Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 244, 24 August 1914 — Page 10
AGE TEN
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 1914
FARMERS HESITATE; TO DELIVER STOCK AT SHIPPING PRICES 'Breaking: Market Cuts Down Receipts at Glen Miller Yards--Calves Run Strong Saturday.
RV A. D. COBB.
Receipts of live stock at Glen Miller
Btock Yards for tne CUU1" August 22. 1914: . 278 hogs, tops $8.85, receipts light and market lower, bulk of sales at 8.508.75. 68 cattle, tops $7.85. A - 64 calves, tops 10c. bulk at 89c. 84 lambs. 7c. bulk at 66c.
With a breaking market bog re
ceipts were low last week. Farmers
did not seem inclined to aenver iueir hogs, with prices slipping and buyers Worn nnntent tn lot well enough alone.
With the market so uncertain. t The delivery of veal calves con
tinues to be a feature of the Saturday
rade. Not Infrequently someone alses an argument as to the relative
prices paid for calves. Naturally a
ai iuvi vv iiu a ui& iv " o a Ttrom 200 to 250 pounds thinks he is (entitled to the top price for prime veal. IfTo one of these men Jerome Shurley, jfcianager of the yards delivered a little alecture Saturday. "Prime veal calves," cald Mr. Shurley, "should weigh from bl40 to 150 nounds. Calves heavier
jfthan that go for fat calves, but do foot command the fancy veal prices ton the market." t Notes of the Yard. V A. J. Murray of New Paris sent In 62 hogs that averaged 210 pounds and fcrought $8.85, the top price for the ;week. i Mr. Fisher of Earlham college was Jon the market early in the week, and : bought four fine cows for the college I dairy. . i Charles Deitemeyer of Webster township delivered 29 hogs that leveraged 220 pounds at seven months old. 1
Frank Robbins of Lynn was a visit-
tor at the yards during the week look-
:-jng ior came to ieea mis winter, f Thomas Lamb, one of the oldest and "best known buyers and feeders in the (county, spent several hours at the feyards Saturday. He is a keen judge tof live stock and can readily estimate jjthe weight of an animal after a quick jglance. I The following men had stock on the toaarket during the week: t Charles Stigleman, J. M. McCarty, tjVy. D. Rich, A. J. Murray, Charles pDeitemeyer, James Mercer, Lester Parks, Jess Bird, C. B. Shockney, OScott Edwards, John Peterson, Charles fCalvin, A. P. Karns, B. O. Reid, J. H. Cpencer, Walter Farlowe, O. Cranor, Marshall Miller, L. E. Raper, D. A. Henshaw, J. B. Mote, J. B. Gordon, J. B. Miller, F. F. Edwards, Geo. Newborn, John Wolf. Gaar Hanigan, Ben H'oschlog, Albert Miller, J. R. Kinsey, .George Cox, Isaac Skinner, Orley Hap'Xier, Olle Boner, Dick Cheesman, O. H. .Pierce, O. M. Jennings, Robert Williams, E. Timmons, Dick Conway, Harvey Osborne, E. S. Wright
WORRY
WORKS
RUIN
ION. DR.
DIGESTION
CAROLYN
SAYS GEISEL
Health Lecturer Says Peacer f ul Frame of Mind and Ap- !: petizing Food Help Keep ij Well. P In her final health lecture at the Chautauqua, Dr. Carolyn Geisel spoke on "Fundamentals of Digestion." She took a course of instruction under Professor Parlow of St. Petersburg, the famous authority on digestion. In illustrating her teachings, regarding the assimilation of food, she used a number of experiments with dogs, f In her preliminary remarks she explained that Bhe had in every case retrained from giving directions for dealing with specific diseases. "My purpose has been to help you prevent sickness," she said. "If you are already 11, you should not depend upon a lec;turer, but go to a good physician, j "Many of our commonest diseases
GOES WITH HUSBAND ?L TO PERSIAN POST
r v ' s
Mrs. John Lawrence Caldwell is the wife of the new United States Minister to Persia and is now with her husband and their children at the legation in Teheran. Mrs. Caldwell is a Kansas woman and before the appointment of her husband to the diplomatic corps made her home at Fort Scott, where Mr. Caldwell was an attorney.
Horn Germans Closed in About Brussels
1AWOEM ffl:y I y T in nrrT w?wanarmy b 1 ' 1 it ' ilv( 1 I AUOUCT9tM. ,i
E JVC AGE jnx JVT 3
SHADED I'ftiia'riOJsf Snows
I 1 1 I POSITION -
1 'fiEjfiiJn: Aivr-CAYAlJr!
7X ART I UIF.TC
Up-to-the-minute map depicting fan-shaped formation of Germans, with Liege as the base, in their campaign against Brussels.
have their origin in dyspepsia. It takes four to twenty-four years' to build up apoplexy to the point of death. If you will learn how to eat so your food will be perfectly digested and assimilated, and if you learn how to eliminate all the wastes of the body, the chances are a hundred to one that you will never be stricken with any of these fatal maladies. God intended us to be well and strong. He never meant that we should be dead in spots. If you will live right, you will live long. "Prof. Parlow of St. Petersburg Is the profoundest student of digestion on this earth. He has shown that there are at least twenty-eight different kinds of digestion. "The very basis of good digestion is through mastication. Starch is digest
ed in the mouth, and if you do not chew your food thoroughly enough to mix it with saliva, the starch in your diet will do you harm. "It is popularly supposed that chewing gum is an aid to digestion, but this is a fallacy. It is the ptyalin In saliva that helps the digestion, and that is lacking in gum chewing. "One of the commonest causes of indigestion is useless worry. American women seem to worry more than they work. If you want your food to do you the most good, you must learn to cpnserve your energy and not fritter it away uselessly. "Prof. Pawlow has proved that 'appetite juice' is essential to digestion. And he also proved that unless food looks and smells good, 'appetite juice' will not be forthcoming. If you wives
want to know how to preserve your husbands' digestion, see to it that your table always looks attractive, 'eat your meat in gladness' and never scold or fret or fume while eating. "If you want to preserve your digestion you will leave condiments alone. Prof. Pawlow proved that condiments, that is, mustard, pepper, and so' on, so irritate the lining of ttre stomach that it must coat itself over with mucous in self-protection. "The rule that you must eat your food in a good frame of mind applies especially to your children. One single scolding while a child is eating its meal may pave the way to chronic dyspepsia. , "I is very Important that the stomach be permitted a rest between meals.
SIMPLE LIFE LEADS
TO POLICE COURT
Fred Mowatt,' a cigar maker, was arrested at Twenty-fourth and E streets Saturday night by Patrolman VogelEong. A vagrancy charge was placed
against him. He said a doctor at De
troit, Wis., where he last worked, told him he had lung trouble and recommended that he take up the simple life until his condition improved. He was released and promised to leave the city.
It ought to have four or five hours of inactivity. "If you are wise, you will use very sparingly the soft drinks that you buy at soda fountains."
DISCOVERS BODY
(Continued from Pace One.)
machinist. He waa a leader of a number of men. For a man oC hi youth he probably was better known politically than any person in the city. Although he was not married, be kept a home at 849 South Seventh street. His mother, Mary A. Sehl. widow of Peter Sehl, and his sister, Lillian Urad with him. It is said he was engaged to a-young woman living in this citr, who is now visiting friends away from here, and that be expected to marry soon. ' . Socialists of the city were saddened by the young mans' death. He was their most promising member, and one of the hardest workers. He was nominated to run for the office of county clerk at the general election next November. The nomination was kept secret, and the various candidates were not to have been announced until shortly before the election. Sehi and his friends had planned a strenuous campaign. Socialists asked that the last writing which Sehl did be published. On Saturday night Sehi wrote the following on the Socialist bulletin board at 718 Main street: "To give victory to the right, no bullets but only peaceful ballots are necessary. Remember that when you visit the polls next time." This is written in chalk on a blackboad, which will be preserved as long as possible at the Socialist headquarters. After an autopsy late this afternoon,
THREAT TO SHOOT ' BRINGS $5 FINE'
Tobe Level, colored. Incited him to fire of a revolver in his home, Colfax street, on Newman's Hill, and threaten to "clean out the household." Level was charged with drawing a deadly weapon, after he was arrested on complaint of his mother. However, the charge was changed to intoxication because of his previous good reputation. He was given the maxlmm fine of 5 and costs.
LIGHTNING SKETCHES PLEASE CHILDREN
Saturday evening was a great time for the "kiddies" at the Chautauqua. Pitt Parker kept them spellbound for' an hour and a half with his astonishing lightning art work and his funny stories. He would make a lot of marks on the paper that would appear to be nothing at all and then, to the delight of the youngsters, who looked
on open-eyed, he would turn It upside down and show them a ship under full sail on the ocean. Meanwhile, he kept up a fusilade of witticisms and jokes and made the crowd feel, by the time he had finished, that it had had one prolonged vibration treatment.
Coroner Pierce announced that the drowning of Charles Sehi last night was due to a general muscular cramp and that the abrasion on his nose and bruise on the left eye probably were teeeived while the body was floating. The fact that Sehi went swimming Immediately after eating supper is believed to have caused the cramp.
IfQNKrrt DKU6 STORf JfH
"THE PLACE YOU GET THE MOST CHANGE BACK." WHAT THE WAR HAS DONE TO PRICES. War is always a tragedy. Here are you and I attending to our own business. War should not touch us. But it does, every time we enter a store. It has put up sugar, meat and boosted many drugs. We are a part in the war, no matter how peaceful we feel. Right now we have to tell you that on account of the hostilities abroad and the resultant closing of ocean commerce and the additional fact that the larger part of drugs in common use are brought either in a crude or. finished form from foreign lands, that the drug and chemical market is disturbed to an extent hitherto unknown. Owing to this unexpected condition we are, of course, aU upset in the price question, but wish to assure our patrons and friends that OUR prices will be advanced (though reluctantly) even in less proportion than they are advanced to us. This explanation we deem advisable at this time. WE Thank You. SEE US FOR Sanitary Drinking Cups, Hay Fever and Summer Complaint Remedies, Canning Compound, Stock and House Fly Knockers, Dollar Spex, 69c Alarm Clocks, Straw Hat Cleaner, Camping Medicine of all kinds, Thinoids, Flesh Reducer, Perspiration Deodorants in short "If it's advertised, it's at Conkey's." Palladium War Maps, 10c. Cameras, Films and Finishing. WE DELIVER FREE AND FREELY. WHEN YOU THINK OF CON KEY, THINK OF DRUGS. WHEN YOU THINK OF DRUGS, THINK OF CONKEY. NINTH AND MAIN.
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CORRECTION NOTICE! German Alliance will meet next Sunday, instead of Sep
The Dominating Money-Saving Event About Which Everybody is Talking
The response to this gigantic August Sale has met our most sanguine hopes. The money saving opportunities of this sale is the foremost topic among Richmond shoppers. EVERYTHING REDUCED. BUY NOW. This is the last week.
of Porch and Lawn Furniture One-Fourth to One-Half 5 Big Crex Comfort Rockers, $12.00 d (( now tpOsUU $10.00 Hong-Kong Steamer Chairs, tfrT A A now P 74r $6.75 Hour Glass Chairs, $1.25 Slat Lawn Benches, $ 00 $5.00 Big Solid Oak Swings, dQ rrt now n)0 O $10.00 Couch Hammock, J 49-inch Big Solid Oak Chain Swing, fl f AQ Special '..pX70
Bed Davenports This Big Solid Oak Bed Davenport, all sanitary steel construction, bed size, 48 inches wide by 72 inches long, handsomely finished in Fumed or Golden Oak, regu- &OQ '7K lar $39.75; on sale now, only. . O
$7.50 Reclining Go-Carts now
$4.95
4 Special Wood Side Pullman Go-Carts regular $28.00 values, A KA
now
Other Go-Carts reduced and on sale at $6.75, $8.50, $9.50 and up.
Itloin Street Corner 9th.
effirigeiraftoirs
Sacrificed.
Just at a Time When You Most Need Them.
At a Discount.
$8.00 Solid Oak Refrigerators, $22.00 Solid Oak Odorless Refrig- Af 1 erators, now P1U1V $49.75 Solid Oak Herrick Refrig- gOO 7tZ erator, now V)u I J $33.00 Solid Oak Herrick Refrig- OQ A erator, now tPidartV $30.00 Full Porcelain Refrigerator, J IJg $12.00 Ice Chests, now $7.95
tember 30.
.4 .. Sr '"i
