Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 260, 12 September 1921 — Page 12
SHE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., MONDAY, SEPT. 12, 1921. j
Markets
GRAIN PRICES Furnished by E. W. WAGNER & CO., 212 Union National Bank Building. CHICAGO, Sept. 12. Grain markets affected by poor United States export sales, 6low domestic cash demand, weakness of German marks and forecast of rain for Argentine. Southwest flour mills may reduce their output Cash wheat reported unchanged to two cents lower. Visible changes will rule closing market. Trade appears disposed to await buying on weak spots overnight The sevencent reaction is liberal, but many bulls have sold out today on belief that market Is not exactly right for Immediate upturns. RANGE OF FUTURES Furnished by E. W. Wagner & CO, 212 Union National Bank Building.
CHICAGO, Sept. 12. Following Is
the range of futures on Chicago Board of Trade today: Open High Low Close ...1.29H 130 1.264 1.264 Dec. .;..1.33 1.33 1.28; 1.29 May ....1.374 1.38 1.33 1.33 RyeSept ...1.07 1.07 . 1.054 105 CornSept 54 4 -54 .53 ; .54 Dec 55 .55 .54 .54 May 59 .60 .59 .59 OatsSept 36 .37 .36 .36 Dec 404 -40 .39 .39May 44 .45 .43 .44 PorkSept ..18.00 18 00 LardSept. ..11.17 1110 Ribs Sept. .. 7.S9 7.80
INDIANAPOLIS HAY. (By Associated Press" INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 12. HayLower; No. 1 timothy, $17.5018; No. 2 timothy, $171'7.5.0; No. 1 clover, $16.5017.50. (By Associated Press) CINCINNATI. Sept. 12. Wheat No. 2 red, $1.3G1.37; No. 3 red $1.32S135; other grades as to quality. $1.251.33. Corn No. 2 white, 574 58; No. 3 white, 57(574: No. 4 white. 5556; No. 2 yellow 58584; No. 3 yellow 57(558; No. 4 yellow, 5556; No. 2 mixed, 57 57Oats 3441 Rye 1.01 1.02. Hay $13.5019.25. (By Associated Press) TOLEDO. O., Sept.. 12. Clover Seed Prime cash. Feb.. $12; March, $12; Oct.. $11.90. Alsike Prime cash, March. $11: Oct., $10.73; Dec, $10.80. Timothy Prime cash. 1921, $2.70; 1920, $2.55; Dec, $2.75. (By Associated Press) CHICAGO. Sept. 12. Wheat No. 2 red. $1.30; No. 2 hard, $1.29 14 1.29. Corn No. 2 mixed, 55 55; No. 2 yellow, 5556. OatsNo. 2 white, 39 40; No. 3 white. 36 374. Pork, nominal; ribs, $8.25 7.75; lard, $11.10. LIVE STOCK PRICES iH Associated Prest TXDIAXAT)LIS. Sept. 12. Hops Ttecelpts. 7.000: lower. Cattle Re ceipts, 200; unchanged. Calves Receipts. 8n0; lower. Sheep Receipts, 400; lower. .Hog Ton nrice 9 Id General sales 8 73 9 00 ai"" "1 utd assorted 160 to 200 lbs 9 0010 00 l'.il and assorted 200 to 223 11.3 M" ' 1 nd assorted 225 to 230 lbs M'x.-d und assorted, 250 , lbs. up Yorkers, under 150 lbs. . . Good liisrs Siiws according to weight Must of heavy sows Good hogs a year ago... 9 00 8 73 9 00 8 S S li 16 25(9 8 no 30 iv 8 75 30 down 23fr 7 50 50 SD 6 75 75if 1 60 Cottle v'l.IiTN'n STEKHS Good to choice, 1.300 lbs. up mnn fa medium, 1.250 Common to medium. 1.300 1 lis. up G ' u choice, 1,100 to 1 230 lbs S 00 8 75 7 Zolp 8 00 8 00 9 00 C t medium. 1.100 to 1.230 lbs 7 00? S 00 G'.i' 11 choice. 900 to 1.050 lbs Ciininw" o medium, 900 7 00 7 75 to 1,050 lbs 6 OOfS Cod to best under 900 lbs 6 00 CO 7 00 pp... 10 medium, under 900 lbs Good to best yearlings... II Mi- BUS Good to best 1 iiikiii 10 medium, 800 lbs. up Good to best under S00 lbs OOrft 00j.O 5 9 009 7 fi 00 6 7 000 8 i .miiii.ii to medium, under 800 lbs 6 00 6 50 1 1 WS Good to best 1,050 lbs. up 1 in. .'i to medium, 1,050 lbs. up 1; :n choice, under 1.050 lbs IViicnoii to fair, under 1,050 lbs Poor to good cutters Poor to good canners.... Good to best. 1.200 lbs. up ,, ,1 to cuoice, under 1.S00 lbs Common to medium, under 1,300 lbs Common to good bologna 00 50 0O51) 00Q 6 00 50 23 00 50 3 50 4 50 4 "55 5 00 3 OOifJ 4 00 4 C..',i tn choice veals, under 200 lbs 1 0014 00 C .noon ' nieaium veals. under 200 lbs 8 0012 00 Gu.i.i to choice heavy calves 7 00 8 00 C m in o 11 to medium heavv calves 4 00 6 00 olOCKlOiiS & FKKDING CA'l iXE Go id to i hoioe steers, sou lbs. and up 6 25 7 00 Common to rair steers. 800 lbs. up 5 00 6 00 Good to ciiiiico steers, un der 800 lbs. 5 00 6 00 Con:mo:i to rair steers. under 800 lbs 4 50 5 00 Medium to good heifers.. 4 50( 5 50 Medium to good cows ... 3 00yi 4 00 foioi.it calves 50 to 400 lbs 5 00 6 00 Native Sbrp and Lamba. Good to choice light sheep 3 003 50 i..,d to choice ncavy theep 0 2 50 Rtoekers & hreedinc ewes 1 00 4 00 Selected light lambs 7 23 -S 8 53 Fair to best mixed lambs 7 00?e s 00 Other light lambs 5 00(a C 50 liucks. 100 lbs 1 OOiji a 00 DAYTON MARKET Corrected by McLean Company, Dayton, O., Bell Phone, East 23. Home Phone, 81235. DAYTON, O., Sept. .12. Hogs Receipts, four cars, market steady; choice heavies, $8.73; butchers and packers, $S.75; heavy Yorkers, $8.75; light Yorkers, $7.508; choice fat sows, $656.25; common to fair, $5.50 6; pigs, $7.508.50; stags, $45. JJaitle Receipts, 7 cars; market, -;idy; fair to good shippers, $7.50
BRINGING UP FATHER BY McMANUS
"Res. 77. a Pat. Off." 7.50; fair to medium butchers, $6.50 8.00; good to choice butchers, 57.00 7.00; good to fat cows. $5.005.50; bologna bulls, $4.00 5.00: butcher bulls, $5.005.50; bologna cows. $2.00 3.00; calves. $311. Sheep Market, steady; $2.003.50; Lambs $4 7. (By Associated Pruss) CINCINNATI, O.. Sept. 12 Receipts Cattle, 3,200; hogs. 6,500; sheep, 1,300. Cattle Butchers steers, weak; good to choice, $7S9.50; fair to good, $63) 7; common to faip, J4S6. Heifers, eood to choice. S6.50&7.50: fair to good. $5Si6.50; common to fair, $3 5. Cows, good to choice, $4.255: fair to good. $3.73 4.25; cutters, $2.50 a3.50: canners. $1.502.25: stock steers, $56.50; stock heifers, $45; stock cows, $2.50'&3.50. Bulls Steady ; bologna, $34.25; fat bulls, $4.50&a. Milch cows, $3090; calves, extra, $13 14; common and large, $47.50. Hogs Steady; 25c lower; heavies, $8!ft 8.75; good to choice packers and butchers, $8.759; stags, $4.505; common to choice heavy fat sows, $6.25; pigs, 110 lbs. and less. $57.50. Sheep Goo dto choice lights, $3.50 4; fair to good, $2 3.50; common to fair, $11.50; bucks. $22.50. Lambs, steady; good to choice, $9.5010; seconds, $5 6.50; fair to good, $79.50; skips, $34.. B Associated Preasj PITTSBURGH, Sept. 12. Cattle Receipts 2.300, lower: steers, $S.25?5 $8.75: heifers, $6.50 7.00; cows $4.00 (g.5.50. Hogs Receipts 8,000, lower; heavies, $9; heavy yorkers $9.65 9.75; light yorkers $9 Q 9.75; pigs, $8.75 9.00. Sheep and Lambs Receipts 5,000; top sheep $5; top lambs $10.50; calves 1,200, steady; top, $14.50. t By Associated Press) BUFFALO. Sept. 12. Cattle Re ceiDts 2.250: teers slow: 50 to 75 cents lower; shipping steers $89.50; butchers $7.759.00; yearlings $9.00 $10.25, few $10.75; heifers $58; cows $150 5.50; bulls $3(35.50; stockers and feeders $55.75; fresh cows and springers $45 135; calves, receipts, 2,000, 25 cents lower; $515. Hogs Receipts 16.000; pig3 steady, others 25 to 40 cents lower; heavy mixed and yorkers $9.25, few $9.40; light ditto $99.25; pigs $9; rough, $6.256.50; stags $45. Sheep and Lambs Receipts 12.000, lambs 50 cents lower; lambs $4.50 $10.25; yearlings $3.507; wethers, $4.505; ewes $14.25; mixed sheep, $4.254.50. , (By Associated Press) CHICAGO. Sept. 12. Cattle Receipts 21,000, slow; strictly good and choice yearlings, handy weight steers and choice kosher cows steady; bidding weak to lower on other grades beef steers and she stock; bulls steady; calves weak to 25 cents lower, early top yearlings $10; some held higher; bulk beef steers $6.509.50; butcher cows largely $4 5, few heavy $6.25; bologna bulls mostly $44.35; good and choice light vealers mostly $1212.50. Hogs Receipts 33,000, generally steady with Saturday's average; stock 10 to 15 cents lower on packing and heavy butcher grades; top $9.25; bulk light and light butcher $8.75910; bulk packing sows $6.757.25; pigs scarce, generally steady. Sheep Receipts 29,000; lambs strong to a quarter higher; native lamb top early $9.25 to packers; $9.75 to outsiders; top westerns early $9.75, top feeder lambs early $7.25. PRODUCE MARKET (By Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 10 ButterFresh prints, 414c; packing stock, 15 (?. 20c. Eggs 30fi 31c. Fowls lbs. and up, 1923e; fowls, under 44 lbs., ISc; broilers, 19 (c23c; leghorns, 19t?20c; roosters, 10 .-'il2c; old torus, 22ot30c; young tores, 25S35c; capons, 3842c; young hens, 25 35c; squabs, 11 lbs. to the doz., $5: younz guineas. $7 a doz.; rabbits, $2.50(5 2.75 per doz.; spring ducks. 4 lbs and up. $1516c; squabs, 1620c; geese, 10 lbs. up, 9llc. EGGS (By Associated Press) NEW YORK. Sppt. 12. EggsIrregular; receipts, 17,170 cases; fresh gathered extra firsts. 3S42c; fresn gathered firsts, 34g'37c. (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Sept. 12 Butter Market unchanged. Creamery extras, 4OV2C. Eggs Receipts, 7.4915 ; market, un changed; lowest, 2426c; firsts, 29 31c. Live Poultry Higher; fowls, 1726c; springs, 25c. Potatoes Dull, 95 cars; total IT. S. hhipment, 885; Idaho White Sacks, $33.1o cwt.; Minnesota Red River Ohio.; $33.15 cwf.; Wisconsin White, $2.9S3 cwt.; bulk, $33.10 cwt. (Bv Associated Press) CINCINNATI. Sept. 12. Butter Fat Whole milk creamery, extra, 45c. Eggs Prime firsts 35; firsts 33; seconds, 25. Poultry Broilers 24; springers 18, hens 24; turkeys, 35. LIBERTY BONDS (Bv Associated Press) NEW YORK. Sept. 12. Final prices on Liberty bonds today were: ZVz $S7.38 New Fall Hats for Men L1CHTENFELS 1010 Main Street
i I DIDN'T LVPtCT I I ( tTE SOLO A SOMG TO I I ( n CT.GOE& UKCn A I ( I I ' TTcS "V ifiol WAMTaIk . THIS- k TEJ4 VtARS AT pp s "(1) 1921. By. lure Fsaturc Sbmvicf. Inc.
First 4, bid..'. S7.fc0 Second 4 87 32 First 4 88.00 Second 4 87.9b Third 4 92.04 Fourth 4 88.10 Victory 3 99.0C Victory 4 99.06 NEW YORK STOCKS By Associated Press) NEW YORK, Sept. 12. Close American Can 28 Am. Smelting 36 Anaconda 37 Atchison 85 Baldwin Locomotive 86 Bethlehem Steel, B 54 Central Leather 29 Chesapeake and Ohio 55 C. R. I. and Pacific .334 Chino Copper 23 Crucible Steel 61 Cuba Cane Sugar 08 General Motors 10 Goodrich Tires 324 Mexican Petroleum 114 New York Central 71 Pennsylvania 38 Reading 704 Republic Iron & Steel 49 Sinclair Oil 20 Southern Pacific 77 Southern Railroad 20 Studebaker 76 Union Pacific 120 U. S. Rubber 48 U. S. Steel 77 Utah Copper 49 RICHMOND MARKETS. (Furnished by Whelan) BUYING Oats, 30c; rye, 90c; corn, 53c; straw, $8 per ton. SELLING Oil meal, per ton, $53.00; per hundred weight, $2.65; Tankage, 60 per cent, $55.00 per ton; per cwt., $2.85; bran, per ton, $25.00; per cwt., $1.40. uauci sail, i:u . Aup, $2 per cwt; standard middlings, $27.00 per ton, $1.50 per cwt.; rye middlings, $26.00 per ton, $1.40 per cwt. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Richmond flour mills are paying $1.15 for No. 2 wheat. LOCAL HAY MARKET Steady; No. 1 timothy, $16; clover, $16; heavy mixed, $15. , PRODUCE BUYING Country butter, 30 cents lb.; eggs, 34c dozen; chickens, 22c lb.; fries, 22c. BUTTER QUOTATIONS The wholesale price or creamery butter is 40 cents a pound. Butter fats delivered in Richmond bring 39 cents a pound. Farm Sale Calendar Tuesday, Sept. 13. Hannah E. and Wayne Stanley, 2Vi miles west of Centerville, at Stop 105, general farm sale at 10:30. Wednesday, Sept. 14 E. Belford; farm located between the Whitewater and Arba pikes, and one mile north of Middleboro. General farm sale at 10 o'clock. George H. Miller on Thomas Meyers farm, 4 miles southwest of Richmond, on Salisbury road, closing out sale at 10 o'clock. Thursday, Sept. 15. George A. Adleman, one mile south of Whitewater. General farm sale at 12:30. Lunch precedes sale. Friday, Sept. 16 Creek Brothers, on the farm of A. P. Creek, five miles northeast of Liberty, three miles west of Kitchel Station, and one-half mile east of Liberty, Boston pike. Big Type Poland China hog sale, starting at 12:30 o'clock. Harry Thomas and Amanda J. King on Amanda King farm, 3 miles east of Green's Fork on Green's Fork pike, general farm sale, 10 o'clock. Wednesday, Sept. 21. D. R. Funk. River Dale farm, breeder's sale of Duroc-Jersey hogs. Sale begins at 1 p. m. Lunch served at 12. Saturday, Sept. 24. Carl T. Hinshaw, 34 miles north of Lynn. Breeder's sale of Big Type Poland China hogs. Lunch at 12; sale at 1 o'clock. Japan leads the world In divorces in proportion to marriages, the ratio being 112 divorces to each 1,000 marriages. iMMiinmtiifimnmmtiiimiiitniMiminmiiiniiaiittiiiiiiiMinntiiinmnm9 Vacation time is here. Better get I a good Accident policy before I leaving. 1 j KELLY & KECK s (Insurance Service) I 1 Phone 2150 901'2 Main St. I HiimtimmimimimmimiHnffiurmmiimuiHiiuiiiumiumniMmiiiummiHu HAVE YOU TRIED "FAULTLESS FLOUR" Ask Your Grocer Milled by a perfected process
GOOD CLEAN COAL Prompt Delivery RICHMOND COAL COMPANY Telephones 3165-3379
EXPERT AUTO RADIATOR REPAIRING
mm
SISrtTir-r
The Farm and The Farmer By William R. Sanborn
If you are a farmer, and have an apple orchard but no apples, or at least a mighty few, with no style to them, perhaps you haven't pruned or sprayed your trees In a coon's age.. We are 'rising to make these remarks because of an apple show put on at the American Trust and Savings bank in Richmond, on Saturday. The banking room looked rather splendiferous, not merely because of the apple show, but because it so happened that the Pythian Sisters of -Hol-lansbure were present with a display of vegetables, dressed chicken, cakes, pies, etc., all on sale for the benefit of their "piano fund." But getting back to the apples for a moment, we wish to remark that this fine fruit was raised within a lew miles of Richmond, in the New Paris district. It was grown in the Martin and Wesler orchards near New Paris, about which orchards and vineyards we printed an illustrated arucie on last Friday, as of course you know. Home-Grown Apples Well, this display of perfectly matched apples contained the follow ing varieties: Rome beauty, white pippins, snow, baldwin, Ben Davis, peewaukee, winter maiden blush, rambo, Indiana favorite, winesap, york imperial. Grimes' golden, N. W. greening, salome, Jonathan and northern spy. Here are at least 16 home-grown varieties, and we may have overlooked a few at that. The point is, that In this year of fruit shortage our neighbors have grown branch-breaking crops of apples, all free from insects or blight. Many! were grown on old trees that had about quit. But when the pruning shears had clipped their hair and trimmed their brushy whiskers, and after being shampooed with proper sprays, those old trees began to perk up and to decorate with fruit to beat the band. Any moral to this story? Oh, no, certainly not still it may suggest something to the careful reader. Farm Bureau Buys Twine. It is now claimed that the Indiana farm federation has contracted to buyi all the binder twine manufactured atj the Indiana state prison at Michigan City, in the next two years. This ar-1 rangement should prove profitable to the farmers, also to the state. Walter Hunnicutt had a piece of red 1 clay soil, quite a knoll of it, we are' told which looked nice and colory butj failed to produce anything worth j while. This year he sowed it to mil-1 let, which grew and grew and grew. It isn't likely to do much more growing, however, as a large family of chinch bugs recently discovered it, and since their neighbors have also colonized the plot there is one measured bushel of bugs, more or less, in a mighty small space. Burning the Cinch Bugs. Right here we wish to remark that the present is no time to burn out (uitintuiiMfuimiiiiiiimiiinmitmniiiiiiiiMiiiititniiiniiuuiiuiiimiiiiniiuimia I Special Prices on Manhattan! I and Apex Tires I Oldsmobile Salesroom I I 1026 Main St. I Hiumtmuimffttumnititmiutimumiiuniinmiiiifflimiimiitmnitinmrmniw New York Dental Parlors Union National Bank Building, 8th and Main, at the "Sign of the Clock". Open evenings. Phone 1378. DR. R. H. CARNES DENTIST Phone 2665 Rooms 15-16 Comstock Building 1016 Main Street Open Sundays and Evenings by appointment. The Cake That Pleases Your Grocer Has It Zwissler's Butter Maid Cake Made by ZWISSLERS
Repairs Efficient Service Prompt Charge Reasonable Richmond Battery and Radiator Co. 12th and Main St. Phone 13S5
fence corners and hedges. The bugs are now very active and would mostly scatter out into the fields, down into soil cracks, etc. Later on when they have sought winter quarters in tall grass and hedge rows,- will be the time to exterminate them. Needless to do this burning twice. The new ctnclr rnmnanv nf farmers
are to take charge of the elevator at' Crete, Ind., on Sept. 15. Moody Welch is to he the new manager. Mowing Soy Beans. While the soy bean acreage on any single farm in this area is not large, the question of harvesting the crop for seed is important, if the vines are not too large or coarse the selfbinder can be used to advantage, or tlie mow er can be made to serve. With the mower the side delivery , attachment should be used, so that the team may not trample on the swath or shell out the beans. Lacking this attachment a man can follow the machine witn a pitchfork to remove the vines out of the way at every round. After cutting with a mower the vines may be raked up into small piles and left until the beans are dry and cured in the pods. Wet weather does not seriously injury soys, unless the plants are allowed to lie on the ground too long. If piles get wet turn them with a fork to air thoroughly. If a binder is used shock-up in bundles, 8 or 10 to the shock. Let stand until perfectly dry. No caps are needed where properly shocked. Shocks may be left in the field until thresh ing time. The ordinary grain separator can be used for the threshing, but the high speed of the cylinder should be reduced at least one-half. This is done by doubling the size of both cylinder pulleys, but making no change in other gearings. In Cuba, only women are to be employed in shops devoted to the sale of women's articles of apparel. Our Every Day Prices $1.25 Pinkham's Compound. .89c 60c Pepsodent Tooth Paste.. 43c 60c Pebeco Tooth Paste 43c 30c Woodbury's Soap 21c $1.10 Miles' Nervine 89c $1.25 Steam's Tonic 89c $1.10 Nuxated Iron 89c $1.10 Tanlac 89c $1.00 Pepgen 89c $1.10 Vinol 89c 85c Jad Salts 69c 40c Castoria 31c 60c Swamp Root 49c $1.20 Swamp Root 98c 60c Syrup Pepsin 43o $1.20 Syrup Pepsin 89c 30c Cuticura Soap 23c $1.10 Squibbs Mineral Oil.. 89c 15c Palm Olive Soap, 3 for.. 25c Nyal's Face Cream, for sunburn 30c and 60c 50c Orchard White 43c 50c Eatonlc Tablets 43c Bathing Caps 40c to $1.50 50c Pure Castile Soap, lb. ..29c $2 Pint Vacuum Bottles. .$1.39 25c Double Mesh Red Seal Hair Nets, SDc; 3 for 50c Parker Founatin Pens, priced at $2.50 to $10.00 A full line of Kodaks and Brownies Let us do your finishing. We give 24-hour service. ley's Drug Stores The San-Tox Stores 3 Big Stores
Don't Forget Wayne County
G Wednesday
Horses, Pigs, Cattle, Hogs, Sheep, Poultry See the exhibits of agricultural machinery, plows, tractors, farm lighting plants, the . large auto show, etc. Amusements for all. See the championship horse shoe pitching contest. ' Judging Starts Wednesday 1:00 P. M.
! I Pig Club
All cars stop Wednesday and Thursday at Jackson's Park. Spend the day with ua. Admission, 25c; Children Under 12, Free
DOLAN WILL HANDLE PICRIC ACID ORDERS FOR WAYNE FARMERS Wayne county will be able to obtain from 1,500 to 2,000 pounds of the picric acid which the war department has released for sale, instead of only the 300 pounds that it was at first believed would be this county's share.
Farmers of the county who wish to use this powerful explosive for land clearing will thus be able, therefore, to obtain a supply of it if they put in orders at once. The cost of the acid will be 10 cents a pound, put up in six-ounce cartridges which are as powerful as the eight-ounce cartridge of 40 percent dynamite. J. L. Dolan, county agricul- j tural agent, will accept orders accompanied by checks, until Friday of this week, after which day the county order must be forwarded. This acid, which the war department at first contemplated disposing of by towing it out to sea on barges and sinking it, is a powerful explosMachine Work, Air Compressors, Gasoline Engines, Motors; Overhauling Trucks and Cars. Richmond Air Compressor Co. N. W. First and Railroad
COAL We Sell Best Grades of West Virginia and Kentucky Coals $7.50 per ton and up We find we can sell coal for less money if we sell more of it, so we lower our prices and give you the advantage. Order now while the supply lasts.
Anderson Corner North West Third and
WHEN YOU BUY Buy for Satisfaction It's the Cheapest in the Long Run
Moline Tractors Moline and Osborne Corn Binders
IRVIN REED & SON Don't Forget the Live Stock Show, Jackson's Park, Sept. 14 and 15
IJ
and Thursday, Sept. 14-15
Sale, Thursday,
ive of which large supplies were accumulated during the war. In many respects it is superior to other explosives being les3 sensitive to dampness, cold, in fact to all weather conditions, and safer than dynamite if handled according to directions. Upon reqeest of the department of agriculture, the war department agreed to allow the acid to be dis
tributed among the states for use in land clearing, the greater portion being alloted to states which have most clearing to do. tHmiiiHitiiiniMmiNiimHtmniitnmirawmmiiiinm!mmtRmmmimuiu!"j f Winter Top Onion Sets ! OMER G. WHELAN I 1 The Feed Man 1 31-33 8. 6th St. Phone 1679 i i iliiiuiwnmiiumwituMHiiHiitnnminnmfm umiummiitruimtintiniiH , 1 Let Us Serve You With Your f Groceries 1 Hasecoster's Grocery I S. 9th and C Sta. Phone 1248 1 i tHuunitniiuuuuuuuHniuiuuuumuiuiiiHUHimjutiuiuutiuiuaimiuiuuiia The New Edison IN THE WESTCOTT PHARMACY jrinrM--rfM,--,-,i-M- - -- -- -- " & Sons Chestnut Sts. Phone 3121 how 1:30 P. M.
