Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 299, 28 October 1921 — Page 18

PAGE EIGHTEEN

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., FRIDAY, OCT. 28, 1921.

Markets

GRAIN PRICES Furnished by E. W. WAGNER & CO., 212 Union National Bank Building CHICAGO. Oct 28. Wbeat crop news bullish. Export news , a bulge pale. Heavy reselling probable In Oklahoma, Texas and Kansas where a drought prevails. Probably eight million acres, or 20 of total wheat acreage, affected. Canadian receipts are heavy and about 1,400 cars of wheat due at Winnipeg tomorrow. Oats visible may decrease. Rail peace may have helped buying side a little. Minneapolis cash unchanged. Grains look two-sided and locals continue willing to buy on dips. RANGE OF FUTURES Furnished by E. W. WAGNER & CO., 212 Union National Bank Building ' CHICAGO, Oct. 28. Following is the range of futures on Chicago Board or Trade today

Open High Low Close Wheat Dec 1.07 1.0894 1.064 1.08 May ....l.llii 1.131 1.10 113V4 May 85 .87U .85 .874 Corn Dec. .... .48 .48 .47 , .48 May 53 .54 .513, .54 Oats Dec 33 .33 .32 .33 May 38 .38 .372 .38 Lard Oct. ... 9.55 9.55 Ribs Oct. ... 5.25 ;. 5.25

(By Associated Press) CINCINNATI, Oct. 28. Wheat No. 2 red, $1.271.28; No. 3 red, $1.23 125; other grades as to ouality, $1.10 1.22. Corn No. 2 white, 5353c; No. 3 white, 5253c; No. 4 white, 5152c. Corn No. 2 yellow, 52i453c. No. 3 yellow, 5252c; No. 4 yellow, 50 51c. Corn No. 2 mixed, 50 51c. Oats Steady, 33 37c; rye, S0S3c; hay, $1.4522.00. fBy Associated Press! TOLEDO. O., Oct. 28. Clover seed Prime cash, $12.40; Feb., $12.65; March, $12.40: Dec, $12.40. Alsike Prime cash, $10.75; May, $11.25; Oct., $10.75; Dec. $11. Timothy Prime cash, 1920, $2.75; 1921. $2.85; March, $3.05; Oct.. $2.85; Dec, $2.90. By Associated Pess) CHICAGO. Oct. 28. Wheat No. 1 dark northern, $1.32; No. 2 hard, $1.09. Corn No. 2 mixed, 4748; No. 2 yellow, 48(5j484. Oats No. 2 white, 3435; No. 3 white, 32(532. Pork Nominal. . Lard $9.65. Ribs $5.50 (g 7.00. INDIANAPOLIS HAY fRv Associated Pr-:s; INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 28. HaySteady; No. 1 timothy, $17.5018; No. 2 timothy, $17 17.50; No. 1 clover, $16.5017 50. LIVE STOCK PRICES (By Associated Press) ' INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 2S Hogs Receipts. S.50(; hiher. .Cattle Receipts. TOO; unchanged.. Calves Receipts. 800; unchanged. Sheep Receipts, K00; lower. Hog Top price $ 8 40 Bulk of sales 8 10(H) 8 35 Mixed nd assorted 160 to lbg. 8 15 8 OO 'fi' flood hop. 225 Jht. up... Yorkers. 130 to 150 lbs flood pigs Sows according to weight tnst of heavy sows Sales in truck market. . . . Most sales of hogs a year a go 15 S 50 down fi 50& 7 50 7 00 7 25 8 25 8 40 2313 SO ( nltlp KILLING STEERS Good to choice. 1,300 lbs. up S 50 9 50 common to medium, i.juu lbs. up Good to choice. 1.150 to 00 8 00 1 250 lbs 8 50 9 7 Common to medium, i,1jU to 1,230 lbs 6 ; Good to choice, 900 to 1.110 lbs S 5010 00 Common to medium, 900 to 1.100 lbs 6 00 7 25 Good to best under 900 lbs 6 GO 7 50 Poor to niedulm, under 900 lbs a ') s.7 Good to best yearlings . . 11 00 HKIKERS Good to best b 75 Common to medium, 800 lbs. up 6 00 ffi) 7 50 fi 50 (iood to best unaer suu ids. 6 50 8 50 Common to medium under 800 lbs 4 00 6 00 COWS Good to best 1.050 lbs. up Common to medium, 1,050 lbs. up Good to choice. under 1.030 lbs - 5 00 4 25 6 00 S 00 4 25 5 00 Common to fair, under 1.050 lbs 3 2o 4 00 Poor to t'ooa cutters Poor to Rood canners Good to best butchers . . . . BULLS Good to best. 1.300 lbs. up. Good to choice, under 1.300 lbs r-r.m,nnn to medium, under 2 f0ft 3 00 1 50 Cai 50 4 25 4 50 50 ip 4 00 50 4 25 1.300 lbs 3 00(H) 3 50 Common 10 suuu 3 00 3 60 CALVBS Good to choice veals, un- rl der 200 lbs 11 0012 50 Common to medium veals, under 200 lbs 8 0010 00 Good to choice heavy calves 6 00 7 00 Common to medium heavy calves 4 00 5 50 STOCKKRS & FEEDING CATTLE Good to choice steers, 800 lbs. and up o io 6 50 Common to fair steers, 800 lbs. up 5 00 5 50 Good to choice steers, under 800 lbs 5 00 6 00 Common to fair steers, un- , der 800 lbs 4 60 5 00 Medium to good heifers.. 4 50 5 50 Medium to good cows 2 60 4 50 Stock calves. 250 to 400 lbs 5 00 6 00 Native Sheep ond I.ninhn. Good to choice light sheep 3 50 4 00 Good to choice heavy sheep 2 50 3 00 Stockers & breeding ewes 1 oo 4 00 Selected light lambs 7 75 8 25 Kair to best mixed lambs 7 oui) 7 uo Good to best heavy lambs 6 50 (if 7 50 All other lambs 4 00 6 50 Uucks. 100 lbs 1 00 2 50 DAYTON MARKET Corrected by McLean & Company, Dayton, O., Bell Phone, East 28. Home Phone, 81235. DAYTON, O.. Oct. 28. Hogs Receipts, three cars; market steady; choice heaviea, $8 00; butchers and packers. $8 00; heavy Yorkers. $8 00; light Yorkers, $7.007.50; choice fat sows. $7" "5: common to fair, $6.30 7.00; pigs. $6.507 00. Cattle Receipts, eight cars; market 15c lower; fair to good shippers, $6.5o fvl.00; fair to medium butchers, $6.50 ft8.00; good to choice butchers. $G.50 (7 00; good to fat cows, $5.005.50; bologna bulls, $4.005.00; butcher bulls. $4.5006.00. Calves, $6.00 10.00. Slheep Market, .steady; $2.003.C0. Lambs $5.00(a 7.00.

BRINGING UP FATHER BY McMANUS

"Res. tr. a Pat. Off." (By Associated Press) i CINCINNATI, O.. Oct. 28. Re ceiptsCattle, 700; hogs, 4,500; sheep, 1,300. Cattle Market, steady; good to choice, $6&8; fair to good, $56; common to fair, $3.505; heifers, good to choice, $5 7.50; fair to good, $4 5; common to fair, $34; cows, good to choice, $4 4.50; lair to good, $3.25 4; cutters, $2.50&3; canners, $1 2.25; stock steers, $45.50; stock heifers. $44.50; stock cows, $2.50 3.50. Bulls, steady: bologna, $3.25 4.50; fat bulls, $4.504.75; milch cows steady, $3095. Calves, steady; good to choice, $11.5012; fair to good, $8 11.50; common and large, $37. Hogs Steady to 10c lower; heavies, $8.40; good to choice packers and butchers, $8.40; medium, $8.408.50; stags, $55.50; common to choice heavy fat sows, $5.506.50; light shippers, $8.50; pigs, 110 lbs. and less, $6 8.50. Sheep Steady; good to choice lights $3.504; fair to good, $23.50; common to fair, $11.50; bucks, $2a2.50. Lambs, steady; good to choice, $8.50 9; seconds, $67; fair to good, $7.50 8; common to fair, $34. (By Associated Press) PITTSBURG, Pa., Oct 28. HogsReceipts, 3,000; market higher; heavies, $8.40'8.50; heavy Yorkers, $8.75 8.85; light Yorkers, $8.75 8.85; pigs. $9.05. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 600; market, steady; top sheep, $5.25; top lambs, $9.50. Calves Receipts, 100; market, steady; top, $13. (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Oct 28. Cattle Receipts 7,000; choice steers very scarce, steady to 25c lower; medium to good natives very dull, 50 to 75c lower than yesterday's high level; choice 1,441 lb. steers, $9.75; top load, prime weight steers, $12; bulk beef steers, $6.50 $9.00; bull and she stock weak to 25c lower; calves and stockers steady. Hogs Receipts 24,000, very unever, mostly 10 to 15c lower than yesterday's average; some sales off more; practical top, $8; $8.25 paid for lignv lights; bulk butchers, $7.65 7.85; bulk packing sows $6.50(37.25; pigs, lower; bulk around $8.25. Sheep Receipts 17,000; fat lambs steady to 25c higher; sheep steady; fat native lambs to packers, early $8.75&8.90; fed western to shippers, $9.20 9.25; range yearlings, $6.75; western wethers, largely yearlings or twos, $6.10; fat ewes averaging around 112 lbs., $4.754.85. (By Associated Press) EAST BUFFALO, Oct. 28. CattleReceipts, 400; steady. Calves Receipts, 1.000; 50c higher; $513.50. Hogs Receipts, 9,600; strong for lights, others steady to 10c lower; heavy, $88.40; mixed, $8.408.50; Yorkers and light ditto, $8.504f8 65; pigs. $8.63 8.75; roughs, $6.757; stags, $45. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 1,000; .lambs, 25c off; yearlings, 50c up; lambs, $49.50; yearlings, $3.507; wethers, $5.255.50; ewes, $14.50; mixed sheep, $4.75 5. PRODUCE MARKET (By Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Oct. 2S. Butter Fresh prints, 4246c; packing stock, 15f?20c. Eggs 4648c. Fowls 4 lbs. and up, 1620c; under 414 lbs., 23c; springers, 2 lbs. and over, 1517c; under 2 lbs., 24c; leghorns, 195? 20c; roosters, ,10 11c; stags, 13c; old toms, 2527c; young toms, 3033c; capons, 3842c; young hens, 3033c; squabs, 11 lbs. to doz., $5; young guineas. $7.50 a doz.; rabbits, drawn, $3 a dozen; spring ducks, 4 lbs. and up, 1620c; squabs, 16 20c; geese, 10 lbs. up, 913c. (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Oct. 28 Butter Market, unsettled; creamery extras, 46. Eggs Receipts, 2,286 cases; market, unchanged. Live poultry Market, unsettled; fowls, 1423; springs, 20; turkeys, 28; roosters, 14. Potatoes, dull; 90 cars; total United States shipments 1,223; Northern white sacked, $1.651.75 cwt.; bulk, $1.7501.80 cwt.; red river 'Chios sacked and bulk, $1.651.85 cwt.; sandland Ohios, $1.50 1.65 cwL; Idaho russets, sacked, $2.10 2.15 cwt.; Canadian bulk, $1.30 1.35. EGGS (Bv Associated Press) NEW YORK, Oct. 28. Eggs Irregular. Receipts, 14,390 cases; fresh gathered extra firsts, 60 63c; fresh gathered firsts, 54 58c. (By Associated Press) CINCINNATI, Oct. 28 Whole milk creamery butter, extra. 46c. Eggs Prime firsts, 55c; firsts, 53c; seconds, 38c. Poultry Broilers, 22c ; springers, 15c; hens, 2025c; Turkeys, 35c. LIBERTY BONDS. (Bv Associated Press) NEW YORK. Oct. 28 Final price on Liberty bonds today were: 3 1-2 $92.44 First 4 bid 93.10 Second 4 92.50 First 4 1-4 93.38 Second 4 1-4 92.76 Third 4 1-4 95.00 Fourth 4 1-4 93.06 Victory 3 3-4 99.60 Victory 4 3-4 99.60 NEW YORK STOCKS (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, Oct. 28. Close. American Can 28 Am. Smelting , 39 Anaconda 411 Atchison 86 Baldwin Locomotive 90 Bethlehem Steel, b 56 Cnetral Leather 29 Chesapeake & Ohio 55

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-rr C. R. I. & Pacific 3314 Chino Copper 26 Crucible Steel 65 Cuba Cane Sugar 734 General Motors 9 Goodrich Tires 324 Mexican Petroleum 106 New York Central 724 Pennsylvania 36 Reading 70 Republic Iron and Steel 50 Sinclair Oil 24 Southern Pacific 7914 Southern Railroad 19 Studebaker 7614 Union Pacific 120 U. S. Rubber 50 U. S. Steel 81 Utah Copper 55 RICHMOND MARKETS (Furnished by Whelan) BUYING Oats 30c; rye, 90c; corn 45c; straw $8 per ton. SELLING Oil meal, per ton, $52.50; per hundred weight, $2.65; Tankage, 60 percent, $55.00 per ton; per cwt, $2.85; bran, per ton, $23.50; per cwt., $1.23. 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, $16; heavy mixed, $1415. ' PRODUCE BUYING Country butter, 30 cents lb,; eggs, 50c dozen; chickens, 18c a lb.; fries, 18c. BUTTER QUOTATIONS The wholesale price for creamery butter is 44 cents a pound. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Second National Bank to Cora G. Rea, $6,000, lot 293, E. Starr's addition city. John Tape to Anna Kreilkamtv $1 lots 15, 16, Poe & Wrights addition, William Ray Barton to Albert B. Carman, $1, Part S. W., 24, 15, 1. Clara Brewer to Cassa Tomlin and Bessie, $1, lot 25, I. E. Jones addition, city. South Side Improvement association to T. J. Hatfield and Nellie, $1, lots 784-785, Beallview. Marie Hanseman to William H. Meerhoff and Lillia. $1, lot 10, Charles Arnolds addition city. Mary E. Quigg to Walter M. Harris, $1, part S. E. and S. W. 19, 17, 14. Watson J. Faucett to Estelle V. Bell $1, part S. W. 32, 13, 1. Richmond Beverage Co., to Omar M. Toney, $1, Lot 73, O Map, city. BUSINESS CONFIDENCE VOICED BY SCHWAB AT NATIONAL SESSION (By Associated Press) ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Oct. 28 Charles M. Schwab, addressing the annual banquet of the National Paint, Oil and Varnish association last night said he was not alarmed about business depression. "We have been on a great business spree and we are now in the cold gray dawn of the morning after." he said. "The business depression will place us in a firmer, surer position for the future. "As long as I can borrow money, I am going to bet every dollar of which I have control on American Industry. I believe that this great nation of ours is going to be the workshop of the world. "We are on the eve of the greatest development in our history. If I had to live my life over again I would choose the present day for beginning a career. We have all learned to live extravagantly but it does not mean anything. I don't give a rap for money except insofar as I can use it to circulate it through my plants and develop them." . Discussing industrial conditions, Mr. Schwab said- "Wherever I go I hear the theme that labor and caoital should co-operate but I have yet to find a man who can tell me how it is to be done. LESS THAN FOURTH OF COUNTY TAXES IN Less than 25 per cent of the taxpayers of the county have paid their taxes for this fall to date, according to the statement of Thomas I. Ahl, county treasurer. A total of $201,000 had been paid in up to Thursday evening. By the last date on which taxes are payable before becoming delinquent, $900,000 should be paid in. Taxes are due up to Nov. 7. Approximately 100 to 150 citizens are paying taxes at this time, each day, and special arrangements have been made by the treasurer's office to accommodate the last minute rush. The office will be open at the court house Monday. Tuesday and Thursday evenings until Nov. 7, up to 8 o'clock. Y to Hold Open House For Boys Under 16 Years The Y. M. C. A. will hold open house Saurday for the boys of the city under the age of 16 year3. Games will be played during the afternoon. The masked ball which will be open to all the boys in the city will be held Saturday night. Perry Wilson has a surprise for all the boys present. The gymnasium will be used for the entertainment and the entire Y. M.C. A. will be thrown open.

THOUGHT fOU WUZ. tN LOVE -

1 AM - AND TO NA!?(?v Irish L From top to bottom: Arthur Griffiths, E. J. Duggan and Michael Collins. The above photos, taken Curing the Sinn Fein conference in London witn the British cabinet, are the latest to be received in this country of Irish leaders. The Sinn Fein delegation was headed by Arthur Griffiths. Other prominent Irishmen at the conference were Michael Collins, the Sinn Fein finance minister, better known as the most elusive chief of the Irish Republican army, and Commander E. J. Duggan, chief liason officer of the I. R. A. Old Fashioned Halloween Party To Be Given by Hi-Y An old-fashioned Halloween party will be given Monday by the Hi-Y club under the direction of Perry Wilson, boys' secretary of the Y. M. C. A. The occasion will be open to the boys and girls of the senior school and it willJ be strictly a wholesome program of fun and frolic. The rooms of the Y. M. C. A. will be decorated extensively for the occasion. Games of all sorts will be planned by Mr. Wilson to make the occasion a big success. Find Body of Young Man Thought Missing Student (By Associated Press) MIDDLETOWN, Conn., Oct 23. The unidentified body of a young man found in the Niagara river near Buffalo, N. Y.. last night, is believed here to be that of Kenneth R. Losey, class of 1923, at Wesleyan university. Losey had been missing since Oct. 13, when he parted from his roommate with the intention of going to New York city. His home was at Northport, L. I. Briefs Attention, K. of P. Meet at Castle Hall at 7 p. m. Saturday to attend the funeral service of Bro. Harry Weber. E. R. Borlander, K. of R. & S. J. R. Magill, C. C. ' Notice Fulle Eros, will have no flowers for All Saints Day.

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t ME NEW CORN IS BOUGHT FOR 36.5 CENTS AT MATTI-SMITH AUCTION By AVI U.I M R. SAXHORN The Matti and Smith dissolution sale in the Fountain City district on Thursday brought out a large crowd of buyers. Mr. Smith, an unmarried man, had been living with the Matti's, ws farming the place and the sale was held to effect a settlement. John Davis, of Pennville, has leased the farm and will take early possession. It was an all-day sale. There being a raft of harness and such a large collection of farm tools, with various odds and ends to dispose of. Included in the live stock were five horses, six cows and 114 hogs, to which there were some additions "brought in", we are told. Aside from whatever livestock might have been added the Matti and Smith sale totalled $2,900. Mr. Matti, who is retiring from farming is to settle in Richmond, and no household goods were put on sale. Buyers and Prices. Among the buyers of live stock were J. Clark, who took a team of horses at $250; C. McQuiston who paid $57 for a brown mare and Jake Fleisch who got her mate at $61. Among the buyers of cows Mahlon Leonard, of Lynn, Harold Thorpe and Ed. Dunham, each selected one. Roscoe Moore, of Hollansburg bought two, as also did Pat Mur phy of route B, Richmond. The top on cows was $57. There was active competition in the hog sale. John Flatley picked out two pens of feeders at $54 a pen. M. Jefferis got one pen at $50.50, another at $58.50, and the third at $68.50. A. Jones bought a sow with 4 piglets; Frank Brown picked out a sow with three little ones; Will Douglass, of College Corner got nine nice ones at $17 each. The largest buyers of hogs were George Davis, of Wiliamsburg, who took 20 at $12.75 and Henry Toschlog who bid in 30 head at $12 average. Walter Cabine selected one sow and pigs at $35. Corn, Hay and Implements Seven acres of corn in the field brought $15, one of the Matti's taking all of it. The 200 bushels of old yellow corn in crib was bid up to 42 cents by Tom Ryan, while C. Woolwine paid 36 cents for 150 bushels of good new corn, the highest price paid for new corn in this district, this year so far as we have learned. Omar Whelan got 3 tons of nice alfalfa at $17; Clarence Addleman paid 25 cents for a lot of "alfalfa straw" in bales. An offering of 120 bales of wheat straw was devided between Will Hinshaw and Joe Irwin, at 30 cents. Farm tools sold according to age and quality. The best sale in this collection was that of a dandy closed buggy to Charles Hill, of Hollansburg, at $39. George Bullerdick paid $50 for the gas engine, and John Murphy considered the cultipacker well worth $39.50. Jesse Wiechman and Francis McMinn, of the Dickinson Trust company, kept the books and made the settlements, and give the partnership total at $2,900. Omar Piatt and James Busby "cried" the sale, and the Ladies' Aid of the New Garden Friends church served a generous lunch. ARGUMENT IN RUBER CASE TO TAKE DAY Argument in the trial of William J. Hubert, of Warsaw, accused of embezzlement, who is being tried in circuit court here, will occupy about one day after the evidence is in. The trial has been going on for nearly two weeks. Hubert is one of the last witnesses presented by the defense. Judge W. A. Bond announced at noon Friday that the "trial would be continued at the end of the day until next week. Saturday will be given over to Wayne county business, a part of which is the finishing of the Bushee dh'orce case. George L. Bushee is suing Susan Bushee for divorce. The case was partly tried last Saturday. Announce Tinplate Mills Will Operate Full Time CHESTER, Ind., Oct. 28. The Neff quartette of Green's Fork and Walter Beeson and son, Norman, of Webster will give a concert in the M. E. church at Chester Saturday evening, Oct 29. A mile in length, and including 78,105 signatures, was a petition recently presented to the British house of lords. FOR SALE 300 bushels turnips, 50c delivered. Come, after them, 3 bushels for one dollar. Call telephone 4009 evenings. D. L. Reid, Spring Grove. (jniniiHiiiiiuiiniiiitiiiiiniuimimniiuiiunmiimiHiinuiiiMiiiiimmuiuijiumHave Your Old Tires I 1 Vulcanized i I McCONAHA GARAGE I I 413 Main Phone 1480 imi'uHmiMiuiiiiiniminiimmimiriiiiiNnmniHMraiuunmrruimtttmutM "The Best She Ever Tasted" Whelan's Pancake Flour Made Fresh Daily Try a Package. For sale at your grocer's.

Brings American Wife ! - -?'- -..1

Mrs. Taji and children, John and Yurie Construction Commander Taji of the Japanese navy, a member of the Japanese delegation to the disarmament conference, has brought with him to the U. S. his white wife and their two children. The photo of Mrs. Taji and the children was taken while they were getting a glimpse of America's "wild west" at Cheyenne, Wyo., en route to Washington from the Pacific coast CANADA LIFTS REGULATIONS FOR JAPANESE DELEGATION (By Associated Pressj VICTORIA, B. C, Oct 28 The Canadian government has consented to lift the customary quarantine regulations for the Japanese liner Kashim Mau, due in port tonight with the Japanese delegates to the Washington conference on the limitation of armaments. At whatever hour the ship arrives she will be given entry. RAILWAY CONSCIENCE FUND BOOSTED BY $35 PAYMENT DANVILLE. Ind.. Ocr ?S n P Jackson, local acent nf the p.ie fnnri Railroad Company here, is in receipt1 oi a letter Deanng tne postmark: "Or-! nge, ai., vci. 17," wnich contained $36 in currency and a note whir-h hnr no date or signature, which said the money was to pay for a half-fare for Which the Writer had failed in aertla during war times. Mr. Jackson is at a loss to Know to whom he is indebted for the delayed settlement and ha3 turned the letter and monev nvr tn the company's auditor. ALLEGED BANDIT IS SLAIN, ANOTHER CAUGHT BY POSSE COUNCIL BLUFFS. Ta rw os One alleged bandit was kiiled and an-! omer captured m a pistol fight with! sheriff's deputies on guard at a store here when a band of rnhhe into tne place Thursday. The dead man was laentmed by Sheriff W. A. Groneweg as James Blankenship, 25 years old. who was indirtPd fni- onn in connection with the courthouse riots in umana two weeks ago.

ORDER A WASHING MACHINE today for your wife or mother eliminate washdav worries. Our line includes the "Quicker-Yet" hand-power or electric washers. DENNIS IMPLEMENT CO. 15-17 South Seventh St. Richmond, Indiana

WE SOLICIT YOUR BUSINESS AND ASK YOU FOR IT We have Good West Va. Coal at $7.50 per Ton WTe also have BLUE DIAMOND Lump and Egg ANTHRACITE CHESTNUT and Stove ' We Are at Your Service Farmers' National Grain Association Incorporated Dealers in High-Grade Coal Phone 1549 Old Champion Mill N. 10th St,

JAPANESE STEAMER SINKS; PASSENGERS AND CREWPICKED UP SEATTLE, Wash., Oct. 28. The Japanese steamshiD Fukui Maru sank 375 miles off Cape Flattery, Washington, at midnight last night in a hurricane but all her nassene-pra and imw

were picked up by the freighter WTest Ivan, according to a wireless message received by the harbor department here early this morning. She was Dound for Seattle from Kobe. The West Ivan xras hnnnd fnr Tanan and will continue to the Orient the wireless stated. Although the list of those aboard the Fukiu Maru is not available here, she is believed to have carried few passengers. No Details Received. No further details -arora recaivnd from the West Ivan. The Fiilrni Mam of 3,087 tons, was built in Liverpool in 183U. bhe was owned by the Yanashita Kasen Kaisha and had been on the trans-Pacific run for years. SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 28. A dispatch Wednesdav from Trip issnHafo.l Press correspondent wit hthe Japanese delegation aboard the Kashina Maru aeciarea a wireless message trom the Fukui Maru said that the boat had been badly damaged during the recent cyclone and was proceeding to Seattle for repairs. Contractors' Relief Law Is Unconstitutional, Rule INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 28. The Indiana supreme court today held the contractors' relief law, 1919, to be unconstitutional. The decision was rendered in the case of the Davis Con struction company, against the Boone county commissioners, and affirmed the finding of the Hamilton circuit court from which it was appealed. The first history of England, thr Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, was started in the reign of King Alfred. OLD RELIABLE STOCK PAINT Buy and Use 100 Pure Linseed Oil Paints Old Reliable Stock Paint, when thinned down, ready to use, will not cost you over $2.19 per galand contains more lead than any other paint made in Indiana (that we know of). 100 PURE LINSEED OIL with this paint, per QO gallon 0C Cash at Store With Paint OLD RELIABLE PAINT COMPANY 10-12 South 7th Street 1

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