Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 160, 7 July 1922 — Page 14

PAGE FOURTEEN

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1922.

Markets

GRAIN PRICES (M?eis by K. F. Inland &. Company, 212 Union National Bank Building) . CHICAGO, 111., July 7 Wheat prices averaged lower today due to generally favorable weather and crop repct3 fro mthe north-west, which offset the heavy rains which are delaying threshing in parts of the southwest. July acted rather light most of the day and"

eai 10 a premium over September, this was due partly to removal of hedges against sales of 550,000 bushels to the seaboard for export. Export business w-as small, the collapse in Continental Exchange being a factor. The northwest markets keep weak, crop reports being favorable and the low temperatures there this morning and indications for cool weather for several days and probably longer. Cash markets one-half to one higher here. Corn was lower with wheat and closed about the low of the day. The bulge seemed to bring out selling and the trade did not put much stock in a report of frost at a point in South Dakota. Export sales on corn were placed at 100,000 bushels. Cash markets steady to one higher. Crop news Is generally favorable.

uats followed other grains, closing at a fraction above the low of the day. Trading in oats was mostly by locals. Cash market steady. RANGE OF FUTURES (Markets by E. F. eland & Company, 212 Union National Bank Building) CHICAGO, July 7. Following is the range of futures on Chicago Board of Trade today:

BRINGING UP FATHER BY McMANUS

"Rs. tr. s. Pat. Off."

' - -.. :

, vj. UTH t)ENT HER. tOlH H.R.. FQ TO TAKE! CARE OF" tHE t OUT WHERE THEX HACVE

1 nriMSlV) OF THEH "

If -N THAT NlM?

iMAAtE- 5 THINK

O FATHER. ttAVE HE. SEriO THE

fat heifers, $77.50; fair to good heifers, J56; choice fat cows, ?45; fair good cows, $34; bologna bulls, 23: butcher hulls u if?) k5-

calves, J6.008.50.

bneep Market steady, $24; lambs J610.

July ....1.13 Sept. ...1.14 Dec. ....1.16

July ... July ... Sept .. Dec. July ... Sept Dec. ...

.85 .63 .66 .66 .36 .38 41

July ...11.05 July ...11.40

Wheat 1.13 1.13 1.13 1.14 1.12 1.13 1.17 1.15 1.15 Rye .85 .84 .84 Corn .63 .63 .63 .67 .66 .66 66 .65 .65 Oats .36 .35 .35 .38 .38 .38 .41 .41 .41 Lard : 11.07 Ribs

(By Associated Press) CLEVELAND, Ohio, July 7. Cattle Receipts. 350 heart: market stoaHv

to strong. Calves Receipts. 300 head; market, strong; choice veal calves, fl0.50ll; fair to good, $68. Sheep and lambs Receipts, light; market, active for choice; slow on common; choice spring lambs, $12 50 13.50; fair to good, $79; good to Choice handv Vfiflrlin?? SSWiffCiin.

good to choice wether sheep. $5.50 6.50; good to choice ewes, 3.505.50; culls, $12. Hogs Receints. Rrin- mov,f m.

higher; Yorkers, pigs, lights, $11.50;

tTr ' 110" roughs, $8.25; stags.

4 lbs. and up 1416; squabs, 11 lbs. j

10 tne aozen, $t; geese, 10 lbs. up, 10 14c; ducks, 4 lbs. and up, 14 15.

T THAT! I , .... , W THW HML-haTT1 HURRAH!

II II I 1 I Hlf.UT V H-T TV II " -1 I It II

HIT f lO OVER mjr TH JANS V o 7 ttAVE HER

y v?J fdfifVSlV. 1 l f7 ,922 8 ,NT l- Fetube Service. Inc. I4-U. !

11 "

EGGS (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, July 7. Eggs Market irregular; receipts 26,970 cases; New Jersey hen whites, extra candle selection, 46c; do uncandled, 39 40c; fresh gathered, extra, 27 29 c; do fresh extra firsts, 24 26c; storage packed, 2324c; Storaea nacked -rtra fi ito VAtTtiVz.-

hen brown, extra, 3639c.

The Farm and the Farmer By William R. Sanborn

11.25

(By Associated Press) CINCINNATI, Ohio. July 7. Wheat No. 2 red, $1.14 1.15; No. 3 red, $1.121.13; other grades as to quality, $1.021.10. Corn No. 2 white, 7070c; No. 3 white, 6969c; No. 4 white, 67 68c. Corn No. 2 yellow, 6969c; No. 3 yellow, 6868c; No. 4 yellow, 66367c. Corn No. 2 mixed, 67 68c. Oats Steady; 3842c. Rye Steady; S687c. Hay, $1420.

(By Associated Press) TOLEDO, Ohio. July 7. Clover seed Prime cash, $13; Dec, $10.90; Oct., $10.90. Alsike Prime cash. $1L75; Aug., $11.40; Oct., $11.15 TimothyPrime cash, $280; Sept, $3; Oct., $2.85. (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, July 7. Wheat No. 2 red, $1.16; No. 2 hard. $1.16.

corn-No. 2 mixed, 6565; No. 2

yeiiow, 64 6o. Oats No. 2 white, 38 44; No. 3 white, 3639. Rye No. 3, 83. Barley 63. ,Ribs $11.0011.75. Pork Nominal. Lard $11.07.

(By Associated Press CINCINNATI. O ti- 7 r;.

Cattle 5o0, hogs 4,100, sheep 7,000.

aine iwarset active and strong; butchers steers, -god to choice $8 $9.50; fair to ennrt 78. i. .v. rn n

ll07'- heifers, good to choice, ?8.509.50; fair to good $6.508.50; common to fair $4 6.50; cows, good to choice $56; fair to good $3.f05; cutters $2.753.25; canners, $1.50 5

au; stock steers $5.506.75; stock

DAYTON PRODUCE DAYTON, Ohio, July 7. Butter and egg market steady; eggs, 23c; butter

(By Associated Press

CHICAGO, July 7. Butter Market,

lower; creamery extras 35; creamery firsts, 3234. Eggs Receipts 15,710 cases; mar-

Kei uncnanged. Live Poultry Market higher; fowls 24: broilers 25 35: ronstsrs

Potatoes Stronger, 30 cars; total

unuea states snipment 509; Eastern Shore Virginia's stave barrelled cars No. 1, $4.90 5.10; Norfolk- section North Carolina stave barrelled Irish Cobblers, $44.10; supply sack stock very scarce, No. 1, no sales reported.

Will Henley, of Lynn, delivered a few loads of 61 pound wheat to the mill at. Lynn, on Thursday. While the wheat Is of fine quality the yield per acre is not large, being estimated at 12 bushels or a little better. According to the miller who weighed it in they are counting on Mr. Henley to deliver around 1,000 bushels from hl3 70 acre crop. The Lynn mill and elevator were navlne SI. 01 for No 9.

red on Thursday and stated that,

while the threshing movement had barely eotten under wav. the fa. r

were offering to sell and they expect-!

ea a iainy iiDerai movement, direct from the machines. The Eikenberry elevator at Camden reports threshing in full swing down that way and the marketing move-

(By Associated Pres3.)

heifers $55.50: tn7v Tr. rti:VA3 on.10- Ju ? 7 .Whole

hulls ctrT. v. 7 " fi. nu uieamery. extra, 3yc. Eggs pui s strong; bologna $45.25: fat Prime firsts 24o- fir -,.. lt

16c. Poultry Broilers, 25 35c; springers, 19c; hens, 22c; turkeys, 35c.

DUllS $0(5 5.2ft milph .Ar0 j

$2o6o; calves, good, $1 higher; good to choice, $910; fair to choice $9) $10; fair to good $89; common and large, $4 6. Hogs Market strong to 5c higher; heavies, $11.25; good to choice packers and butchers. $11.25; medium. $11.2o; stags, $5 5.50; common to choice heaw fat sown 7-a en. i!v

shippers, $11.25; pigs. 110 pounds and

less, $ i (g li. Sheen Market.

choice lights, $4 6.50; fair to good.

$5CX4; common to fair, 50c$1.00; bucks, $23.50.

Lambs Weak. 25 re-nta lnw. j

to choice, $13.50 13.75; seconds, $8

(as; rair to good, $9.50 13.50; skips, $46.

ment well underway. Thi3 elevator took in nearly 4,000 bushels of wheat

on Wednesday and said that a number

when

breeding, and another im

t , , . " I musi uc me nuiy apirety Das been developed by selection, it of God within us. working daily for ine new varieties are Nittany and God and the church. S o?', Mn the iraProved type is! "Critics always have looked upon . Earliana- !the hurch as a pitiable kind of thing. Tar the resu,t of crossing a I existing for charity and not because noJ tomato fcy a small yellow!14 had a mission to fulfill as other infit The result is n unusu- stitutions. But the church is an insti-

trucsuy ana saia that a number r """-"'e variety. The Matchum i luIon, Dunt upon faith, and always is nm aa n r . . IS I) VdC 111 . I .1 ll; . . .

"tt6UU3 were waning to unload 1,1 crossing Hummer bvi "wemng ricniy in God's manifestation zn we called them on Thursday I fi in 1909- " produces a large !of Pwer through the Holy Spirit And ?moon. It was Raid that tV, I mla season CrOD. This no... .- if thpr are anv

. . . : avpracoa , .

.

anernoon. it was said that the wheat! caauu crP. This new tomato

jeceivea was not or prime quality,!""-'"?" "?ariy tfiree Inches in diam Tiinfitlv 0T-Ar?ina XTrt O I - i , ! ftPT. has fw c-, , ...

mostly firradine: No. 3. and the iriolrT

is placed at 10 to 15 bushels. The

-ikenherrys paid up to $1.03 for No.

eter, has few kcoHc aA i -

and pleasant flavor. .

All these varieties are quite resist-

IND1ANAPOLIS HAY (By Associated Press)

INDIANAPOLIS, July 7. Hay

Kei, weas; uncnanged.

LIVE STOCK PRICES INDIAXAPOLIS.- Julv 7. Hogs Receipts, 7.600: higher. Cattle Receipts, .00: unchangred. Calves Receipts, 400; higher. Sheep Receipts. 00; steady. Hosts Top price hoe-s 150 lbs. up$ll 25 Bulk of sales, good hog;s. 11 00W11 20 Good hogs 150 to 180 lb. av 11 lall 25 Good hogs ISO to 210 lb. av 11 10(5?11 15 Good hogs 210 to 240 lb. av 11 Oo'Sll 10 Good hogs 240 to 275 lb. av 11 00f?ll 10 Good hogs 275 lbs 10 SOff ll 00 Yorkers, 140 to 150 lb. av. 11 lSll 25 Good to best sows 11 S5 Common to fair sows .... 8 To 9- 25 .Pigs, according to weight 11 15 down . Ptags, subject to docUage T nnf? S 00 Rales In truck division... 11 1011 25 Range in price year asro.. 9 7510 00 Cattle Quotations Killing steers, 1250 lbs. up Good to. choice 9 50fflo 00 Common to medium 8 so 9 25 Killing steers, 1100 to 1250 lbs. Good to choice 6 50 H 7 75 . Common to medium 7 50 8 50 Killing steers, 1000 to 1100 lbs. Good to choice . . . . : 8 TS 9 50 Common to medium 7 25i5) 8 25 Killing steers, less than 100 lbs. Good to best yearlings ... 8 00 iff 10 00 Common to medium 6 75(7? 7 75 Other yearlings 8 00 8 35 Stockers and feeding cattle Steers, 800 lbs. up 7 00(3 7 50 Steers less than 800 lbs.... 6 50 til 7 25 Heifers medium to good.. 5 Olifi) 6 00 fnws medium t n o-Arr? 1 " r:. a aa

caivos 300 to 000 lbs Female butcher cattle Good to best heifers

Baby beef heifers 8 50 9 25

Common to medium cows. 4 oosv 5 00 Poor to good cutters 3 OO-f? 3 75 Poor to good canners 2 bO'ti! 2 "5 Bulls and calves Good to choice butcher bulls 4 75 if? 6 50 Poor to choice hpavy bulls 4 00 4 50 "Common to good light hulls 4 25 4 75 Common to good bologna bulls 3 75(f?) 4 25 Good to choice veals 9,iOffflO 50 Poor to good cutters 3 25 3 75 Good to choice heavy calves 6 00 6 50 Poor to medium heavy calves B 00 5 50 Common to medium veals 6 00 S 00 Sh-ep and I.ainh Quotation Good to choice light sheep 4 00 5 00 Good to choice heavy sheep 2 50 3 50 Common to medium sheep 1 00 2 00 Good to choice yearling sheep 6 00 8 00 Common to medium year- . ling sheep 4 00 5 00 rood to best heavy lambs 9 no-fi 10 00 Fair to good mixed lambs 9 00 10 no All other lambs 6 00 8 50 Rucks. 100 lbs 3 OOJii 4 00 spring lambs 16 00 down Good to choice spring lambs .. . . 1A nni! aa

............... V'M.AO vj Common to medium spring lambs 7 0012 00 Assorted light lambs.... 11 0012 00 Good to choice spring lambs 12 50S13 50

00g 8 00

7 00 8 50 6 00 7 00

(By Associated Press) CHICAGO. Julv 7. Cattio innn-

market active: beef steers strong, ma.

lurea Deer steers $10.80; bulk beef

sieers $8.70 9.80; she stock firm; bulls 25 higher; veal calves strong to higher; etockers dull; bulk beef cows and heifers $5.257.50; canners and cutters $2.903.75; bulk bologna bulls around $5, with best heavy sausage bulls at $5.25; bulk vealers early $9 9.50. Hogs 20,000, steady to strong with Thursday's best time, 5 to 10 higher than the average; top $11; bulk gooa butchers $10.5010.95; pigs 15 to 25 lower; mostly $9.2o9.75; heavyweight hogs $10.50 10.70; medium $10.60 10.95; light $10.90; light, $10.80; packing sows smiwh ts r?i

iHiJ??' s-358.90; killing pigs.

Sheep 15,000, including 9,600 direct

iu yagers; marKet firm, short back native lambs, $14 : to clty bu'ehers packer top $13.75; straight culls native mostly $7.50 8; best fat California lambs $12.50; fat ewes, mostly $5.55 U 7.00.

NEW YORK STOCKS (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, July 7. Close American Can 49 Am. Smelting 624 Anaconda 532 Atchison 101 Baldwin Locomotive 115 Bethlehem Steel, B 76 Central Leather qciV

Chesapeake and Ohio fissi

. rt. 1. ana t'acinc 441 Chino Copper 70 Crucible Steel

General Motors

. j . t . -

vruouricn iires 39 Mexican .Petroleum 162 Va New York Central 96 Pennsylvania 441,3 Reading 75 Republic Iron and Steel 72 Sinclair Oil 35 Southern Pacific 90 Southern Railroad 25 Stude baker 13414 Union Pacific 141 Vs U. S. Rubber 63 H U. S. Steel 99 Utah Copper 64(3

DULL WOOL MARKET SHOWN THIS WEEK (By Associated Press) BOSTON, Mass.. July 7. The Com

mercial Bulletin tomorrow will say:

"Mid-year dullness, together with an

extended holiday and adverse weather conditions, made a very dull market for wool, although prices have shown very little change for the week. The mills are getting samples for the lightweight season, which is expected to be opened some time this month, although the markets are nat

urally concerned over the probable contents of the new wool tariff and

may delay opening on that account.

lhe Liverpool colonial market is slightly under the London close on Merinos, while Australia has been fairly firm. In our own markets there has been onlv a desultory business on

about the basis of last week's values."

2 on Wednesday and at lnst n 'ant to disease.

noon on Thursday. The drop at Chi-j vft y?ar in the college gardens the

v.-aBO oeiore me ciose on Thursday; iejaea almost fifteen and'wmcn IE1S ever blessed stream might maw h9VO lnnrMJ .V '. I One-half ti-.no .1. - - I flrt..r Ha W .

" """ r,ncu lucir price on r n- u me acre. The aver- a ,esl"t 01 nis coming to day morning, but as to that flrv nrt ! ' yield Of Matchum fny u . i the church on Ppntprncf tlinri -n.A

day morning, but as to that we are not

aavisea. Our inauirv develnnpd the f.f

the Camden farmers seem inclined to

age yield of Matchum for n

UnJtTT0t its development was just fifteen tons, and in eight years

riiii 1 x 1 a 1. n

- 1 iiif m rmrx

said

LIBERTY BONDS (By Associated Press.) NEW YORK, July 7 Final prices on Liberty bonds today were: 5. $100.00

lrs 100 38

second 44 100.36

Ilira 4 100.14

Fourth 414 100.I6

victory 4 100 52

WEEK OF

(Continued from I-age One.) discharged 61 strikers who had been appointed as special police. At Wichita, Kas., 50 stationary firemen and oilers joined the strike. A small number of shopmen employed by the Chicago, Peoria and St. Louis railroad at Alton, 111., returned to work.

Striking shopmen of the Dakota di

Roll at nn i thirteen tnA 41 . d'tiagcu

. vuk., iaiUn man 10 noiu. n luije-quarter tons per looks as if very few of our farmers ex- j f crf- The average yield of tomatoes

, oerween rive and six tons per acre, and that for the better class of market gardners is about ten tons. .Feeding Cows in Summer v Ds some of the ew tricks summer feeding of cattle, f- YH Ve able t0 add several dollars to their milk rheiro o.u

It is not an easy job to bring a herd of dairy cows through the summer in good condition and keep the milk flow

.-u normal, especially after the

Biass, Degms to get short. , It commonly happens that the dairy cow is allowed to graze on a poor pasture, without grain or si.'age; she becomes thin, the milk flow falls low profits, if any. are low, and the cow condition. C. S. Rhodes of the University of Illinois dairy denartmnnt c,

many dairymen at this time are feed-

lu. ."Jge- rain. or both, and find that it pays. Feedine cows now xHii

pay even more next winter. The following grain mixture, he says, may be fed at the rate of onpound to every three and a half to five pounds of milk produced a day, depending on the amount of mi!k produced and the condition of the cow; Corn five parts; oats or bran, two parts

o"u uifni, one part.

pect to put their grain in store,

tne party answering the phone. Not Threshing at Modoc "We do not expect to begin threshing around Modoc until the middle of next week," was the report from the manager of the elevator at that point, on Friday mornine. He further stated

that none of the farmers seem anxious to sell in advance of the output from the machines, nor had he yet bought a single crop on contract. "Practically all our wheat is testing No. 2 red," said Mr. Schlientz, manager of the Farmers' Equity elevator at Eaton. The yield is not extra large." said he, "but the quality is very satisfactory, so far as our receipts to date show. We have taken in over 3,000 bushels and have contracted for several crops to come" in as threshed. All the threshing rigs now seem to be in action and we expect a liberal movement to market, right from the machines. Our top purchases were made at $1.02, early, but our present price is $1 per bushel, owing to the break at market centers, on Thurs

day." said Mr. Schlientz. He also stated that the present tendency was toward immediate sales, rather than

to hold to await market developments.

Lively Buying at Milton Manager Stone, of the Milton Grain

company, with elevators at Milton, Beeson's Station and Rentnnvillo

states that threshing has been pretty

lively in his domain all week and that

if there are any semblances of weak

ness, or lr our hope is becoming despair, it is because the Holy Spirit of Jesus Christ is taken out of our program. The Holy Spirit of Jesus is the power we need, with our human faculties and powers, the channel in which this ever blessed stream might

now. as a result or His coming to the church on Pentecost tho --.

re-dating of history, the reorganization of society, and a church, 'not of color or denomination, but a church of power. For Spiritual Results ? "It is the purpose and plan of God to educate His people away from the externals of this life. In the midst of a voiceful era, this fact is clearlv seen in our day. Some of us are looking for externals, miracles of healing and other awe-inciting things, and just so long as we run hither and thither looking for signs and wonders, other than the Holy Spirit of Jesus,

we v,ia De susceptible to every bait the devil may choose to throw our. If we want to see great manifestations of Godly power, and miracles, let us 'work through the Spirit of Jpsus' that men might become converged, as the greatest and most important miracle today is making men new creatures in Christ Jesus. The presence of the Holy Spirit in the world today means that there is a power divine working for spiritual results, delivering souls from the thralldom of the sensuous, scattering the fog tanks which shut out spiritual realities, regenerating human society, and making things new by giving the Holy Spirit of Jesus the right of way to change the existing orders. Co-operation With Spirit "To meet the demands of the dav we have tried to institutionalize thV church into power. But we have utterly failed. We also have trifd to gormandize the church with power

(By Associated Press) PITTSBURGH. Pa Tnl

Receipts, l.oOO; market higher; heavies, $11.2511.35; heavy Yorkers $11.7511.S5; light Yorkers, $11.75fi)'

ii.ao-, pigs, 511.o05ff 1.70.

sheep and Lambs Rccoints ocn.

market steady; top sheep, $6.00; ton lambs, $13.75.

Calves Receints. 150!

er; top, $7.95.

(By Associated Press) EAST BUFFALO. .Tnlv 7rM

xveceipis, iza; market, steady to strong; calves, receipts, 8,000; $1150 Hogs Receipts, 4.000: steady to 55c

nisher: heaw. Sll. 25fffcii 35 rr.,--

$10.3511.60; Yorkers, $11.50i.75;'

ugnt 1 oncers and pigs, $11.751180: roughs, $9S-925; stags, $56 Sheep

Koceipts, t00; Iambs and wethers 25c higher; others. 50c higher; lambs' $614.25; yearlings, $510; wethers, $7.507.75; ewes, $26.50; mixed sheep, $6.507.

RICHMOND MARKETS (Furnished by Whelan)

BUYING Oats, 35c; rye, 75c; corn, 60c; straw, $10.00 per ton. SELLING Oil meal, per ton, $63.00, per hundredweight, $3.25. Tankage, 60 per cent. $67.00 per ton; per cwt.. $3.50. Barrel salt. $3.25. Standard middllngs, $30.00 per ton; $1.60 per cwt. Bran, per ton, $28.00; per cwt, $1.50: Cottonseed meal, per ton, $64.00; per cwt., $3.25.

LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Richmond flour mills are paying $1 for new No. 2 wheat.

thev had housrht f nmi hnehoi

more, since Monday noon. "The graTn une and July the often' "hntn0UH tdelivt!redC I , neglected the most, and Lcordfng o but wdl hf as fat a t'nraahaA " II. nt nu-J. it . uul LU

.vj. .,11. i,,,. Auwes, me regular niilkine dp. ??I1W ,7rSaZ...afternn riods ould be adhfred to as cloX

UU,1UU6 tuupuipu ui ine uaxoia ai-i""- t-iu x, musuy. so iar, as possible because anv -,", vision of the Great Northern offered ! b"t might lower his price to 98c on change in the management nf lJt to volunteer their services without! Friday, depending on the trend of cattle usually results in dPPrIS pay in anv casp. where lr nf Ufa w.r-ices at centraT markets ti-VuV. -co .,n. j...., 111 "greased

- . . ' . ( - - ...... juijjv jn uuucnon wrecks or by fire is threatened. weak on Thursday. He reports the

Announcements hv the I'nlnn Pq.i hPSt crnn vet hoard nc n.nntn. on 1 m, .

i pJLtn Tn nr rii i rn

systems that pensions and seniority ! crop so far threshed as bein 12U 1 IU ' tLi-Lj

righto Ti..rtiiirt ..f i .1 1 ! V .. T T t nA , . .

uu?uei. me ju-Dusnei crop was grown by Marshall Hughes. Mr. Stone says that the wheat threshed around Beeson's Station ran at 5S to 60

pounds, while in the Milton neighbor

j... j ' . r . f.uiiuauuup ine cnurcn with nower ixng days in m dsnmnoi. .. 1 v,.- . . u P"wer,

iduea. Ana we have tried to organ

ise iur tnurcn into action

. , ....... o-uvi-ule, especially when the heavy load of the harvesting season is on and crops are to be cultivated. During

rights would be forfeited unless the

men returned to work immediately were greeted by jeers from strikers at their meetings. In Illinois, state t

nalviiip aSan ,Decatur Champaign, hood a lot of the grain is testing about Danville and Delavan were ordered to 157 pounds

in readiness for

hold themselves

strike duty.

Additional wage adjustment cases

cent decisions were set fnr tirino

by the railroad labor board todav.

Reports a 23-Bushel Cron

The Hagerstown flour mill has been paying $l per bushel for wheat test-

WASHINGTON, D. C, July 7. Postoffice officials today said that no further reports concerning interference with the movement of United States

man trains by striding railroad work

WITH HOLY SPIRIT

John H. Perry, pastor of Mt. Mo

nan Baptist chm-rh

kKuaiu

on

"And they were all (the church) filled with the Holy Spirit' Acts 4:31 said:

DAYTON MARKET Corrected by Schaffer's Commission Company, Dayton, Ohio. Ee!l Phone 4060. Home Phone 81262 DAYTON, Ohio, July 7. Hogs Receipts, five cars; market 15c higher; choice heavies, $11; butchers and packers, $11; heavy Yorkers, $11; light i'orkers, $11; choice sows, $85?8.50; common to fair, $7.508; stags, $45; pigs, $10.5011. Cattle Receipts, nine cars; market lflWPr " rhrtlro ctcnn tCC Cn- anrA tn

f hnlr a hutrhpr itaorc 7 Q f.i n a,,vi Ai0 o n 7 a ( . n . .

- . . . - . i i o , ion ... juuug iuui3, uu-iuu, CVUUS, O O L 1 WC , good butcher steers, $77.50; choice young hens, S-14 lbs., 3040c; ducks.

WINCHESTER MARKET WINCHESTER. Ind., July 7. Corrected daily by the Winchester Union Stockyards company. Hogs ReceiDts. four

15c higher; light Yorkers, 140 to 160 lbs., $10.90; heavy Yorkers, 160 to 180 lbs., $10.90; Yorkers, 180 to 220 lbs SIO-SOIOO: medium, 220 to 240 lbs, $1080; heavies, 240 to 300 lbs., $10.65 10.80; 300 lbs. and over, $10.65; pigs, 140 lbs. down. $910.90; roughs, $8 8.25; stags, 80 lbs. dock, $5.506. Cattle Good to choice steers, $7.50 8.00; fair to good, $67; good to choice heifers, $5.507.50; choice cows, $4.505; fair to good cows, $3 4; canners and cutters, $23. Calves Choice calves, $9.50; common calves, $78; culls, $6, down.

bheep bpnng lambs, $10.50; yearlingc, $7; choice sheep, $3; common to

good, i.!U!3;2.uu; bucks, $1.502.00. PRODUCE MARKET (By Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS, July 7. ButterFresh prints, 3538c; packing stock. 1516c. Eggs 1820c. Fowls Jobbers buying prices for packing stock delivered in Indlananolis. 1518c: snrine-era. W.tRithf

fowls, 20c; springers (1922), 2834c;

broilers. 4&c; roosters, lll3c; stags,

llQlZc; turkeys, old toms. 2523c;

LOCAL HAY MARKET Steady: eond timnthv SIR

clover. $16; heavy mixed. $16.

PRODUCE BUYING Country butter, 2530c lb., eggs 18 19c dozen; hens, 1618c per lb., depending upon lhe buyer. Fryers,

weigning z pounds, 25c per lb. Leg horn fryers, 20c per pound.

BUTTER QUOTATIONS The wholesale price of creamery butter is 39c a pound.

FAMILY MARKET BASKET Fruits and Berries New apples, 1015c lb.; new peaches, 10 to 12c lb.; red raspberries, 60c quart box; black raspberries, 30c box; dewberries, 35c box; blackberries, 25c a box; gooseberries, 25c a box; red cherries, 25c a box; California oxheart cherries, 60c a lb.; California apricots and plums, 40c lb.; bananas, 10c lb.; oranges, 30 to 60c a dozen; lemons. 40c a dozen: watermelons

cantaloupe, 1015c; California Honeydew melons, 75c; red currants, 30c a box. Vegetables

Egg plant, 25c lb.; green beans, 10c to 15c lb.; sweet potatoes, 10c lb.; leaf lettuce, 15c lb.; home grown cabbage, 8c lb.; southern cabbage, 5c lb.; home grown tomatoes, 2025c lb.; southern stock. 10 to 15c lb.; new beets, 5c a bunch; green onions, 3 bunches for ipe; dry onions, lflc lb.; new potatoes, 6 lbs. for 25c; new peas, 1520c lb.; radishes. 3 bunches for 10c; carrots, 5c a bunch; green peppers, 6. for 25c; cauliflower. 40c lb.; hothouse cucumbers, 15c each; small home grown, 5c.

not inpindpd V C i per Dusnei ior wneat test ??!i1D,cl"dfd m those covered by re-'mg 5S pounds. Thev claim the m,.i

l rill llHf'l k'nn c ti- Ct-n r- .. 1 . , . - ,

lty or the wheat coming in i3 satisfactory but say the yield is irregular. The best crop so far reported at the mill threshed out 23 bushels to the acre. The marketing of grain has just fairly begun in the Hagerstown district.

ers had been reported a, ""''W A:orner .milIlDS com-

strikers attemoted to hinder th- mvjf,?n7 f pa-ying ?1 for whfat and ?ay,uon. which always is t!

ment of mail trains t. T,,jet- j nai ine Iarmers are selling rather : cnurch. St. Paul said: 'I can do all V..?. , 111311 trains in Louisiana and i frpelv at that nri Thrhs- Jthin th,, v... J ?a.. ali

Strike disturbances of Chassee and!lUrl!.S, show,ae of fro to 15 eth me.' 'Not by might, nor bv power, Slater, Mo., whfch threatened to re'-i f ."fl1 h,-ta that 11 m sa"h the LoVd of!

tard mail fnr j , . ur auuui i.ue average run the 6?llZtSZZa 1J?;So!l??i,ld::for the district, so t as threshing "We may have

Kern, of the St. Louis and San Francisco railroad appealed to the governor of Missouri and the officials of the county in which the towns are located to prevent further trouble. In several Missouri towns some delay in mail train movement was due to general strike conditions, but only tWO cases Of actual inlorforon

. ... . v. iv- nuu . mail trans had hocn ron,(j il

Marshall, Texas, and the other at De Quincey, La.

V,.

- u""". ulil W

nave uueny failed in our organizing power. And now we are trying to psychologize the church into power and in this we shall utterly fail We must have the -spirit of the Chris through the Holy Spirit in the whee! -to make the church move with power Let us be filled, 'not with denomiTktion, but with the spirit of Jesus, and have a great vision of our dav and present the fullest measure of service. And this can be done onlv when we are spirit-filled Christians. That spirit whose mission is to carrv forward the teaching which Jesus began a gracious, invisible influence, waking into activity" all our dormant spiritual energies, makine- thp hrt -.

cePue or an truth and fruitful of all

uuiui Ul till good deeds, like the warm rays of sun which cause the planted seed to r,-rtn- nnJV..J .1.

"Ac tk. tti o -i . auu uuu nu Diossorn into fruitAs the Holy Spirit was the sourc' ' of prophetic inspiration, so He is to-! "' """"""""""""""",""""""",""""""HHii.MmB.i S V.bte tlnspirr of every Christian.! GRAIN BAGS FOR SALE I In fact, the onlv onerat vp rhricHor, i ..i f

force in the world today is the Holy! I 20 25c, 30c

opuit. ine saving efficiencv of thels gospel is in the power of the Holyfi Spirit. This truth is in thn

' f.ndw Hi,s disciples with - -...,....,...,,..,., j power tor their work of evansreliza-. "

tion. which always is the work of the

OMER G. WHET.AV I

31-33 S. 6th St. Pkon 1R75 I

returns up to Thursday indicated. .'finely equipped with ail the modern I

iinptuvc 1 luv-inuci v . UUL it caunoi move itsel

. vjv.v v uii 1 uwu o jji pt-niii spirit it is July 5 states that Russia's 1922 grain i so much dead weight. We mar have

jr

1 ."5"a i w .

k-a JK-Mist as ar--ca 'if -saw

w

L.ONG-L.F-ET

F. LEE, 8 S. 7th St., Richmond j

crops are immensely larger than were harvested last. vear. According

to estimates the bread crops will

heads that have been enninnert -;tH

all science, philosophy and art, but

wmiuui me noiy spirit of God, the

REALTY TRANSFERS Hannah M. Pierce to Howard Hockett and Edith, $1,000, lot 2 Cowgill's addition Fountain f!itv

. J ' v-ju oico. x ue mhivs rnvprpn n m

Benjamin F. Harris, administrator, New York, 25.580 acres; Wisconsin Emory C. Hobbs and Ella J.. Ji m T Rnn Doria. r-i. A c V i!conr.n

Mystery Surrounds Identity Of Brave Young Woman MIAMI. Fla., July 7. Mystery surrounded the identity today of the fashionably dressed young woman who last night leaped into Busecayne bay from her motor car, and with the later aid of a street car moterman, rescued from drowning

automobile two men whose machine she had seen leave the road and dive into the bay ahead of her. Kenneth Burroughs and Douglas Gibbons were the two men rescued, hut efforts

discover the name of the young woman, who drove away in her car as quickly as she had jumped to the rescue, after the men had been dragged out, were unavailing. 54,770 Acres Planted To Late Cabbage, Report (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, July 7. A forecast of 54,770 acres planted to late commercial cabbage in "seven prominent states" was announced today by the department of agriculture as of July 1. Acreage harvested last year was Ai.

580 acres. The states covprpd n,4

' lu. viwyo Willi ' ' ' 1 l. me iiJiy opilll. Ol IjOO, th reach a minimum rf ?;nn nnn iwui Pathor nf oil ,..-,i.,- j

..... ..... v. vwv . - ....... vi mi ludiiAiuu, we are nn v

poods (63,000,000 tons), or 1,000,000,- on lowerground. Our one gift of u!-'

vvu iiuuus more man tnose of last year, acting Premier Kameneff told. Jhe correspondent today. From practically all sections of I Russia, except the north, reports are!

pouring into Moscow showing thai

Buy a FORD and Spend the

Difference

to Emory C. Hobbs and Ella J., $1,225, S. W. 8-15-14. Herman F. Prrlifrlr tn Rnhort n

Schuerman and Florence, $1, lot 323 O. map city.

.

12,500 acres; Colorado, 5.800 acres; the southwestern section nf

acre; Pennsylvania, 3,190 acres; Min nesota, 2,810 acres, and Oregon, 1 090 acres.

the grain is flourishing in ideal weather beyond the fondest hopes of early spring. If the yield is as large as expected it probably will be Russia's greatest crop since the war. What Culling Tests Proved In Knox County, Ind., half the number of flocks of hens culled under the supervision of the county agent, were standard bred and the Othpr half mir.

J ed breeds, so their comparative merits 1 jt .n 1 A V 1 j - 1 . .

v-uuiu ue cunsiuerea inrougn culling. The 9 standard bred flocks numbered 1,087. while the 9 of mixfxl fWUs

numbered 1,103, or 16 more hens. The 1

ween Before culling, the standard bred 1

uens iaia z.yuo eggs and the mixed breeds 2,547, or 352 less. In culling, 314 standard bred and 355 mongrel hens were removed from the flocks, leaving 773 standard bred and 733 mongrels, or 35 more standard breds. Two owners of the standard bred flocks, being breeders, culled much

cioser man the owners of the mixed1 flocks. The week after culling the! standard bred hen3 laid 2,724 and thei mongrels 2,433 eggs. j The figures show that among the, 1.087 standard bred hens there were! 41 less culls than among the 1,103 ofi the mixed flocks, and that the- Taii I

359 more eggs the week before cull-!

ing and zai more the week after. New Types of Tomatoes Two entirely new varieties of toma to have been develoned at PennsvH-a.

nia State College as a result of cross J

WEBB-COLEMAN CO. Opp. Postoffice Phones 1616-1694

Lowest Prices in Town on

Rugs and Furniture Easy Payments

Guttman Furniture Co.

-I I-

-none oieo i

1 -M'M'M w t.m

405-407 Main

iMiiiimmmiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiimHitnBiiHH,,,,,,,,,,, j 11 , wmr . . . . i

I men s nork Shirts and Over-1 j alls, Special 95c 1 I WHEN STORE, 712 Main fiHiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiniiiiii1ni,,,,,,,,,,m1l,ll,llHlmI1lllllllll1I111I1)Ilmiliiim

gHmiiiiiiiuuiiiiiiiisHtmiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiMiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiuimitiiimiiiiiiiiiHmi

TRACY'S

Friday 8c Saturday Specials I I WILL SAVE YOU MONEY f """"""""""" '"""iiimi MiiimiiiiiiiiiHiiuiniimniiiiiMitiiiiiHmiiiiiinl

SPECIAL at VIGRAN'S'

Serpentine Crepe Kimonos Special $1.00 AMGRAN'Q Ladies' Shop' O

PHONE 2766

Let Us Do Your Washing

Home waw Laundr

v

Place Picnic Orders for Bakery Goods Early

ZWISSLER'S

Bakery Phone 1654

Restaurant Phone 165f