. 1857-62 Senator. I862-65 Military Governor of Tennessee. 1864 Elected Vice President. been sounding, "Treason Must Be Made Odious." Although a southernor, Johnson haJ always been at odds with the slave holding aristocracy, which frowned or. the rise of a penniless youth who had been bound out at ten to a tailor, and who had been advised at seventeen as a run-away "bound boy." A fugitive from his native state of North Carolina, he crossed over the mountains to Greenville, in eastern LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF BUDGET OR ESTIMATE OF EXPENSES AND i A. I.KVIF.S FOR 1921 The Trustee of Wayne Township, Wavnp rvmntv. Indiana, and the Advls ory Board at a regular meeting held at Trustee's Office on the 4th day of September 1020. determined the estimate and the amounts and rates for which taxation shall be raised for year 1921 as follows: Township Fund: I. For pav of Trustee and Office Rent. $1920.00. m 3. For Expense of Justices of the. Peace. $100.00. 4. For Books, Stationery and Printing, $200.00. j 5. For Public Ditches, $50.00. 6. For Pav of Advisory Roard. $15.00. 7. For Miscellaneous E x pe n s e s , $2215.00. M Total Appropriations Township Fund, $4,500.00. . Township Fund Tax 1 cent on hundred dollars. Road Fund: 8. For Labor. $3,000.00. II. For Miscellaneous Expenses, $2,000.00. Total Appropriations Road Fund, $5,000.00. Road Tax Fund 6 cents on hundred dollars. Special School Fund: 13. For New Buildings and Grounds. 14. For Repair of Buildings. $3,000. 15. For School Furniture and Supplies, $1,000.00. 16. For Fuel for School Houses, $2,000.00. 17. For Special ScViool Fund Debt. 18. Miscellaneous Expenses. $16,000. Total Appropriations Special School Fund. $22,000.00. Special School Fund Tax, 25 cents on hundred dollars. Special School Fund Poll Tax 50 cents. Library Fund Expense, $10,000.00. Library, 2i cents. Tuition Fund: 19. For pav of Teachers and Transfern. $29,000.00. Tuition Fund Tax 32 cents on hundred dollars. Tuition Poll Tax, 50 cents. Special School Fund Debt. $19,000.00. 20 cents on hundred dollars. On Account of Poor: 20. To Reimburse the County. $8,000.00. Poor Fund Tax 14 cents on hundred dollars. Total of All Appropriations and Expenditures. $97,500.00. Total Tax S8 cents on hundred dollars. The net taxables of the above named Township are $9,254,000.00, and number of polls 647 and the total of all levies 88 cents on the $100.00, and 100 cents on each taxable poll. Notice Is hereby given that the final establishment and the certification of th above expenditures and tax levies will be made by the Advisory Board at a meeting to be held at the Township Trustee's Office on the 14th day of September, 1920, commencing at 1 o'clock. P. M.. at which tu.ie J.nj ta. payer may appear. Signed J. O. EDGERTON. Sept. fi-lt. Trustee. PUBLIC SALE ALE
Tennessee, and there he nailed above the door of a two room bouse the sign upon which the weather beats to thia day:
A, JOHNSON, TAILOR.No other private occupation did he ever have. From the table on which he sat cross-legged as he worked at his trade, he stepped directly into congress, and he remains the only president who describe himself as a hand-craftsman. He continued most of his life to make his own clothes. and when he was governor of Tennessee, he complimented the governor of Kentucky by making a suit f6r him. Johnson's tailor shop was also hi.i only schoolroom. He never was In any other, even for a day. But he w3 not his own teacher. The post was filled by Miss Eliza McCardle, who had chanced to see the North Carolina boy walking into town and had giggled to her companions, as so many giggling girls have done: "There goes mv beau." In less than a year, though, the bride only 17, and the groom not yet 19, they were married and keeping house in the two-room tailor shop. Johnson could only read a little, and could painfully form the letters of the alphabet. But his wife became his first teacher, reading to him while he plied his needle, or guiding his hand while he practiced writing. Her eager pupil was most apt in oratory, and soon his shop became the forum of a debating society, where other ambitious workers joined the tailor in wordy combats. Before he was of age, this village Demosthenes was elected an Alder man on a workingmen's ticket, and two years more he was mayor. Then for eight years he was in the legislature; for ten years a representative in congress; for two terms governor of Tennessee, and finally he was elected to the senate. His worthiest monument iuc ocuaic. ilia wui LUirai mull mil ri 1 1. as a legislator is the Homestead law, which opened the great national domain to the landless poor, that he introduced and that he perseveringly championed against a lobby of landgrabbers. No one ever questioned Andrew Johnson's honesty any more than his courage as he rudely forced his way up the ladder, rung by rung, in hardhitting, rough-and-tumble contests. He neither gave nor asked quarter, it was a poor school in manners, taste and temper. His triumphs over those who boasted their descent made him bostful of his own ascent, and this self-made man never forgot his maker. The bold self-reliance of Johnson became heroic in the eyes of the nation when he alone among the 22 southern senators breasted the wafve of secession which engulfed his section and which swept out of the union even the state from which he held his ere dentials. He not only fought secession in the senate, but he challenged it on his own ground, in, Tennes3e where he faced a cloud of deadly threats. Pulling out his pistol at ono place, he pointed it at his muttering audience and defiantly shouted: "If any man has any shooting to do let him begin now." No one venturing to second that motion to a hip pocket, Johnson laid his weapon on he table and opened a vocal bombardment of the foe. By Lincoln's appointment, he was made military governor of Tennessee, where his stout, fiery soul became a very fortress for the union in the midst of the enemy's country. It was from that outpost that he was called to the vice presidency, and in a month more he was president. Exiled from his home and family as he had been, his house seized by the confederacy as the property of "an alien enemy," the long struggle had been indeed a civil war to Andrew Johnson, and left him in a most un civil mood toward the confederal leaders. Yet through it all he has remained as stubbornly a southernor and a Democrat as he was a union man. It was as a war Democrat and as a southern unionist that he was nominated on the ticket with Lincoln in 1864, when the partisan designation of Republican was lad aside for the broader name of the National Union party. What his course would be now that he had taken the wheel was the riddle of one of the most anxious and pregnant hours in American history. NEW METHODIST CHURCH IS DEDICATED AT NEW CASTLE Dedicatory services for the Centenary church of New Castle, Ind., were held Sunday. Bishop Frederick D. Leete, of Indianapolis, bishop of the Indianapolis area, and the Rev. Dr. Somervliie Light, of this city, district superintendent, made addresses. Preaching services conducted by the bishop were held in the First M. E. church in the morning. Sermons in the new church were given in the afternoon and evening. The Rev. Light said Monday that the church was dedicated free from debt, and that there is an excellent field for active work by the new church. A membership of 500 within a few years is expected. The latest walking shoes are equipped with pneumatic insoles. PUBLIC SALE
PUBLIC SALE
of personal property MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1920 The undersigned will sell at public auction on the John Pierce farm, seven and one-half miles southwest of Centerville; ten miles northeast of Connersville, at 10 o'clock a, m.: 3 HEAD OF HORSES One 1200-lb. horse, good worker, sound; one 1400-lb. horse, sound, good worker; one 1100-lb. mare, good worker. 15 HEAD OF CATTLE 10 head black cattle consisting of some fine stock of various ages; 4 good milch cows, 2 full blooded Jerseys, other two good milchers. 65 HEAD OF HOGS Nine sows, one boar, 19 shoats, 37 pigs. FARM IMPLEMENTS 10-20 Bull tractor, 1-ton Modern .truck. 1 automobile, John Deere engine gang, 14-in.; Cassidy horse gang, 12-in.; Deerlng double disc, Dunham cultipacker. Universal 3-sectlon iron frame harrow, John Deere corn planter, National corn cultivator, Ohio spring-tooth corn cultivator, McCormlck mower, 6-ft.; Dain mower, 5-ft.; 5 and 6-ft fcunchers; Improved Hocking Valley hay loader, hay tedder. Van Brunt wheat - drill, Wayne wheat drill, 2 corn furners, hay rake, roller, Peering binder,; Syracuse plow, 15-in.; P. & O. plow, 13-in.; Oliver plow, 14-in.; John Deere box bed. wagon, Deerlng No. 3 corn picker and husker. Manure spreader, hog feeder, hog fountain, harness, auto trailer. Sharpies separator, 18 tons hay In mow, 190 bushels oats, 200 bushels old corn. One half of 50 acres of standing corn. - -
RODNEY FL.ANNIGAN & LAKE, Auct
PAGE THIRTEEN'
RECEIPTS OF-LIVE? STOCK ARE HEAVY; PRICES GO LOWER By WILLIAM R. SANBORN. With but 5,500 head of hogs In on Saturday, the receipts at Indianapolis were heavier than at' any western market. The receipts of hogs have been falllnf off at all points, which is bracing the markets of the country. An active demand from both packers and outside shippers stimulated prices at Indianapolis on Saturday, and the loss in price made on Monday and Tuesday was fully regained. Bulk of sales were at $16 and 116.23, with good choice lights selling up to $16.50. The hog markets of the country ruled fairly steady last week, it being a sort of a see-saw, from day to day; western packers fighting advances until shippers grabbed the choicest offerings. Salesmen made concessions on caV tie on Saturday, rather than to carry them over until Tuesday. Calves declined $1 to $1.50 on the week, at Indianapolis and medium calves were sharply lower at $10 to $12 at the week end. Cows were 50 cents to $1 lower, compared with Saturday, August 2$. The Chicago top on hogs was $16.25, with bulk of light butchers selling at $15.35 to $16.10, on Saturday. Cattle showed a loss of from 25 cents to $1 in that market for the week, depending on quality. Glen Miller Ships 10 Cars. A double deck car containing 81 lambs and 82 calves was shipped from Glen Miller on Saturday, being one of ten cars to go out during the week. This car netted shippers $2,641. An i . . . . . oth" c" containing 13 cattle and 28 B5,?St JT hJ:.t n x- lauj, ui uuoin tu vv noil brought in a full car of 72 hogs during the week and was paid $15-25 for them. The load weighed 17,450 pounds and the check was for $2,608. Thomas Ryan made a delivery of 104 assorted hogs, averaging right at 200 pounds for which he received $16, the top of the week in swine. His check called for $3,303. Local Stock Yards Receipts. It was a busy week at the local yards. Just about $25,000 being paid out to home farmers, the hulk of It being ' for hogs. The heaviest car of hogs ran just under 21.000 pounds and sold for $2,795; this being but $5 over the amount the next high priced car brought, although weighing In but 17,440 pounds of better finished stock Among the men making deliveries at the Glen last week were: G. F. Gault, M. Johnson, O. M. Jennings, James Burg, Howard McWhinney, Arthur Mills, Charles Colvin, Bert Skinner, C. E. Martin, A. S. Parent, Chester Mills, Fred Sasser, O. O. Lamo, John Sheets, George Robinson. O. Hartup, E. Quigley, Mr. Austerman, Miles Shute, M. L. Chapman, John Weedenbach, L. Hawley, OIlie Hodgin, Charles Wickett, Donald Bayne, Tieman Bros., C. W. Reid. M. Eubank, Major Bostick. L. Lemmon, Nate Hunt, R. C. Rhinehjeimer, Herbert Forbes. George Comer, Harry Wise, C. Lowdeslayer and W. W. Pickett. Many brought in lust a "Jag" of stuff, while others had solid truckloads or more. WOMAN" IS REFEREE IN JUVENILE COURT OF SAN FRANCISCO Airs. E. L. Baldwin. Mrs. E. L. Baldwin of San Francisco is rferee in srirls' cases in the Juvenile Court of San Francisco. She is an ex-official judge of the court and has the power of rendering decision. She is known as one of the orisrinal organizers of the i ... . . ; - .. nf Crn prnnrivco PUBLIC SALE C. FOULKE JOE BURRIS, Clerk.
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