Richmond Palladium (Daily), 18 October 1904 — Page 3

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CCNOLLENBE

tore

THE BUSY

STORE

ANY BUSINESS must be done designs at REASONABLE PR!

in a BUSINESS LIKE WAY. Our way is to sell only the BEST GOODS in the

ii-very department is crowded to its fullest capacity, and new goods arriving daily.

Of course you will want come Winter Underwear, and we want to supply your wants. Here are a few things for ycur consideration: Ladies'fleeced cotton Vests and Pants, QJJ Ladies' fleeced cotton Union Suits, gQ QJ Men's heavy fleeced Shirts and Drawers, jjQ QJg Men's medium weight Shirts and Draw- CO rtTQ ers, each JU U I 0 Also a full line of Woolen Underwear in Union Suits and Separate Garments. We are sole agents for the Famous f MERODE " Underwear, in Cotton and Wool, for men. women and children. For comfort and service they have no equal. Full line of men's Work Cloves, 10c to $1.50 a pair Men's Leather Mittens at 25c to 50c a pair

Watch our show windows for displays of seasonable merch'se

LATEST STYLES and newest

Get into line for Knollenberg's

LADIES' TAILOR-MADE SUITS

A complete line of the new and nobby makes in a vast array of colors and fabrics, and at absolutely correct prices. LADIES' TWO-PiECE SHIRT WAIST SUITS in SILK and WOOL. They are very stylish, well made and in the most desirable colors. OUR prices ae reasonable Large and complete line of ladies' and misses' WALKING SKIRTS. A great variety of colors, figures and stripes. For rainy days the CRAVENETTE COATS are the thing. These garments are made for service and comprise both quality and style. See them on second floor LargSEEnW INii EaStern Indiana' See them hi purchasing. , OUR DRESS GOODS DEPARTMENT is a veritable "FAIRYLAND " displaying as it does the most beautiful things in Silk and Wool fabrics Suits. ' WPbTe tLyfyrd ofly 35 champ1 ta rs. also in white for Waists or Beautiful line of Fancy Silk, the most desirable shades, prices right. Full and comnlete lin nf blaMr o i Wool Goods. See the new mannish effec:s. Our liue is superb. complete Une of black and color, d Cravenette Rain Proof Clotb for Coats, in oxford, grey and tan shades. Prepare for a rainy day while the sun shines..

WE ARE READY and will help you get ready for winter.

Blankets

Blankets

Stacks of them 60c to $12 a pair Beautiful line of COMFORTS in WOOL and Cotton fillings with pretty and serviceable coverings. PRICES REASONABLE

The Geo. H. Koollenberg Co.

Always welcome to look, wait or rest

( U A in

I MMaMMBaaa

PNEUMONIA AND

BERN LIFE

MO

DR. ALBERT HALE.... Assistant Professor of Opht hnlmolonv, Kush MtMllc'Hl College, Extra mural.

1 (Chicago Tribune' 'October 10.) not only ;m attonqit lo keep in e f That, pneumonia is . steiulily on tlie from catarrh Imt also a frequent

ierease, and that its proMortion of Morality has by no m.;ans been diMnishod ; by any of the nisto;ads

lancing 5-cience, are statement; eas-

preveution

tidies or

aware

wash with some antiseptic gargle and spray, used a5 otic- might use so.ip mul water for the body and ha.uds. Doctors (leVi-'ht in civimr such .(i r

y 0 . , - . ' 0 ' Iv c'oXifinned)v anv one who cares . advice as this: Do not urv. av-IJ

h follow Jjie anedieal discussions of physical and menial exhaustion, a lie 'day,.::.'Why- tins) is ;so.:iay; be ex-" well as unlue .;. sure to inclement jained by others of " the wise ones" , weather, and .) ncj, rateh. cold.

ill Avnai jineumoitia many is, as weu -m.u ; , n uc.ii jii ireneran ie. . hov to lirvent. its snrond. one-lit to and how hard to follow thorn! W.

h a matter of more common knowl- cannot all or always rest Avhen we flge. , : are weary, nor stay at home when it I The individual is more interested is wet or cold, and is there any ray

ttion than in, laboratory, to ward on, or ai least to reduce , r statistics, but he should a minimum, that source of all evil, nf tlia fnnf tlmf h nsnallv "catcbinr cold ?"' Ts tberp nnvibin-

rnes i.nout witti him a tew germs in roouern Hie win h mkes, the viet.-m ihr disease, rind if 'tbese nnnmoe- of civilization mere suseentiblf to a

ci are harmless enougrh.on the heal- sneeze and the running at the nose

y mucous membranes ot the mouth winch we think is part and parcel of id throat, it is not wise to treat us? I say modern life and civilizaem with seorn, for they await only tion intentionally, because we kuow favorable opportunity to creep in- that the Eskimo has one, if no other, the'lunjis and to start the blood advantage over us he rarely has inner into that febrile and danger- pneumonia, so long as he keeps to his fs state called acute croupous, or frozen north, but once let him beJbar pneumonia. Pneumonia, is come civilized, that is, put on our

"erefore, an infectious disease, in clothes, live in a city, or, probably iich the individual may infect him- worst of all, shut himself within four If or bocome infected by a specific walls, where ventilation is neglected rm ; but there is the difference, and where the cold without is excesflt in a typical infectious disease the sive compared to the heat within, he Vm must be transmitted from one gets chills,he has pneumonia, and usurson to another who may be in the ally he dies, because his lungs have st of health and offer reasonable not acquired resistance, or his blor! ustane to the invasion, while in has not learned to develop the kind feumoaia the individual is almost of stuff that kills the cerms or des-

,?vays exposed' to the germ, which troys their' poison. ftst wait till some depressing influ- We know from history, too, that res disturb resistance in the poor ' , , . . , ; . ' , . , the handkerchief, as a necessity slow, so that this germ mav thrive , , in

the desire.-. - ; . .. , . l i thing oi compartively recent inven-

ietucai sciencQ would jikc, , or lion, ana mat wuen our aristocratic ti-se, t find' some jositive way of ancestors three or four hundred years fating pneumonia, a'nd it is not at ago ate with their fingers, slept with impossible that a serum such as . their clothes on, and kept warm in

t nowaday called antitoxin ; for winter before a draftv, open fireplace,

( I do not try to prove by statistics that the crowded city life is more dangerous so far as this particular disease is concerned, nor that dwellers in our flats and office buildings are easier pray to this disease, but it cannot be' doubted that this one factor of modern life makes us more susceptible to pneumonia, and that if we hail a purer atmos there, kept our skin at a more uniform tempera

ture, did not, in search of comfort, heat our houses too much, while at the same time drying out of them the moisture present, in respirable air , the deadly increase of pneumonia .might be checked.

IMT

Quotations change-

December May

From O. G. Murray's Ex--Closing Prices Chicago Market.

ooooooooiio;;ooo"oooo

o

o

0

Wheat.

' There is more Catarrh in this

'section of the country than all oth

'or diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be

incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and

by constantly failing to cure with

local treatment, pronounced it incur

able. Science has proven catarrh to

be a constitutional disease and therefore reoniren conftt unisonal treat

ment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufac

tured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo,

O., is the only constitutional cure on

market. It is taken internally in

doeses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful It acts directly on the blood and mu

cous surfaces of the system. They

offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address, J. F. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by druggists 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best

ibatiig diphtheria may be devel- they" did not have to blow their noses jpd, so that the disease can be throt" In other words, they didn't need fl, so to speak, in a specific way; handkerchiefs, because they didn't so I even then prevention has its often catch cold. Jssiiiirs, and he who learns to take There is a lesson in this, of course, e of himspf so as not to catch but I question whether we can learn VimAiiio mav lrmoli of nntitovine it vpt AVifli nil llin pnmfnt-tc nf mrwl

jl germs. At present he is much ern living we introduce too much liin .If V iY1nfoi2 ha lenpndrmcn im lnvnrv wj cnodli mn- hn.Hoc tnf At

VI ,L .'1. .-.1V' .-- ..'v,v.m.v ' , , ' ' . V. V'VIl "flit Vt' I such treasures as serums, but not take the best care to toughen kes up his mind to avoid the dis- them, and one of the most harmful f altogether, for, with a good, conditions under which Ave Americans fk attack, there is one chance out place ourselves is in that of artifi"five thai he will yield completely cializing our atmosphere. We could the disease and die. wear what thick or thin' clothein.r

pertain climates are, perhaps, less seemed to suit us best if Ave did not oiabV to the spread of pneumonia, change our temperature and propor-

I tin is finest tunable, because ..ens- tionai moisture so violently. e j and habit in a people greatly; could .stand the cold better if Ave did Tlifv '.he infectiousness of the dis-' not have so nmch heat. We sit and 4. It is shocking to say so, but steAV in i steam heated houe, Ave icco rmoke has an inhibitive ac- shut the AvindoAvs to keep out the

'i on tiie germ, ami cigaret smokers itraught Uhai's all riglit it Ave lound 'e been knevn to keep their some other way of admitting fresh nits free from cretins thereby, in air and natural moisture); we ?ty contrast to ,'iose friends avIio breathe impurities incessantly, and

i voted, these vegetable miero-or- then with neither the skin nor lungs isms instead of the weed. Far be ready for the change which must be

om nv to encourage the use ot to atelite hrtAvbe maderuze,asgcqu arhr ?o, but, I throw this in f.'n- thos.- made, AAe rush out of doors, drive

Avish support in contitming at the blood imvard (that's a nice, popIt one redeeming -'vice. FimI.m:1-- ular jdtrase), quicken into ucav life I a better way to subdue too ! i. all those germs that do not belong on his a groAvth.of germs is by per- the mucous membrane. Ave catch a flit care-of the- teeth, cleanliness cold, and some of us experience pneuie nose and throat, which means monia.

ARTHUR F. REED. Frank I Reed, after meeting Col.

II. T. Keed and Avife at St. Louis, re'turned yesterday from St. Louis j bringing with him the body of his brother, Arthur F. Reed, Avho died last Wednesday in St. Louis AArhere he had lived for the past thirty-four years. The burial Avas in Earlham Cemeterey, two o'clock Sunday afternoon. Dr. I. M. Hughes officiating.

Arthur F. Reed was born in Rich mond April 1st, 1837, aged 67 years

lie spent two years as a cadet at West Point Military Academy, after

Avluch he lived Avith his uncle. Hugh

P. Reed of Fort Wayne until the breaking out of the Civil War. He

was a captain in the 12th Indiana

Volunteers and later promoted to

Lieut. Colonel in the 40th United States regulars. , - He leaves a Avidow (no children) avIio AA'as unable to accompany the remains oAving to her own impaired health.

December Mav ....

December May October . January

Corn.

Oats.

Pork.

.113 1124 ,112 111' 40 43 j 2S 2S54 ! 30 V2 30 I

R. R. R. Lunch Room. 825 NORTH E ST. L M. HAYS- Prop. MEALS 15 CENTS.

O

Lard.

January . October .

10.72 12.25 7.20 7.55

10.05 12.10

7.07 7.45

OOOOSDIIO

3

o o

o

ooo

Receipts, hogs 35000; left over, 70000; prospects, 10c lower: lihr.

4S0 and 535; mixed, 495 and 555;

heavy, 40 and boo; rough. 470 and

490.

Receipts, cattle 31000. Receipts, sheep 40000.

LOCAL MARKETS

Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. Xo one who is acquainted with its good qualities can be surprisedat the great popularity of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. It not only cures colds and grip ecectually and permanently, but pre-ents these diseases from resulting in pneumonia. It is also a certain cure for croup. Whooping cough is not dangerous when this remedy is given. It contains no opium or other harmful substance and

jmay be given as confidently to a baby

as to an adult. It is also pleasant to take. When 11 of these facts are taken into consideration it is not surprising that people in foreign lands, as AA-ell as at home, esteem this remedy very highly and very few are

willing to take any other after having once used it. For sale by A. G. Luken & Co.. and W. II. Sudhoff, corner Fifth and Main streets.

Grain Prices. (Paid by Wm. Hill.) Wheat, $1.05, CO lbs. Xo. 3, red $1.00 57 lbs. Corn, 55c. No. 2- 56 lbs. (shelled) to bushel

45c per bushel

Timothy, new baled $8 to $10. Clover, baled $7 to $8. Clover seed, $5 to $6 per bu. New Oats, 30c per bu. Straw $6. Meats at Retail.

Maher & Hadley Meat Market. Liver pudding, 10c. Bacon, 15 to 20c lb. Roast pork, 12 1-2 to 15c. Veal, 10 to 20c lb. New lard 8c b.

Smoked ham, 124 to 25c lb. Poultry 12 to 16c per lb. Fish, 8 to 15c lb. Fresh sausage, 12 l-2c per lb. Lamb, 124 to 20c per lb. Smoked sausage, 12 l-2c lb. Beefstake, 15c. Beef, 6 to 15c per lb. Fresh pork, 15c per lb. Chuck roast, 10 to 12 l-2c per lk Beef to boil, 8 to 10c per lb. Pork chops, 214 to 15c per lb. Country Produce. (Prices Paid by the Ideal Grocery.) Eggs, 19e dozen. Butter, Creamery 23c lb.; country,

17c to 20c per lb.

Young Chicken, dressed, 16c lb. (Furnished by the Ideal Grocery. Retail Prices. " Maple syrup, $1.25 per gallon.

Honey, 20c lb. Red Beets, 25c pk. Lemons, 15 to 25c dozen. Apples, 25c to 35c per peck. - Cbbage 5 to 10c ead. Celery, 3 bunches for 10c. 1

DR J. A.WALLS THE SPECIALIST At home office Monday, Tuesday, Friday and Saturday of each week. Consultation and One Month's Treatment FREE!

HE TREATS SUCCESSFULLY iK$ST&nZ.r S Ji YS, LIVER and BLADDER, RHEUMATISM, DYSPEPSIA and aM DISF a Jil- 'ui M ' epilepsy (or falling fits) Can?er, Scrofula, Prim and NotmDiS Khi. ''v" Low. of Vitality fVom indiwmionV in voiith or matMey cWHtion of the Rwtnm, without detention from bueinew 7 ' ' hi"tat .4-' KUPTI7RR POSITIVELY HIKED AMD GUAR AfTED. I t ! to your interest to consult the Doctor if you are sufferine irom ciseas X .i if he cannot cure you be will tell you so at once ciseas K.-mi.,er the time and place. Will return every four weeks. ' ie and Laboratory. No. 21 SOUTH TENTH STREET. RICHMOND. WO.

ThefioPthuacster Mataallnfe Ins. Co

J. V oAKoxiK, Caeneral Agent, MchmoL?!.2"'

Milwaukee,

Wisconsin

Tomatoes, 50e bushel. Dressed chickens, 18c lb. Eggs, 23c dozen. Potatoes, 60c per bushel. Country butter, 22e. Pumpkins, 5 and 10c. Jersey Sweet Potatoes, 30c pk. Pineapples 15 to 20c. Eating Pears, 2oc pk. Cranberries, 10c . Concord grapes, 25c basket, 7 lbs. Lettuce 15c lb.

Bananas, 10 to 20c per dozen. Cal. Oranges, 20 to 50c doz. Potatoes, 15c peck. California Plums, 10c quart. Spanish onions, 5c lb. Richmond Livestock. Hogs, 200 lbs, top, heavy, $5.75. Hogs, 400 lbs., common and rough, 4c to 5c lb. Choice butcher steers, 41-2c lb. Common steers, 3 to 3 l-2c b. Lambs, 41-2c to 5c lb. Veal calves, 5c lb. Sheep, fine extra, 4c lb. Cows, 2 l-2c to 3c lb? Choice cows, 3 to 3 3 -4c lb.

finally cured. Only 25c at A. G. Luken & Co.'s drug store. '

Too late to cure a cold after consumption has" fastened its deadly grip on the lungs. Take Dr. "Wood's i Norway Pine Syrup while yet there is time.

Omaha via the Northwestern Line In addition to its already remarkably complete train service between Chicago, Council Bluffs and Omaha., The Xorth-Western Line has inaugur

ated elegantly equipped . parlor car service through to Omaha without han'ge, leaving Chicago 10:15 a. rr. daily, arriving Omaha 11:40 p. m. uffet, smoking "and library car on this train also opened to parlor car assengers. Other fast trains leare Chicago 7:00 p. m., 8:00 p. m., and

11 :d) p. m., daily over the only doule track railway between Chicago and the Missouri River. Information and ickets can be secured from your home agent or address A. H. Waggener, irav. Agt 22 fifth Ave., Chicago, 111. $33.00 California, Oregon and Washington. Colonist one-way second class tickets on sale from Chcasro to San Frar-

cisco, Los Angees, Portland, Tacoma, Seattle and other Pacific coast noints.

and still lower rates to Utah, Montana, Wyoming, and Idaho points, vii

me Chicago, Unio Pacific & North

western line. Corresponding ow rate

from all points.

A Thoughtful Man. M. M. Austin of "Winchester. Tnd .

knew what to do in the hour of need. His wife had such an unusual case of stomach and liver trouble, physicians could not help her. He thought of and tried Dr. King's New Life Pills and she got relief at once and was

Daily nd personally conducted excursions in Pullman tourist sleeping cars, double berth only $7.00 fror:

Chicago, on fast through train.

Choice of routes. No change of cars. All agents sel tickets via this line. For full particulars address A, H. VTaggener, traveling agent, 22 Fifth avenue, Chicago, HL