Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 51, 1 March 1922 — Page 12

PAGE TWELVE

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1, 1922

Markets

GRAIN PRICES .Markets by E. P. Leland & Company, 212 Union Bank Building.) CHICAGO, March 1. Wheat Liquidation hit the wheat market today, resulting In declines of 4 from the high. The higher Argentine opening and the bullish census placed on private reports on farm reserves failed to bring In buying. Liverpool was much lower and the weather in southwest still bearish. New ground ran into stop loss orders. Cash wheat 4 cents lower. About 200,000 wheat reported taken for export. Corn Corn showed moderate strength all day. Weak late with wheat. Cash markets about 2 lower. There was no export business reported. Oats Trade active with selling credited to the leading elevator. There were some commission houses buying on set backs but the close was decidedly weak. A report was received of 60,000 oats taken for export of which 30,000 was domestic, but this was not confirmed. , " RANGE OF FUTURES t Markets by E. F. Leland & Company, 212 Union Bank Building.) CHICAGO. March l.--Followlng is tbe range of futures on Chicago Board of Trade today:

Open High Low Close - - wheat May ....1.47 1.47Vi 1.42" 1.43 July ....1.23 1.23 119 1-21 May 1.08 1.08--1.04 1.05 Corn May 67 .68 .651,4 .66U July 69 .70 .67 .68 Oatc .. May .... .42 .42 .41 .41 July .....44 .44 .42 .43 RibsMay ...11.42 ..... 11.45

(By Associated Pres - CINC1NNAI. O.. March 1. WheatNo. 2 red. $1.46Cal.47; No. 3 red, $1.43 !fil.45: Other grades as to quality, $1.371.42. Corn No. 2 white, 64fi6Dc; No. 3 white, 63864c; No. 4 white, 6162c; No. 2 yellow, 6465c; No. 3 yellow. 63(3 64c; No. 4 yellow, 6ir62c; No. 2 mixed, 6364c. Oats Weak, 380 43c. Itye Lower; $1.031.04. Ha,y J15.5020.O0. (By Associated Press) CHICAGO. March 1. Wheat No. 2 hard. $1.401.41; No. 3 hard. $1.39. Corn No. 2 mixed. 60Vi62; No. 2 yellow, ft062c. Oats No. 2 white, 4144; No. 3 white, 37 (g.38. Pork Nominal. Lard $11.87. Ribs $11.25 12.25. (By Associated Prss) TOLEDO, March 1. Cloverseed Prime cash $15.75; March, $15.75; April, $14.50; Oct., $12.55. Alsike Prime cash $12.50; March, $12.50. Timothy Prime cash, $3.15; March $3.15; May, $3.25, ... INDIANAPOLIS HAY 4 (By Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS. March 1. HayWeak; No. 1 timothy, $1717.50; No. 2 timothy, $16.5017; No. 1 clover, $18.5019.50. - LIVE STOCK PRICES (By Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS. March I. Hogs riM-inn- 7.R00: lower. Cattle r.erelDts. 1.200: lower. Calves Receipts, 800.- Sheep Receipts, 1,100; lower, tloitn Top price ho?s 150 lbs. up$ll 33 Rulk of sales, good hogs. 11 15ll 25 Oood hOfrs 150 to 180 lb. av 11 85 Good hoys 180 to 210 lb. av 11 15&11 33 Good hogs 210 to 250 lh. av 11 20 frit 35 Good hogs 250 to 275 lb. av 11 10'ttll 25 Good hogs. 275 lbs. up... 11 00 it 11 15 Yorkers. 140 to 150 Job 11 35 down Pigs, according to quality 10 50 down Good to best sows 9 &0tfi 9 73 Common to fair sows 9 OOW 9 25 Stags subiect to dockage. f0'ii t 50 Sales in truck division... 11 2511 50 Range In ples a year ago 9 75 11 23 Cuttle Quotation Killing steers, 1250 lbs. up Good to choice $ 8 25rd 8 50 Common to medium 7 50(a) 8 00 KtlMng steers 1100 to 120O lbs Good to choice 8 00 S 8 25 Common to mdium 7 OOifi) 7 75 Killing steers. 1000 to 1100 lh GOod to choice 7 50 fil 8 00 Common to medium 75ffi 7 25 Killing steers, less than 1000 lbs. Common to medium 6 50fn 7 00 Good to best yearlings... 7 COM 8 60 Other yearlings 7i(tp 7 25 Stockers and feeding cattleSteers, 800 lbs. up 6 00fi 7 Steers, les sthan S00 lbs.. 5 SOW 6 Heifers, medium to good.. 4 50(ft 5 Cows, medium to good... 3 75 4 Calves, 300 to 500 lbs 6 00 7 Female butcher cattleoo 25 60 23 00 Good to best heifers f.0(T() Common to medium heifers 5 50(i) Habv beef heifers 8 OOSi) Good to choice cows 5 00 fit) Common to medium cows. 4 00 7 G 9 6 75 00 00 4 73 Poor to good cutters Poor to good canners.... Bulls and calves Good to choice butcher bulls 1'oor to -holce huavy bulls Common to good light bulls Common to good bologna 3 00f( 3 50 2 23 3 03 4 50O 5 00 4 OOffi) 4 60 4 00 75 bulls 3 75i'fl 4 25 Good to choice veals.... 11 00112 50 Common to medium veals. 8 00& 9 00 Cood to choice Heavy calves 6 50 7 CO Common to medium heavy calves 5 tO'ii ( 00 Sheep and I.amh Quota! loan, flood to choice light sheep$ 7 OOfa' 8 00 Good to choice heavy sheep 5 00rj 6 00 Common to medium she-p 3 50'i 4 00 Good to best heavy lambs 14 00 ft 15 00 Assorted light lambs 12 &0fi,13 50 Fair to good mixed lambs 12 00fi13 00 All other lambs 13 50f15 00 Bucks. 100 lbs 2 60fj; 3 50 DAYTON MARKLT Corrected by Schaffer's Commissicn Company, Dayton, Ohio. Bell Phone 4060. Home Phone 81262. DAYTON. Ohio. March 1. HogsReceipts six cars; market 25c higher: choice heavies. $11.25; butchers and packers $11.25; heavy Yorkers $11.25; light Yorkers. $11.25; choice sows, J84J9: common to fair. $7.508; stags, $45; pigs, $10.5011. Cattle Receipts, 10 cars; good to fair butchers. $5.506: choice fat heifers, $510; good to fair heifers. $45; choice fat cows, $3.504.2a; fair to good cows, $3 3.50; bologna cows $1.502.50; bologna bulls, $3.50 4; 'butcher bulls. $484.50; calves, $7(f811. Sheep Market, steady; $2.505. Lambs $10.00 12.00. '- (By Associated Press) -er,-CLEVELAND, Ohio, March 1. Cattle Receipts 250; market steady. Calves Receipts 200 head; market steady; choice veal calves, $12.50 $13.50; fair to good. $8.0010.00. Sheep and . Lambs Receipts 200; Market steady; choice lambs, $15.00 $15.75; fair to good, $8.0012.00;

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choice sheep. $6.008.00; fair to good, $3.004.00. Hogs Receipts 4,000; market is steady; yorkers, $11.75; mediums, $11.75; roughs, $8.75; stags, $6.25. . . (By Associated Press) CINCINNATI, Ohio. March 1. Receipts Cattle, 550; hogs, 3,000; sheep, 325. ' Cattle Market, steady; butchers steers, goo dto choice, $6.758; fair to good, $6 6.75; common to fair, $4.506; heifers, good to choice, $6.50 7.50; fair to good, $5.50 6.50; common to fair, $45.50. Cows, good to choice, $4.755.50; fair to good, $4 4.75; cutters, $33.75; canners, $2 2.75; stock steers, $56; stock heifers, $4 5; .stock cows, $3 4. Bulls, steady; bologna, . $45; fat bulls, $4.75 5.25. Milch cows, steady; $35 85. Calves, weak to 50c lower; good to choice, $11 12; fair to good, $7 11; common and large, $4i7. Hogs Steady; heavies, $1111.50; good to choice packers and butchers, $11.50; medium, $11.50; stags, $5C(t 5.50; common to choive heavy , fat sows, $68.50; light shippers, $11.50; pigs, 110 lbs. and less; $7.5010.25. Sheep Steady; good to choice lights, $67; fair to good, $36; common to fair, $1(Ld2; bucks, $24. Lambs Steady: good to choice, $15 16; seconds, $1012; fair to good, $12.50 !&15; common to fair, $6 8. (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Mar. 1 Catle receipts 7,000; beef steers and she stock steady to strong; choice 1.49o lb. steers $9.40 bulk beef steers $7.50 8.40; bulls slow about steady; calves unevenly lower; stockers and feeders steady on better grades; lower grades dull; hog receipts 21,000 uneven mostly 10 to 15 cents lower than yesterday's average lighter weight active; others slow; top $11.20; bulk $10.75$11.15; pigs 25 to 40 cents lower; bulk desirables 100 to 120 lbs. $10$10.25; sheep receipts 17,000; very slow; nothing choice sold early; bidding 25 to 50 cents lower; shorn Texas yearlings and twos $10 $10.75; desirable 81 lb. shearing lambs $14.50. (By Associated Press) PITTSBUP3H, Mar. 1 Hogs, re ceipts 1000; market lower: heavies' $11.25; heavy yorkers $11 .70 $11.75; light Yorkers, 11.7011.73; pigs. $11.25 11.50. Sheep and lambs Receipts, C00; market steady; top sheep. $9.50; top lambs, $16.25. Calves Receipts, 150; market steady; top, $13. (By Associated Press) EAST BUFFALO. Mar. 1 Cattle receipts 125; steady; calves receipts 200; steady: $3$13.50; hogs receipts j 4500; slow; 15 to 25 cents lower; heavy $11.25Cai?l l.&u; mixea ii.buig S1l.fi5: vorkers $11.65(ft$11.75: light ditto $11.25$11.65; pigs $ll$11.25;j roughs $9.25$9.&0; stage 54($5.50; sheep and lambs receipts 1200; lower; lambs 8$15.75; yearlings $10$14.50. PRODUCE MARKET (By Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS, Mar. 1 Butter Fresh prints. 3740c; packing stock, 15c Eggs 18 19c Fowls Jobbers' buying prices for fowls, 17 ft 22c; springers, 21c; capons 7 pounds and up, 28c; slips, 2ic; roosters, 10314c; turkeys, old toms, 30c; young toms. 3540c; capons, ss &40c; young hens, 3540c; ducks, 4 lbs. and up, 1623c; squabs, 11 lbs. to the dozen, $6; geese, 10 lbs. up, 14 (18 cents. EGGS fBy Associated Press) NEW YORK. March 1. Eggs Mar ket firm; receipts 2,953 cases; fresh gathered extra firsts, 31 32c; fresn gathered firsts, 29 31c. (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, March 1. Butter Market Higher; creamery extras, 37. Eggs Receipts 16,070 cases; market higher; lowest 23g24; firsts 26 26. Live Poultry Unchanged. Potatoes Steady, 36 cars; total United States shipment 489; Wisconsin sacked round Whites, $1.802.05 cwt.; Idaho sacked rurals, $ 2.05 a 2.15; Idaho sacked russets, $2.253.35 cwt; Colorado, sacked Bliss Triumphs, $2. cwt. (By Associated Press) CINCINNATI, Ohio, March 1 But. ter Whole milk creamery, extra, 40c Eggs Prime firsts, 2424c; firsts, 23rd23y2c; seconds, 22c. Poultry Frjs, 33c; springers, 26c; hens, 26c; turkeys, 40c. NEW YORK STOCKS i fBy Associated Press) NEW YORK, March 1. Close, American Can 40 American Smelting 47 Anaconda 48H Atchison 96 Baldwin Locomotive 106 Bethlehem Steel, b 63 Central Leather 33 Chesapeake & Ohio 59 Vi C. R. I. & Pacific 39 1 . fi a f 1 r tnino ,umtii D' Crucible Steel 56 General Motors 8 Goodrich Tires 38 Mexican Petroleum 123 New York Central 77 Pennsylvania 35 Reading - ; 74 Republic Iron & Steel 47 Sinclair Oil 22 Southern Pacific 84 Southern Railroad 20 Studebaker 99 Union Pacific, extra div 130 U. S. Rubber 57 U. S. Steel 94

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LIBERTY BONDS

(By Associated Press) NEW YORK, March 1. Final prices on Liberty bonds today were: 3 97.00 First 4, bid 97.08 Second 4 96.96 First 4 97.30 Second 4 97.02 Third 4 98.10 414" 97.30 ! Fourth Victory 3 100.00 Victory 4 100.26 RICHMOND MARKETS (Furnished by Whelan) BUYING Oats, 37c; rye. 85c; new corn, D5c; straw, $9 per ton. SELLING Oil Meal, per ton, $60.00; per hundredweight, $3.15. Tankage, 60 per cent. $67.50 per ton; per, cwt., $3.50. Bran, per ton, $36.50; per cwt., $1.85. Barrel salt. $3.25. Standard middlings, $37.50 per ton; $2.00 per cwt. Cotton seed meal, per ton, $53.50; per cwt., $2.75. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Richmond flour mills are paying $1.35 for No. 2 wheat. LOCAL HAY MARKET Steady; good timothy, $14 to $15; choice clover, $16; heavy mixed. $11 15. PRODUCE, BUYING Country butter, 30c lb.; eggs, 20c dozen; chickens. 22c lb.; fries, 22c. BUTTER QUOTATIONS The wholesale price of creamery butter is 38c a pound. . REALTY TRANSFERS Verne E. Shelley to Frank M. Price, $1, lot 17 J. K. Dugdale's add. city. Frank M. Taylor to John W. Lamb, $1, S. half 30-13-1. Homer Williams to Ina B, over, $1, pt. S. W. 35-16-12. Nellie Eliason to Helen K. CrownLoucks, $1, lot 40 O. P. Centerville. Ada I). Haseltme 10 Wm. C. Wolfe and Nellie B., $1, lot 52 T. Woodnut's add. city. Frank M. Taylor to Flora Gates and Everett, $1. pt. N. E. 17-16-14. John W. Brittenham to John H. Pat ton and Nellie E., $S00, lots 4-5 blk, 12 Cambridge. George L. Cox to City of Richmond, $80, lot 6 R. and T. Mfg. Co. add. city. William H. Brooks to Margaret H. Brooks, $1, lot 1 William Baxter's add. city. Arthur Marvin, commissioner, to Mary M. Franklin, $416, lot 43 Economy. Richmond Lake and Park Co. to McClelland White, $200, lot 38 R. L. P. Co. add. city. John G. Holt to Margaret Swain, $1,000, lots 3-4 Dublin. J, ttQ u u .i 1 w 7,1 m l ical U B. church, $1,200, lots 4-11 blk.: 1 Dublin. .,'-' i,, I Mienuan . " a""f '"'"6a to Laura B. White. $1, pt. S. W. 3a-15-1. FTA,MmnJ0?en Gartln' $1. lot 9 J. Matti's add. city. Herman F. Pilgrim to John E. Boldrey and Alice M., $1, lot 10 C. E. Gates' add. city. Emory C. Hanson to Stephen A.' Wood and Elva R., $1,000, N. W. 28-18-12. John F. Fender to John H. Billheimer, $1, lot CO Moffitfs third add. city. Almon F. Hill, Jr., to Letitia HiH.j $1101S IV A, iVi, 30, 10, UJ. Richmond Terrace. Meeting of Duroc Jersey Breeders Here Saturday A meeting of the Wayne county Duroc Jersey breeders association will be held in the directors' room of the Second National bank in Rich mond at 1 o'clock Saturday. Pig club work, and various business matters will be considered. IF KINDEYS ACT BAD, TAKE SALTS ( Savs Backache is Stan You Have Been Eating Too Much Meat. When you wake up with backache and dull misery In the kidney region it generally means you have been eating too much meat, says a well-known authority. Meat forms uric acid w'llch overworks the kidneys in their e'ort to filter it from the blood and they become sort of paralyzed and loggy. When your kidneys get slug gish and clog you must relieve them, like you relieve your bowels; removing all the body's urinous waste, else you have backache, sick headache, dizzy spells; your stomach sours, tongue Is coated, and when the weath er is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of sediment, channels often get sore, water scalds and you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night. Either consult a good, reliable physi cian at once or get from your pharm-J acist about tour ounces or jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of wa- j ter before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine.! This famous salts is made from thej acid of grapes and lemon juice, com-i bined with Uthia, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate , sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize t acids in the urine so it no longer ir-i ritates, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is a life saver for regular meat eaters. It Is Inexpensive, cannot injure and makes a delightful, effervescent lithla-water drink. Advertisement.

' ' ' ' ' 1922 ev hrrx Feature Service. Inc ' 3-2

The Farm and By William R. Perhaps the ladies in our farm homes have overlooked the fact that thin la Prune Week, not merely in Wayne county or in the Richmond dis trict, but national prune weea auu advertised as such in all parts of the country. And how does It come that we are fnvnrpd with a nrune week, in the opening days of Marcn: Ana way prune wees, anyway wnai s grand idea? Well, to befdn with, the California Prune and Apricot Growers, Inc., have j some 11,000 members. They raise, prunes, sell prunes, eat prunes, havej pinned their hopes tl prunes and are anxious to sell a world of prunes at profitable prices. Having both prunes and money they are telling all America about how deliciously good California prunes are. how healthful they are and how economical in use. ; These California co-operators are responsible for the hue and cry about prunes: about their own particular kind and brand of prunes. Time was when these men were just prune growers, in the days when prunes were just prunes, and nothing more. They sold as Individuals to every Tom, Dick and Harry that offered any kind of a price. Today there is a great organization of prune growers which has protected and broadened the prune market, bettered and standardized the grades and instituted an annual prune week. Disease-Free Seed Potatoes There were 225 boys enrolled in potato clubs in Butler county, Pa., last year and for that reason the far mers of the county have already placed orders for ten cars of certified seed. for spring planting. Each boy planted one bushel of potatoes, certified seed from New York, which was planted beside home-grown seed for comparison and to demonstrate the value of disease-free seed. Field meetings were held in August to show difference ana diseases under growing conditions. When the potatoes were dug in October 65 boys secured a 39 per cent increase, as compared with the yields from their father's home-grown seed. Of this increase one-third was attributed to the seed, the balance to better cultural methods. The local farm bureau is anxious to increase the potato yield in this county and are arranging to Import all the seed our farmers may order for that purpose. More than 200 farmers have already placed their orders forcertified, disease-free seed. They "want more and better potatoes for their investment in land and labor. Some of the orders placed with county agent Dolan to be filled by the Wayne coun ty organizations have come in from adjoining counties, notably Henry and Preble The varieties ns?meA to date are Cobblers, Rural New Yorkers and Ohios, the latter leading in demand, , Q Armoui.,86Vlvufi. We like the tone of Mr. Armour's interview as printed by the Chicago Tribune on Tuesday morning. Wo Suburban ' Call Baseball Headquarters, Phone 6299. Do it now. Taxi Service, day or night, 25c. Special rates on Country Drives. 0. E. Thomas, Phone 6091. Whitewater Lodge I. 0. 0. F. Funeral services for Brother John B. Keys; Wednesday evening at 7:15 o'clock. L A. Handley, Sec. Sir Knights Attention All Sir Knights are requested to meet at the Asylum of Richmond Commandery No. 8 K. T. at 12 : 45 p. m. Thursday, in full Templar Uniform to attend the funeral of Sir Knight John'B. Keys. Geo. L. Smith, Em. Com'd'r. H. H. Cowles, Recorder. Attention Moose Meet at club rooms 7:30 p. m. today to attend funeral of Brother John Dolan. Geo. Sheffer, Dictator.

Attention Farmers Bring your Cream to the Wayne Dairy Products Company and get the highest market price. We Test and Pay Cash on Delivery 50 South Sixth Telephone 5238

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the Farmer Sanborn think our readers will also like it, so we are passing it along: 'T am bullish on the United States, and believe we are fast getting back to normal and Europe is improving faster than most people believe," said J. Ogden Armour, who was back from a ten day trip through the east. "The advance in sterling is a bie facto, and I loreign exchange is likely to get bet , v I ter all along. It will be a great help toward business recovery. Europe will take all the grain stuffs we have to sell. Prices recently have been too low, and before the top is reached, they may get too high. Of late people who have bought have had profits after four years of depression, and this creates more confidence. There will be price reactions at times, but they will not go as far as they have heretofore. Corn is worth $1.00 per bushel to feed, based on hogs at $11 or better." . Mr. Rosenwald Assents. Julius Rosenwald, president of the largest mail order concern in th country, told the stockholders at their meeting in New York, on Monday, that "The general advance in prices of farm products Is of fundamental im portance to the general business sit uation. The rise in gram will encourage the farmer to plant more, hecause he is now getting a better re turn on his investment. This will have a beneficial effect on the whole country. Conditions in the mail-order business have improved materially pince the rise in grain began." This reminds us that May wheat at ! Chicago, on Monday, came within b cents of the top one year ago on that date, while May corn actually sold one cent higher at 70V&C. May oats were also at a practical parity wltn me price range a year ago. And Look at Hogs By the same token hogs were higher at Chicago and Indianapolis and in this case that means everywhere, on Monday, than on February 28, 1921. How much higher? The average price on Monday was $10.90, against $9.90 last year, at Chicago, while the top on the day was $11.25. Indianapolis climbed up to $11.50 and Chicago to $11.35 on Tuesday. When we nnd wheat but a few cents below last year's figures, oats on a parity, corn a cent higher and hogs $1 per cwt. over February 28. 1921, prices, we can 1 - . 1 C - 4M.r.lv apprevria.te uu ia.i we uav n uairrcu from the low spots inside of 90 days, Breeders' Gazette Opinion Admittedly a little late, but never theless worth printing, is the editorial comment of Alvin H. Sanders, of the Breeders' Gazette, Chicago. Mr. San ders was among those invited to the agricultural conference at Washington, He didn t go, and what follows is ex planatory of why he stayed at home. His remarks are headlined "More Conversation." "The editor of the Gazette was invit ed to participate in the conference called at Washington to consider ex An itching skin by RESIHOL 5oolhinq nd He&linq You dorit have to waif : One application of this gentle ointment brings heartfelt relief and healing BUY COAL NOW We have the right coal at the right price. Jellico & Pocahontas Lump. ANDERSON & SONS N. W. 3rd & Chestnut Phone 3121 New Spring Styles for People Who Care Beckman & Kreimeier 708 Main UmiininiHiiiniiiiniMiiininiiitiiiiiiniininniiiiiiiHiminnniiiiiiimiiiiiNHittii" ilDr. J. A. Thomson 1 Dentist Murray Theatre Building I Hours: 9-12. 1-5, 7-8: Sunday 9-12 Phone 2930 .mmtmiimnmminmimimminmtimtwiuimiHiiimiiMiiiiiiiiHmitnmmiiii II

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HE JUtT LE.FTDONT TOO LIKE THE. OCSR.

isting agricultural conditions. He is (duly appreciative of the compliment, j but could not see hi3 way clear to atitend. He trusts that something good j will come of it. No one appreciates more thoroughly the unfortunate situ ation prevailing; none can be more sympathetic or more sincerely anxious to serve, but we are going to be per fectly frank about this matter. We believe that hard work, thrift and economy offer the only way out the one absolutely sure way out, and with all due deference to the President, who lent the dignity of his great office to the opening session, we wish to say that the catle and hogs on feed today in the corn belt are doing more for the restoration of prosperity every 24 hours than all 'talk fests' can. accomplish in a year. It has cost a lot of good money to hold all the conferences and committee meetings that have beeji held during the last twelve months, many of which have been little else than post-mortems on the moot question of who it was that really 'killed cock robin' the Kaiser, the Federal Reserve Board, the Board of Trade, the packers, the railroads, the middlemen, the profiteers, or some other satanic agency." What Everybody Knows "There is not an intelligent man, woman or child in America but knows that we are suffering not from some incurable or dangerous internal disease, but from the wound of war gunshot wounds, if you please; and these are to be healed by time and honest, co-operation; not by patent medicines. " "These gatherings afford a fine opportunity for 'conversation' for farm consumption, but does that sort of thing get anywhere? That is the ques tion. Believing that all should prac tice what they preach, and believing that the man who attends to his own business closely these days is the one who is doinjr most for his country, we have saved the price of a Washington ticket and hotel bill and a week's time." Farm Sale Calendar March 2 Morris Pittman, on New Paris pike, just off Middleboro road; public sale, commencing at 1 o clock. Friday, March 3. C. A. Smith and Omer F. Smith, on Frank Hayden farm six miles north west of Hagerstown. General farm sale, at 2:30. Tuesday, March 7 Lew Hinshaw, one-half mile east and one-fourth mile north of Williamsburg. Stock sale. Wednesday, March 8. J. M." Rife and W. J. Faucett on Rife farm 1 miles south of Boston, general clean-up sale. Tomorrow Alriaht Jiignts ionics fresh air, a eood sleep and an Mi Tablet to make your daya better. Nature's Remedy (N? Tablets) exerts a beneficial Influence on the digestive and eliminative system tbe Stomach, Liver and Bowels. Tonight take an hH Tablet its action la so different you wUl be delightfully surprised. Used for nVnr i i ii a i tn uwir Nt JUNIORS Little) Ma One-third tba regular dose. maoe 01 same Ingredients, then candy coated. For children and adulte. Thlstlethwalte's Drug Stores Blatchford Milk Mash For the Chick OMER G. WHELAN The Feed Man 31 & 33 S. 6th St. Phone 1679 niiiiiiiiniiiiittiiiiniuiiiiiHiiiHitiiiiuniraiiiiniiHiiimiHHiiiiitimiiiiiiniiiium ASK FOR 1 Abel's Velvet Ice Cream 1 IT'S DIFFERENT 1 Retail Phone 1901 I Wholesale Phone 1439 1 uiiniiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiinuiuiiiHiiiiininmiitiiHinraiiiiiiiiiMmimiii mmniiiiiajiiiiiHHiHiMiiniiiHiiiHiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiitimiHiiiiiiiiiiiniHiniifflitiniiir lii JOHN H. niewoehneri i'l Sanitary and Heating Engineer l il w" w" Phone 1828 I QUALITY FOOTWEAR for Men, Women and Children OT MAIN mm

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MASON'S CHALLENGE ACCEPTED BY IOWA CHICAGO, 111., March 1. Grain growers of the heavy grain producing states of the middte west continue to join the ranks of the U. S. Grain Growers, Inc., the national farmer-owned grain marketing agency, at the rate cZ more than 2,000 a week, according to field reports received at the' central office in Chicago. "Our chief difficulty in connection with organizatio.i work is that of extending the work fast enough to meet the demands of interested growers," according to Frank XL Meyers, executive eecretary of the association. Accepting the challenge of James K.; A Mason of Milton, Ind., national direc-i tor of the organization, that Indian J would lead all states in membership increases. J. E. Wooters, assistant director of organization in Iowa, has asked Iowa farmer solicitors to set their mark at beating the best performance of the "chesty Hoosiers." New territory is being opened in Iowa in Jasper, Dallas and Franklin coun ties. Everyday Ad-Ventures That Puts The Joy Back Into Life After you've been "sampling" cooks in an effort to replace the best one you ever had, who left town two months ago And you've decided that too many cooks are worse than none at all, and that you'U just try to get along yourself without any more of these disastrous kitchen try-outs And everything goes smoothly for a while and your husband tells you how fine it is to eat some of your good cooking again, but after a couple of weeks of cooking and compliments, you feel a great "Come Out of the Kitchen" urge coming over you And then just when there does not seem to be any escape you happen to think of a. little Help Wanted ad in the Palladium And it turns out to be the best Idea you've had this winter, because within a few days after your ad appears, one of those "perfectly splendid" girls that you didn't know existed any more applies for the position and you take her on and oh, lady That Puts the Joy Back Into Life! (Copyright 1922) albany ocivite McCONAHA'S Phone 1480 This Is a YEAR New Models New Prices BROWER AUTO SALES CO. Studebaker Dealers 21-23 S. 7th St. Phone 6019 Safety Service Security 2nd National Bank fiaaaeaaaaaaaMMMMMMMVsMM The Best Place to Trade , After All AjcKqtiti tmV The Miller-Kemper Co. "Everything to Build Anything" LUMBER MILLWORK BUILDERS' SUPPLIES Phones 3247 and 3347 Collars With No Saw-Edges. Send Them to Home wltfr Laundry Phone 2766 yiiiiiiititiitiiHHiiiuntHin'iiiimiiiiirutniimHiiiintmiitmniniiUiUHiiiiimifi I FORD LENSES j Passed with high record 70c i s per pair 1 WEBB-COLEMAN CO. Opp. Postoffice Phones 1616-16941 MiniHiiiiiHtliiiiiHminiiiiiniiaiHfliimiiEtnuHHiHiitHtiHnmminiuiutnmniff New Patterns in Hall-Mark Shirts, $1.48 up Rapp's Cut Price Co. 525-529 Main St. For REAL COAL PHONE 1178 j MATHER BROS. Co.