Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 278, 4 October 1921 — Page 10

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Markets CO Ors- cT oo-ot ARE HUMRvf AH Oij ARE COiN in uT Ut KrOvv in A.ONAISCE. LEF-T FOR Ou OTne BRINGING UP FATHER BY McMAHUS I I I GRAIN PRICES Furnished by E. W. WAGNER & CO 212 Union National Bank Building. ; CHICAGO. Oct. 4. Wheat News regains a bulge sale. Export news again indicates much wheat on the way abroad unsold. Saskatchewan wheat crop given at 174,000.000 bushels, and this is near 290.000,000 bushels for Canada. U. S. wheat export sales in past four days do not appear to exceed one million. Much wheat held unsold at head of lakes and New York reports discouraging conditions d Corn buleed early on good U 7.. 3 3 V' "Reg. U. 3. Pat Off." 1921 Intl Feature Servic Inc

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rash demand and - fear damage by mould. Wheat receipts are fairly liberal. Overnight grains brobably will meet bulge sales. RANGE OF FUTURES Furnished by E. W. Wagner & CO, 212 Union National Bank Building. CHICAGO, Oct. 4. Following is ""the range of futures on Chicago Board

of Trade today: Open High Low WheatClose

Dec 1.194 1.20 Vi 1.13 May ....123 1.25 1.19 Rye Dec 97 .97 .93 CornDec 49"8 -50 -491 May 55 .56 .54 Oats Dec 36 .36?8 .33 May 40 .40 .40-s Lard Oct ... 9.97 Ribs Oct. . . . 9.75

1.20 .94 .49 .54 .35 9.97 6.75 (By Associated Press) CINCINNATI, O.. Oct. 4. WheatNo. 2 red, $1.311.33; No. 3 red, $1.27 Or 1.30; other grades as to quality, $1.20 fir 1.23. Corn No. 2 white, $1.51 wnite, 4S(gSc; rso. c jciiwt v-v h2V2c; No. 3 yellow, 5151c; No. 4 Yellow. 49iAfo50V2c: No. 2 mixed. 60 rt COVic. Rye Lower. 99Cg $1.00. Oats Weak, 34y239c. Hay ui 20.75. (By Associated Press) CHICAGO. Oct. 4. "Wheat No. 1 hard, $1.20; No. 3 hard. $1.19. Corn No. 2 mixed, 48 & 49c; No. 2 yellow, 4849c. Oats No. 2 white, 35(536Uc; No. 3 white, 3335c. Pork Nominal; ribs, $7.008.00; lard, $9.97. (By Associated Press) TOLEDO, Oct. 4. Clover SeedPrime cash, $13.05; Feb.. $13.35; March, $13.27; Oct., $13.05; Dec, $13.20. Alsike Prime cash, $10.75; March, $11.10; Oct., $10.75; Dec.. $11. Timothy Prime cash 1920. $2.6 1921, $2.75; Jan., $2.95; Oct.. $2.75; Dec. $2.75. INDIANAPOLIS HAY (By AHsoclated Press) INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 4. HaySteady; No. 1 timothy, $17.5018; No. 2 timothv, $17 17.50; No. 1 clover, $16.5017.50. LIVE STOCK PRICES (By Associated Press INDIANAPOLIS?, Oct. 4 Hogs Receipts. 12.000; higher. Cattle Receipts, BOO; highrr. Calves Receipts. 600; unchanged. Sheep Receipts, 600; higher. Ron Top price General sales Mixed and assorted 160 to 200 lbs. Good hogs. 200 lbs. up... - Yorkers, 130 to 150 lbs Good pigs Hows according to weight Most of heavy sows .... Kales in truck market S 60 8 35(3 850 8 40 8 60 . s:.r, 8 351) 00 Cai 7 no a 6 50 a 75 (w 8 2 5 8 00 7 50 7 00 8 50 down . Most sales of hogs a year ago - Cattle " KILLING STEERS Good to choice, 1.300 lbs. 15 7516 00 8 00 9 00 Common to medium 1.300 lbs. up 7 00 7 75 5 25 9 23 6 75 7 75 Good to choice, 1.10 to 1.250 lbs S 2d Common to medium. l.loO to 1.250 lbs 6 ia Good to choice. 900 to 1.100 lbs 8 50 Common to medium, 900 to 1.100 lbs 00 9 50 7 25 Good to best under 300 lbs. Toor to medium, under 900 lbs Good to best yearlings... HEIFERS Good to best Common to medium. 800 lbs. up Good to best under R00 lbs. Common to medium, under 800 lbs COWS Good to best 1.050 lbs. up Common to medium, 1.050 lbs. up Good to choice, under 1 050 lbs 6 00 7 50 5 OOii? 5 75 8 50(g10 50 75-3 7 50 6 00 6 50 '(J 4 50 5 00 & fi 50 8 00 4 25 ffl) 4 75 4 23 Sip 3 25 H 2 r.0(a 1 50 3 50tfj 4 25 3 00'n) 3 25!3 Common to fair, under 1 050 lhs Poor to good cutters Poor to good canners BULLS Good to best. 1.300 lbs. up Good to choice, under 1,300 lhs Common to medium, under 1.300 lbs Common to good bologna CALVES Good to choice veals, undr 200 lbs 1 Common to medium veals. under 200 lbs Good to choice heavy calves Common to medium heavy i-alv4 2 0013 00 6 0010 00 5 501? 6 50 4 00ifi 5 00 STOCKERS & FEEDING CATTLE Good to choice steers, 800 lhs. and up Common to fair steers, 800 lbs. up Goo dt" choice steers, under 800 lbs Common to fair steers, under ROO lbs Medium to gooJ heifers.. Medium to good -cows ... . Stock calves, 250 to 400 73 00 Hi 6 2J 00Ji 6 50 irt S 00 50' 5 50 50 4 lbs. 00 6 Aatlve Mirep and Lamb flood to choice liRht sheep 50 4 00 tiood to choice heavy sheep 2 Stockers & breeding ewes 1 Slectd liffht lambs .... 7 Fair to best mixed lambs 7 All other lambs " Lucks, 100 lbs 1 50 oow oor 001(71 00 3 oo 4 50 8 00 7 50 6 50 2 50 DAYTON MARKET Corrected by McLean & Company, Dayton, O., Bell Phone, East 28. Home Phone, 81235. DAYTON. Ohio. Oct. 4. Hogs Receipts, 6 cars; markets, 25c low; choice heavies, $S.25; butchers and packers, $S.25; heavy yorkers, $8.25; light yorkers. $7.50fj8; choice fat cows. $6(5 6.50: common to fair, $5.50 fi 6; pigs, $77.50; 6tags, $45. " Cattle Receipts eight cars; market 15c lower; fair to good shippers. $6.50 tf?7; fair to medium butchers. $6.50 8; good to choice butchers, $6.507; good to fat cows. $55.50: bologna bull?, $4(fI5; butcher bulls, $4.50 $5.25- bologna cows, $44.50; calves, S6(?U1.

Sheep Market, steady; $23. Lambs $57.

(By Associated Press) CINCINNATI, O., Oct. 4. Receipts Cattle, 500; hogs, 4.500; sheep, 300. Cattle Market, steady; butchers steers, good to choice, ?67.50; fair to good, $56; common to fair, $3.50 (30; heifers, good to choice, $D.50(gb, fair to good, f 4.50Q. 5.50 ; common to fair, $3 (ft 4.50; cows, good to choice, $4.255; fair to good, $3.50 (ft 4.25; cutters, $2.75 3.50; canners, $1.502.50; stock steers, $46.50; stock heifers, $45; stock cows, $2.50i3.50; bulls, steady; milch cows, steady; calves, steady, fair to srond $7(5X7.75: common

40iand large. $3 6.50.

Hogs Steady to 10c higher; neavies, $8.75; good to choice packers and butchers, $8.75; medium, $8.75. Sheep Strong; good to choice lights, $33.50; fair to good, $2(3; common to fair, $11.50; bucks, $1.50 2.50; lambs, strong. (By Associated Press) PITTSBURGH, Oct. 4. Hogs Re ceipts, 1.200; market higher; heavies, $8.5008.75: heavy Yorkers, $9; light Yorkers, $S.609.70; pigs, $8.25 8.50. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 300; market steady; top sheep, $5.25; top lambs, $9. Calves Receipts, 100; steady; top, $14. (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Oct. 4. Cattle 9,000; native steers and she stock strong to 25c higher; early top yearlings, $11; some held higher; common grassers little change; bulk beef steers including westerns, $69.75; fat cows and heifers, largely $46; canners mostly, $2.752.90; bulls, steady; veal calves held higher; packers bidding steady; stockers and feeders strong to higher, hogs, 22,000; opened mostly 10 to 15c higher than yesterday's average; later market mostly steady to 10c higher; practical top, $8.50; one load, $S.55; bulk light and light butchers, $8.20 8.50; bulk packing sows, $6.607.10; pigs, steady; bulk desirable, 100 to 120 lb. pigs, $7.257.50. Sheep, 27,000; killing classes opened steady to strong; early sales fat native lambs, $8 8.25 to packers; $8.50 to city butch ers; no choice western lambs sold early; feeder grades firm feeder lambs, early, $7.10. (By Associated Press) EAST BUFFALO, Oct. 4. CattleReceipts, 400; steady. Calves Receipts, 125; steady, $514. Hogs Receipts, 1600; 2540c higher; heavy, mixed and Yorkers, $8.909; light, ditto and pigs, $8.759; roughs, $6.50 6.75; stags, $4 (go. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 800; unchanged. PRODUCE MARKET (By Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Oct. 4 Butter, fresh prints, 42 45c; packing stock, 15&20c. Eggs 36 38c. Fowls. 4 lbs. up. 2124; under i lbs., ISc; broilers, 20fa25c; leghorns, 1920c; roosters, lOfillc; old toms, 2230c; young toms, 2535c; capons, 3842c; young hens, 25(g,35c; squabs, 11 lbs. to doz., $5; young guineas, $7 a doz.; rabbits, $2.502.75 per doz.; spring ducks 4 lbs. and up, 15&16c; squabs, 16 & 20c; geese, 10 lbs. up, SQ 11c. EGGS (Bv Associated Press) NEW YORK, Oct. 4 Eggs Irregu lar; receipts 17,711 cases; fresh gathered extra firsts. 47 50c; fresh gathered firsts. 41 46c. (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Oct. 4. Butter Market unchanged. Eggs Receipts, 9.072 cases; market higher; lowest, 35 SSc; firsts, S941c. Live PoultryMarket higher; fowls 1523c; springs 22c. Potatoes Steady; receipts, 126 cars; total U. S. shipments, 1,342 bu.; Minnesota and North Dakota Red River Ohios, $l.S5tfi2 cwt.: Wisconsin and Minnesota Round Whites, sacked and bulk. $1.90 2 cwt.; Maine Cobblers, $2.10 cwt.: Idaho Round White, sacked, $2.10 cwt. (By Associated Press) CINCINNATI, Oct. 4. Whole milk, creamery, extra 4Sc. Eggs Prime firsts, 41c: firsts. 39c; second?, 32c. Poultry Broilers, 27c; springers, 18c: hens, 24(5 28c; turkeys, 10 lbs. and over, 35c. LIBERTY BONDS (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, Oct. 4. Final prlce3 on Liberty bonds today were: 3t2 $88.86 Firt 4 91.00 Second 4 90.36 First 4U 91.02 Second 414 90.96 Third 4 '4 94.30 Fourth 4U 91.30 Victory 3?i 99.40 Victor' 4 99.40 NEW YORK STOCKS (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, Oct. 4 Close American Can 27 Am. Smelting 384 Anaconda 44 Atchison 86 Baldwin Locomotive 86 Bethlehem Steel, B 55l4, Central Leather 28H Chesapeake and Ohio 56 i C. R. I. and Pacific . 34 Chino Copper 25 Crucible Steel 63 Cuba Cane Sugar General Motors 10 Goodrich Tfres 31 Mexican Petroleum 100 New York Central 72 Pennsylvania 36

Reading 2 Republic Iron and Steel 52 Sinclair Oil 20 Southern Pacific 79 Southern Railroad 20 Studebaker 73 Union Pacific 122 U. S. Rubber 49 U. S. Steel 79

Utah Copper 51 RICHMOND MARKETS (Furnished by Whelan) BUYING Oats 30c; rye. 90c; corn 47c; straw $8 per ton. SELLING Oil meal, per ton, $33.00; per hundred weight, $2.65; Tankage, 60 percent, $55.00 per ton; per cwt., $2.85; bran, per ton, S25.00; per cwt., $1.40. Barrel salt, $3.25; standard middlings, $27 per ton, $1.50 per cwt.; rye middings, $26 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, $15; clover, $18; heavy mixed $14. PRODUCE BUYING Country butter, 35 cents lb.; 36c dozen; chickens, 18c a lb.; 18c. eggs, fries, BUTTER QUOTATIONS The wholesale price for creamery butter is 45 cents a pound. Butter fats delivered in Richmond bring from 35c up a pound. REALTY TRANSFERS. William J. Nolte to Edith E. Jeans, $1, lot 5, M. Parry's addition, city. Joseph L. Scholl to Carey C. Clemens and Ethel, $1, lot 8, Von Pein's addition city. Luther L. Hinshaw to Samuel C. Addleman, $1, part S. W. 33-15-1. Catherine Temme to Edward Tierman :ind Margartt, $1, lot K'7, Schwegman's addition, city. Horace G. Iredell to Benj. W. Barr and Martha $1, lot 26, C. T. Price's addition, city. j Dickinson Trust Co., trustee to CorlOtS KeeveS - ton Place, city. George Ellish to David A. Goble and Emily, $1, lot 4, R. and F. addition city. Jesse A. Wiechman to .Willi.m P. Edmondson, et al, $1, lot 7, E. L. Cleavers addition city. Alice Landy to Iichie M. Byrum, $1. lot SC. O. Map. city. Walter E. Duning lo Anna L. Froelich, $1, lot 119, block 8, Mendenhall & Price addition, city. Eliza J. Wilson to Edwin N. Wilson, $1, lot 1, F. A. Coffin's addition, city. ROTARY SUBSCRIBES $31 FOR YORK FARM A closed meeting was held by the Rotary club at its regular weekly meeting Tuesday noon at the Arlington hotel. The question of assisting the crippled children was discussed at the meeting and also the endeavor to have a more intensive boys work campaign. Following the meeting the club subscribed $31, which will go into a na tional fund of all the Rotary clubs of - ! the states for the for the purchase of a farm for Sergeant Alvin C. York, hero of the World war. The movement is being conducted by the Rotary club of Atlanta, Ga. Robert Parker Injured When Cycle Hits Pole Donald Parker, living east of Richmond on the Gaar road, was painfully injured. Monday morning, Ihe bicycls on which he was riding struck a telephone post located on the back-end of a truck of the Richmond Home Telephone company. Parker sustained a broken jaw bone in two places. The accident occurred on North E street, between Fifteenth and Sixteenth streets. Farmer's Associations to Hold Joint Meeting FOUNTAIN CITY, Ind., Oct. 4. A joint meeting of the farmer's associations of New Garden and Franklin townships will be held in the Fountain City school house Wednesday evening. The wives of members also will attend. No special program has been planned but business of importance to both townships will be considered. WOULD HONOR ITALY'S HERO WASHINGTON, Oct. 4. Bestowal of the congressional medal of honor on the unknown Italian soldier to be burled in the national monument to Victor Emmanuel II at Rome would be authorized under a bill introduced by Representative Johnson, Republican, South Dakota. QtmiiimiiimiuitimmnwiumnifimnmiHHnnmutiniuiuitHtminiuintiitit 5 High-Grade Tubes and Tires Richmond Tire Service 1 I Corner 11th and Main i MtifmiiiiiMiiiinHunmuiiiiuwfViuiiniiiiiiinnHiiiu "Say It With Flowers" LEMON'S FLOWER SHOP 1015 Main Street Phone 1093

KITTERMAN PRAISES GENTERV1LLE STATUS

(Special to the Palladium) CENTERVILLE, Ind., Oct. 4. Speaking on the subject, "Civic Improvements Our Neighbors Have Made," Claude Kitterman, banker, of Cambridge City, pointed out the fortunate position of Centerville in com parison with many cities of larger size, in its sanitary arrangements and in its comforts both before the Centerville Home Culture club, Tuesday afternoon. Mr. Kitterman particularly emphasized the progress that we have made in present days over the living conditions which our ancestors endured, but did not fail to point out the need of being zealous for further improvement, citing one striking instance of a two room dwelling within a comparatively short distance, in which he had discovered one room used as a living room for the family, while the other was used as a stable. The meeting Tuesday afternoon was held in the Centerville Friends church. Members of the New Garden Community club were guests. Miss Mary Overbeck, of Cambridge City, spoke on "The Evolution of China Painting." Bernice Fraaman Succumbs 16 Hoars After Mother Dies Bernice Frauman, four years old daughter of Edwin H. Frauman, 127 South Eleventh street, died at Reid Memorial hospital at 10 o'clock Monday night. Death was caused by typhoid fever. Just 16 hours elapsed between the death of the child's mother, Mrs. Pearl Frauman, and the daughter. Both the daughter and the mother died from the same cause. Surviving the two is Edwin H. Frauman, husband and father, two sisters, May Louisa and Evelyn Marie, and one brother, Paul Roland. A double funeral will be held from Trinity Lutheran church at 4 o clock -Wednesday afternoon. Short services l ,..111 ,0M at Iha narlnrs of Tnrdnn McManus. Hunt and Walterman at 3:30 o'clock. Burial will be in the Lutheran cemetery. The Rev. O. T. F. Tressel will be in charge. Friends may call at any time at the undertaking parlors. Funeral Arrangements MRS. MARJORIE SCHUNEMAN. Mrs. Marjorie Schuneman, 23 years old, died at her home, 306 Richmond evenue, Sunday evening at 6 o'clock. Her surviving relatives are, her husband, Raymond Schuneman; her father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. W E. Floyd, of Dublin: thre sisters, Doris, Mela and Mrs. Earl Snyder, and two brothers, Everett and Kenneth. Funeral services will be held at 2:30 o'clock Wednesday afternoon in the United Brethren church at. Dublin. The Revs. Turner and Stoner will officiate. Burial will be in the Dublin cemetery. Friends may call at any time at the home of W. E. Floyd, Dublin. IRVIN HALL. Word has been received here of the death of Irvin Hall, in Phoenix,. Ariz The body will arrive in Richmond early Saturday morning. Funeral arrangements will be announced later. MISS MARY BURSON Funeral services for Mary Burson, who died Sept. 9, 1921, at her home in Pasadtna, Cal., will be held Thursday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock from the chapel of Doan & Doan. Friends of the family are invited. Rev. Fred F. Thornburg. of Peru, Ind., will officiate. Burial will be in Earlham cemetery. ACCUSED OF LARCENY

Claude Abbott of Dalton township, . . I was arrested by Sheriff Carl Wad if McCON AHA GARAGE I man at his home Monday evening andjl 418 Main Phone 14S0 1

Drougnt to menmona. tie is cnargea with petty larceny. The time for his hearing has not been set. Briefs Whitewater Lodge, 1. 0. 0. F. Funeral services for Brother Henry Hoff will be held Tuesday evening. Meet at hall at 7: 15 o'clock. L. A. Handley, Secretary. For Your Next Meal, Use Richmond Rose Brand MEATS and LARD Prepared by STOLLE & SONS Don't Wear Spotted Clothe Send them to WILSON to be Cleaned Phones 1103-1105 SEE NASH 4-DOOR SEDAN $2,075 Delivered WAYNE COUNTY NASH MOTOR COMPANY 13-21 S. 7th Phone 6173

The Farm and The Farmer By William R. Sanborn

Hartford City claims the dubious honor or reporting the nrst irost in Indiana this fall. It formed on Sunday night. "It damaged the tomato crop, though not all the product was destroyed," as the message ran. Eugene' Meyer, managing director of the war finance corporation, is back in Washington, after a three week's tour whlcl1 tookhlm amonS the cattle men and on to the west coast. He said he had been advising the buying and feeding of cattle, also that the banks appear ready to begin the needed financing, aided by the finance corporation. The great North American hog will have an inning at Purdue on Friday, October 7. It will be the "first annual swine day" at the university and many breeders and farmers are expected to attend. A tour will be made of the hog farm and the various herds on different feeding rations will be in spected. Several brood sows with suck- j lings will be exhibited, with relation to feeding experiments. Licensed Warehouses. Numerous elevators in the grain growing areas of the northwest, where there is a great desire to arrange for loans, have been licensed and bonded of late. Large elevator corporations are included in the new demand, although the warehouse receipts of such substantial concerns have always been bankable paper. The bonding is the j first step, after which the government issues a license, all being satisfactory, Among the somewhat belated silos to be filled was one on the Wilson McGaw farm, four miles southwest of Richmond, on Saturday. A number of silos were filled in Center township within the past few days, with others here and there throughout the county, making the closing of the silo season. I Beef From Velvet Beans. The United States Department or Agriculture has conducted a steer-fattening experiment in Mississippi which shows that velvet beans are well adapted for use in making beef. Feeding mixtures of silage, dry velvet beans and cotton seed were compared with combinations of silage and dry velvet beans, and silage and soaked velvet beans. The mixture of silage and soaked velvet beans resulted in the most economical and profitable production of beef. Apple Trade Brisk. Indianapolis dealers report apples In good supply, despite a short crop, and say trade is brisk, under practically the same conditions as existed last fall. Dealers announced a cut of 25 to 50 cents per bushel on Grimes Golden and Jonathans, on Monday. Milk, $1.75 in Porter. Valparaiso reports that the Milk Producers' Co-operative company has fixed the price of milk in Porter coun ty at $1.75 per hundred pounds, with ! the usual differential for milk delivered in Chicago. The Pine township farm bureau has decided to build a community house for the holding of farm meetings and for such other uses as may be for the benefit of Pine Township social life. Mr. McKenzie's Idea. H. C. McKenzie, director of the taxation service of the American Farm Bureau, has this to say: "The net result of all the changes proposed by either the senate or house of representatives on the tax bill is to shift a large part of the taxes from incomes lo consumption from those who are able to pay to those who will have to take it out of their living. "The repeal of the excess profits tax and the raising of the flat rate to 13 per cent, would relieve the corporations with very large earnings of most of their taxes, and increase the taxes largely on the corporation of small earnings. It favors the strong against the weak. yiiMlir!iiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiniiNiiiitiitiiiiniuiiiiiiiBiiiiitmiiiitiitiiinuiiiHm Rear Signal Lamps for Your I 1 Car, $5.00 1 BHiiinuuutiiummiiiimiiiiimiimnitiim iminHiniiiiniiiiHiiiHiinimiiuui M.

Fl II f WW A V M A VI A fS

Here is Your Chance to Save Many of Them 3 BIG WAYS TO DO IT SOW WHEAT THIS WEEK Buy a HOOSIER 5-Hoe Drill

We Our A Few Tons Left in HOOSIER

DENNIS

"The repeal of the excess profits tax would also allow individuals to incorporate and thus escare with a maximum tax of 15 per cent. This will inevitably produce a deficit, making necessary more consumption taxes and a shifting of the burden. "The farm bureau stands firmly for its original contentions: Forget about a sales tax; retain the excess profits tax; amend the constitution so as to do away with tax-free securities." Good Price for Yearlings. Morris paid $11.15 for 20 head of S74 pound steers and heifers at Chicago, on Monday, that being within 10 cents of the highest yearlings of the year, paid last January. Some fancy calves brought $11.50 and cattle generally sold 10 to 25 cents above

Saturday. Hogs were up 15 to 20 -tl, e ls' un a top of $8.45. Farmers Borrowing Freely. Wichita reports loans of $1,000,000 monthly to farmers, through the federal loan Dank, with the largest number of applicants from New Mexico and Colorado. "New Mexican live stock raisers are mortgaging their lands for the first time to pay off previously incurred debts," ig the report of Secretary Rochester. Two Best Wool Buyers. It now develops that the United States bought 85,788 bales of the Argentine 1920 wool clip, and that Germany took 98,287 bales, again establishing herself as the best customer of that country . Uncle Sam had lttle to do with our purchasing Argentine wools, in the face of our own over flowing storage houses. The importers are responsible for all the foreign wools coming into this country, the majority of them dealing almost exclusively in the foreign article. Farm Sale Calendar Wednesday, October 5. Mary E. Quigg, on Woodland Farm, three miles due south of Williamsbug, on Williamsmburg and Centervilla pike. Closing out sale. Thursday, Oct. 6. W. P.'Krom, on. Gaar and Shurley farm, one mile west, of Richmond on Williamsburg pike. Poland China sale. Burley McGill, on the old Thomson Smith farm, joining New Paris on the east. General farm sale. 12:00 o'clock. Monday, Oct. 10 Harry E. Shultz, one mile west of Fountain City, general farm sale at 10 o'clock. October 11. J. W. Smith, southeast of Hagerstown, Ind., will make a clean sweep sale of farming implements, etc., also 80 acres of land will be sold at auction. Letters, customs, community -lan guage and ideas have all followed. roads. j 1 "lutiiiiiuiiHinmiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiitiitiimiHMititiimiiiiliiHtiiiHiitiirttiirmuiniu 1 1 FULL-0-PEP FEEDS WHELAN'S 31-33 So. 6th St. Phone 1679 nitiiiiiiMituiiiHiniiiMMifiiniiiiiiitintiHiMtutiHiMiiimitiitiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiitHiih gtntfimmtnmiiiumiimMitiimiiiiutiHnniMuiHiitiiniiHiiniiiitniiiHtuniMmt i The Underselling Store .11111 iiiltuiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiitmiluluiiimiiuitiiiiiinmuiiiiiiiiiituiuiuiiHltiniiiiuif Buster Brown School Shoes for Boys and Girls are better. WESSEL SHOE CO. 718 Main St

Your Last Chance to Buy One for Only - -

Sell Armour's Fertilizer Don't Warehouse at the New Low Prices CORN TURNER A FEW

Implement Co.

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FIG CLUB ROUND-UP DRAWS LARGE CROWD;

AWARD MANY FRIZES (Special to The Palladium). WINCHESTER. Ind., Oct. 4. Over 1,000 people attended the annual pig club round-up of club members of Randolph county which was held at Winchester Saturday afternoon in the Favorite building. Thirty-six pigs were exhibited by the boys and girls of the county, rather evenly divided between the Poland China and the Duroc Jersey breeds. Winners in the Poland China boar class were: Perry Site, first, $10; Marion Girto, second, $S; Ronald Kemp, third, $6. For gilts: Knowl10; Pobert Romack. $8; David Shocknev. IS: Roht Huffman. S4: James Shockney, $: Manon Site, $2; Herman Lester, $1; Clarence Wagner, $1; Mary Miller, John Miller, 50 cents each. In the Duroc Jersey class the winners were as follows: Charles Miller, $20; Herman Flack, $16; Gerald Snell, $12; Kenneth Warner, $10; Charles Reeves. $8; Lester Menstiel, $7! Herman Fisher, $5; Ralph Fisher, $4; Wendel Ludwick, $4; Frederick Reece, $3; Marion Blansect, $3; Howard Kennedy, $3; Claude Kennedy, $2; Harry Conner, $2; William Robinson, $2. Others who placed, but received no prizes were, Lee Hinkle, Randolph Ludwick, Woodq Thomas, Kenneth Barker, and Glen Endle. A total of $400 in cash prizes was awarded. Fountain City Grange to Entertain on Holloween FOUNTAIN CITY. Ind., Oct. 4. Arrangements have been completed by the local grange for the entertainment of the Winchester Grange on Hallowe'en night. More members are expected to be admitted before that time and they, together with the already liberal membership, will assist in the entertainment. Sixteen new members were admitted at the last meeting, held Friday night. Our Sight Service Satisfies Optometrist Richmond Clara M. 1002 Main Sweitzer, St. OHLER & PERRY Battery Service Station Recharging and Repairing New Batteries for All Makes of Cars Night Service Until 9:30 1532 Main St. Phone 2677 LUGGAGE OF QUALITY At Prices that are Right 827 Main TRACY'S Coffee Always Fresh we seii skinners the highest grade Macaroni, Spaghetti, Egg NoodJe and other Macaroni Products.

St.

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