.. IWf*
"M IP'
•I
-•S-
AEQEIPTS LARGER THAN TRADE
LOOKED FOR AND MARKET
H:
18 SLOW AND WEAK.
PRICES SHADE LOWER
,1 THAN SATURDAY'S CLOSE
Rainy weather Proves Handicap to
Cattle Sellers"-Prices For Sheep Fail
to Recede When Receipts Prove Un
usually Abundant—Lambs Forced to
Lower Levels.
Chicago, June 7.—There was no ses-
Average weight of hogs at Chicago ethers
for the week was estimated at i.'.9 Lambs
pounds, the lightest since the first week
of March, two pounds lighter than the Kansas
preceding week, six pounds Igihter than
the same week last year and fifteen
pounds lighter than the corresponding
week two years ago. The reweighing
of many 175 to 225 pound lots caused
*,he average weight to fall off, as coun
try arrivals in reality were heavier,
as was reflected in the discrimination
against them by most buyers.
Overlook the fact that this is the time
1
ff
year when such cattle go over the
tumps. Texas stuff has been running
jpomewhat more freely, but supply from
that quarter is still below normal, al
yhough some has arrived here direct to
packers and must be taken into the
Reckoning. I
This week's experience demonstrates
:«hat sen oversupply of big cattle is
easily
created while the 1.100 to 1.250-
Good yearlings with weight
I® had action, but the $S US
S.50
(have been laggards. The break last
^week had the effect of holding back
half fat and slippery yearlings and the
closer the country adheres to this p'an,
/the better. The yearling market is al
'ways fickle and anything not wearing
bloom ought to be held back to ac
pjjjauire condition at least a.pproaching
standard.
A lot of light gTassy cattle have
{Shown up during the week and killers
*are sidestepping them. Grassy steers
selling below J7.75 are 25 cents lower
tor the week, if not more, and their
market future is not promising.
Traders .who have taken on such cattle
this week have been stung and are
nursing red eyed regret.
cl.
f.
Prices for sheep and lambs faiM" to
recede at first notwithstanding that ar
rivals showed an increase compared
with a week ago but subsequently
lambs suffered a decline.
Packers know that they will have ac
cestf to very few shorn
'ifefr"' Chicago Livestock.
Chicago, June 7.
Cattle—Estimated receipts for today,
17.000 market weak.
Native beef steers €.75 9.30
Western steers 6.80® 8.05
Cows and
42 good heavies 30S
57 good heavies 329
3S good heavies
7 rough hogs ..
S roush hogs ..
96 lights
59 •'lights
lights
74 lights
.. 13.700 market steady.
Sion of the Chicago gr&.n board today xativ steers 7.7o^ 9.00
because of the primary election. Cows and heifers
estern steers
Receipts of hogs at Chicago for last
week totaled 129,000, a decrease of 16.
600 compared with the previous week.
bd increase of 11,300 compared with
same week last year and a decrease of
26,100 compared with the corresponding
week two years ago.
were Texas steers
Chicago, June 7.—Offerings
v. .1 Range cows and heifers
more plentiful than had been looked1 paIv.oa
tor in the hog market acted as a weight
today.
•Cattl
9.000 market steady.
Prime fed steers ....
Dressed beef steers
Western steers
Stockers and feeders
Bulls
Calves
Top hogs at Chicago for the week
made 57.90, within 5 cents of the high
mark of the year, against $7.-7-3 the -'Bulk
previous week. JS a year ngo and'Heavy
JS.S5 cwo years ago. Average price Packers and butchers
figured $7.60, or 5 cents lower than Light 7.60f/7.6"
the preceding week. 55 cents lower |P:s:s 6.75 4J7.25
than same week last year and $1 lower Sheep—Estimated receipts for today,
than the corresponding week two years ,000 market strong.
ago. jl-Ambs 11.35
7.55
7.60
7.65
7.05
7.13
7.50
7.55
7.60
.'65
341
378
404
151
15$
167
ITS
Representative Cattle Sales.
Below are quoted a few of the repre
sentative cattle sales tor today:
Average.
19 steers 956
IS steers 1044
17 steers 11S1
16 steers 1077
16 steers 1152
15 steers 1170
14 steers 1216
15 steers »... 12"7
13 steers .... 132S
14 steers 1269
13 steers 1354
12 steers 12SS
11 steers 1379
11 steers 1456
10 steers 1414
10 steers 1571
Price.
6.
So
7.00
7.25
7.40
7.60
7.75
7.S3
$.00
$.50
S.65
S.75
S.90
9.00
9.20
Omaha Livestock.
Omaha. June 7.
Cattle—Estimated receipts for today,
.T.ioyr
.6.00®
.6.30®
,. 6.00®
.5.S5®
S.30
7.30
7.65
Calves S.00@ 10.00
Hogs—Estimated receipts for today,
7.60: market higher.
Heavy 7.35 "a 7.50
Light 7.45 5 7.55
Pigs 6.75 0 7.50
Bulk 7.40S 7.50
Sheep—Estimated receipts for today,
-.200 market higher.
Yearlings 7.00*?? S.00
-5.753 6.50
9.50 @10.50
Hogs—Estimated receipts for today,
$.000: market steady.
Eleven markets received 47.S00 hogs Yearlings 7.25 ft' 9.25
Saturday, making 56S.OOO for the week.
March, despite a local decrease, or 5C.
000 more than the preceding week,
105,000 more than the same week last
year and 1,000 more than the corre
sponding week two years ago. Total
for 1915 to date 12.350,000. or 1.9S3.000
Cattle.
Rainy weather handicapped seller^
iat cattle.
Talcing one thing with another, the
"«narket has not been a bad actor the
fi&st week. Liquidation of long-fed
'steers by tired holders under the in
•centTve furnished by Monday's high
market caused an unevenly lexwer mid
week deal, but prices are not much
worse ait the close of last week on any
thing. Grassy light steers have en
countered seasonable discrimination
»nd the country will do well not to
:P.ange
the largest since the first week of Range wethers 5.75 fj
ewes 5.25®
Oats—Xo. 2, 46g46U Xo. 3. 45'5 45
Xo. 2. white, 45^ Xo. 3. white. 47®
4S Xo. 4. white, 46UtM6*& Standard,
4 }r2 4 S V2
at
rolorsdos
r,-3.20'??
S.75
Calves 7.50® 10.23
Hogs—Estimated receipts for today,
£4,000 market slow, shade lower.
tight 7.40®7.72"^
Mixed 7.35® 7.70
4_ Heavy 7.05® 7.65
afe SUmgh 5.75® 7.40
.Ttgm 5.75® 7.40
I
Stalk 7.50®7.55
'ji Sheep Estimated receipts for today,
|1 S#,W0 market steady.
SlMep 6.40® 7.20
[re lambs [email protected]
Representative Hog Sales.
are quoted a few of the repre
sentative hos ®I« for today:
Average.
adzed nogs 216
'ffVOnd bogs 231
Mixed hogs 244
hogs 2o6
•aariee 288
•.
I
Kansas City Cash Grain Close.
[Furnished by Tavlor & Patton, over
22 East Main.]
Kansas City, June 7.—Wheat—Xo. 2.
red, 1.20-5 1.21: Xo. 3, red, 1.17G1.19:
Xo. 2. hard. l-2051.2-4 *2 X"o. 3. hard,
1.19'5 1.24: Xo. 4. hard, l.llf?? 1.20.
Oats—Xo. 2. 43 43Vi: Xo. 3. 42: Xo.
2, white. 47@47^: Xo. 3, white, 4-5.
ipound class appears to enjoy unlimited ^714 extra seconds. 2514•52614.
Cheese—Market unsettled receipts,
3.653 boxes: fre^h flats or twins. I6H
average fancy, 16 Vi 'a 18^
tyuuiiu
demand. Killers have been on the
I alert for steers within that range of
jvreight selling at S8.6OSS.S0 and such
cattle show least of the decline.
New York Produce.
X-\v York. June 7.
Butter—Market steady: receipts.
245 tubs: creamery specials. .'Sfe'ai'S
creamerv
Eggs—Market irregular: receipts 15,-
have 090 cases: fresh gathered selected ex
kinds 1 rr«s 23 5 24: extra firsts. 2l"^'Ti22
tras.
firsts, 19i:®21: seconds. IVfilS.
Poultry—Live: market
killed western chickens. lS^j.22 fowls.
14.^16% turkeys, 18'al7.
Chicago Produce.
Chicago. June 7.
Butter—Steady creamery. 22'S27I£.
Eggs—Steady receipts. 21,543 case*:
mark, cases included. 16''5i71
r.liiiarv "rstr. 161£ f)rc'c 7 "a
Poultry—Alive, lower: hens, 13.
Chicago Potato Market.
balance of the season and for that r^a- :Mi'higan and Wisconsin red. 4^'jf 45
eon the prime ones were quickly Michigan and Wisconsin white 4S'3 50
•napped up from day to day. Ther? Texas Triumphs 1.30^1.40
ehould be considerable fed western I
shorn stock coming from Missouri be- LOCAL MARKETS.
lore the end of the season, but not
much natice stuff, outside of springers.
Is known to be on feed anywhere.
Quality has been good all week and
sorting was not very severe. However,
there have been a few loade which
•bowed signs of "grass" and such of
ferings found a limited outlet, selling
«^L discount.
Chicago. Jun° 7.—Potatoes—Higher
receipts, forty-five cars new receipts,!
ten ca rs.
Prices Paid to Farmers by Msrshsll
town Merchants.
The following prices are quoted by
Marshalltown dealers for the different
varieties of farmers' provisions, grain,
produce anf bides, tallow, wool, pelts
and skins:
lowing prices in trade for country pro
duce:
Butter—24.
Eggs—18.
Benedict Flour and Feed Company
will pay the following prices rt their
place of business in this city, subject,
however, to market "hanges:
Xew corn—66.
Oats—44.
Wheat—1.10.
H. Willard, 3oa ft Co., quote the
following prices:
Wool, clear medium—26@27.
Wool, coarse low quarter and braid—
21@23.
Wool, light line—19@21.
Wool, heavy fine—17@lf.
Green hidee, No. 1—12 cents.
Green hidee, No. 2—11 cents.
Horse hidee, large—.0004.00
Beeswax—25 cents.
No. 1 tallow—5 cents.
Local Livestock Market.
Brlttain ft Co. today quoted the fol
lowing prices for hogs in wagon load
wis
Hogs, over 125 pounds—7.10.
Good packers—6.60.
Light hogs, 100 to 126 pounds—5.60
c*r*v«yca Wfc^9Wf
J" .&>TS
£*i
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION TO GO
ON RECORD AGAINST BRITISH
TACTICS.
TO TAKE UP SUBECT
R.20 I
S.35
Fear of Injury to Cause by Growing
Disposition Towards Militancy in
South—Controversies Pending Be
tween National Organization and
Congressional Committee,
Chicago, June 7.—Militancy is to be
decried in the first mid-year confer-
At
,j
5.'"0
7.00
St. Louis Cash Grain Close.
[Furnished by Taylor & Patton, over
22 East Main.]
St. Louis. June 7.—Wheat—Xo. 2.
red. 1.26'S 1.27 So. 3. red, 1.22@1,24:
more than the same period 1914 and ro. 4. red, [email protected] Xo. 2, hard, 1.2S.
1,424,000 more than the correspond::*
time 1918.
Corn—Xo. 2, 71~: Xo. 3. 701,jf§71
Xo. 2, white, 73: Xo. 3. white, 721slg73:
Xo. 4. white. 70 Xo. 2, yellow, 72^4@
73: Xo. 2. yellow. 71H®72.
sional Lnion for Woman suffrage, mal
_. land arch-enemy of the national asso
City Livestock. jciatijn.
Kansas City. June 7. Fear Militancy in South.
Estimated receipts for today, The women of th^ south, it is said,
t0
.6.50'a 10.00
Ky.. and to elect Mrs. Xellie Xugent
Somerville. of Greenville. Miss., in her
place. Mrs. Breckinridge resigned be
cause the work in Kentucky prevented
her from giving the proper amount of
time to the r.atonai work.
National Board on Hand.
Every member of the national board
was present except Miss Katharine
Bement Davis, of Xew York. Those at
the preliminary session were Dr. Ansa
Howard Shaw, of Xew York, president
.ft the national association Mrs. Stan
ley McCormick, of Xew York Mrs.
Richard Y. Fitzgerald, of Massachus
Mrs. Medill McCormick. of Chicago.
I Controversies over the national and
I state policies between the national as
I sociatlcn and the congressional union
will be one of the leading points at is
sue in the conference. The meeting was
called for the purpose of determining
how to work for a nationai suffrage
amendment In the next congress. The
work will not all be confined to Wash
ington. There are congressional district
organization in forty-one states.
Corn—Xo. 2. 69H*S'70: Xo. 3. 69: Xo.! These organizations are to be urged to
2. white. 71 Xo. 3. white. 70H:: Xo. 2,
yellow, 72: Xo. 3, yellow. 71.
use ai
gres^
the
Plan Anthony Amendment.
According to Dr. Shaw, the first
I move in Washington will be to intro
duce the Susan B. Anthony amend
mem. which has gone to every session
of congress in forty-three years. It
"For forty-three years
Anthony
Liverpool Grain.
Liverpool. Jun® 7
Wheat—Xo. 1 Manitoba. 12s lid: Xo.
3 Manitoba, 12s 5d Xo. 2 hard winter,
12s 9d.
"'orn—Xew American mixed, Ss Id.
Flour—Winter patent, 41 sa.
TIMES-REPUBLICAN. MARSHALLTOWN. IOWA: JUNE 7,
HERETOFORE TABOOED
ence of the Xational American Worn- furn'sh a considerable addition to cx
a
an t-i rt:age Association, which opened
at the Hotel La Salle. The fear that
the methods of English suffragists will
be invoked by some of the suffragist Government Bulletin Tells of Form of
workers in this country is responsible, Ipecac Used by Dentists.
for the anti-militant attitude.
Hitherto the national organization
the
unreasonable to believe
svlvania.
It
Susan B.
session of congress passes that it is not
quiet fresh introduced until we have national suf--j
frags. There is a little group of wom
en who call themselves the congres
sional union who say we have aban
doned the Susan B. Anthony amend
ment for the Shafroth.
"We have not abandoned the Anth
ony amendment. But at the last ses-
doesn
in the crater, or whether melting of
the snow on the peak, with consequent
flowing of-water into the crater, caused
the accumulation of steam which blew
a river of mud out of the mountain.
Mr. Diller, who made a study of the
volci.no last year, said that he inclined
toward the melted snow theory, adding
that the bright glow reported as ap
pearing on the clouds of smoke and
steam over the crater is a reflection
of the red-hot matter uncovered by
the eruption, indicating that the vol
cano Is in a more or less dangerous
mood.
The river of mud which was shot out
of the north side of the crater and
down Hat creek has damaged govern
ment and private propertv. says a wire
to the forest service from San Fran
cisco, destroying bridges which were
necessary to permit-. the entrance of
livestock that are grazed on the forest
range during the summer. Soine_12,
000 cattle and 30000 sheeji are grazed
or. the Lassen forest every year.
Mount Lassen is regarded as ex
ceptionally interesting from a scien
tific viewpoint, according to the geo
logical survey, inasmuch as it is the
only active volcano in the United
States proper, is verv accessible to ob
servers, and appears to be full of dan
gerous possibilities. There is much
that is not known about volcanoes, and
Lassen is expected bv geologists to
INDORSES PYORRHEA CURE.
has refused to consider militancy at all, cure for pyorrhea or Ricgs disease.
da'
The bu
,lelJn
1
particularly fear the invasion of mill- 1
..7j'a 9.00 umcy in the south, and the southern
.S.00'5 S.75 delegates held a conference at which it
7.50'g' S-75 promised to stick cioser than bark to
.6.7o'S $.25 the national organization tree in order
.5.00^ 7.:!5
assure the voters at home that it is
not
courting militancy.
The south will have an important
I part in the present conference. The first
.7.50 5?7.65 tact of the national board was to ac
7.Kit 7.F.7•cept tho resignation from th'i board of
.6.7'"57.67^ Mrs. Desha Breckinridge, of Lexington,
Mrs." Stan-
Xabb Miller, o? Columbia, Mo„ and
is both local and
he
remove tartar and the VeHowish mat-
ter which accumulates alone the inner
edges of the teeth and between the
teeth. This is particularly important
in the case of children."
BELGIANS ACCUSE GERMANS.
Legation In Washington Issues State
ment Which Chargis Much Cruelty.
cejVea 0f
ne
uiral nation
national suffrage, and the Shafroth she, in her turn, refused to violate
amendment was devised.
a
Will Fight to End. jor benefit of Germany.'
"We shall always push the Susan B.
Anthony amendment until we got it.
The congressional union believes we
can get ft thru the coming session, if
our national strength comes because Nearly all of the new routes will go
of our strength in the states, and mem- into operation June 15.
bers of the organization have been Enlargement and extension of the
urging men not to vote for suffrage in rural service was made possible by a
the «tate election. Thev are following readjustment resulting in a reduction
the English militant method." of operating expenses amounting to
Ir Shaw sent a cablegram to Mrs. $511,262. Many routes have been con
Johanna Munter. president of the solidated with others, but it is said
Danish Suffrage Association, congratu- that few carriers^ will be dropped^
latlng the women of Denmark on se
curing universal suffrage.
LASS FN UNDER OBSERVATION.
Forest Service Co-operates With Geo
logical Survey in Recording Activity.
Washington. June 7.—Mount Lassen,
California, whose violent eruption of
May 19 places it in the first rank of
volcanoes now dangerously active, has
hficfimc the subject of an Informal co
operative study by the geological sur
vey and the forest service. At the re
quest of the survey, a telegram has
been sent from Washington Instruct
ing the officers of the Lassen national
forest, in which the peak stands, to
continue observations of the volcano's
activity and keep a record to be used
as a basis for a scientific investiga
tion by J. S. Diller, a government ge
ologist. who ls expected at Lassen
early in July.
The observations are being made by
forest rangers at the scene and from a
fire lookout tower on Brokeoff Moun
tain, a few miles north of the crater,
where the forest service last year kept
watch on the numerous eruptions
which occurred from May to Septem-
It is not known whether a cloudburst
started the last eruption by precipitat-
tag rain down upon the molten lava Kxchaage,
treaty or to abandon her neutrality
we ail get together on it. It is most R„ra"| Mail Service !ls
710 NEW R. F. D. ROUTES.
,, .. Rcsyciic?^ 'n c*ppnM« 3iv#* oiirieson rr»u^
that. But while Chance to Extend Rural MailI Service,
it.
a as id a in W as in to E a is on no a a at
it thru, we are going to work on
't seem to realize that by Postmaster ijeneral Burleson.
Orders are now awaiting the post
master general's signature providing
for new rural automobile service in
many localities, as authorized by the
last appropriation bill.
"Amphlhloua."
W
4r
FEDERAL OFFICIALS
says in effect that the remedy health and by economists desiring to
.' will help in putting false teeth out of aid the public in its perennial task of The local showers come on tho
cause of tne activities of the Congres- Pu"
n» £rvjng to reduce the cost of
sayg thac at 0
„e
or another every one has
time
pyorrhea,
sur-_
and
the delicate membrane which
rounds the roots of the teeth
causes them to fall out.
Just as soon as the cause of Riga's
disease was found out. the search for
the cure began in earnest. It had been
previously discovered thai the u.-e oi
ipecac would cure the a sea^e? hich
are caused by infection of the intestine
with er.damoebae. From this i: was
deduced that a similar treatment
would cause the destruction vf the
endamoebae in the mouth. This was
found to be the case and emetin was
taken up. The health service adds
that it sometimes requires a consider-
above ma
in the recent "white book" of the or-lest crrades of macaroni, it was stated,
their Influence upon the con- ganlzation of Belgian citizens into are made from the semolina of Durum
^men in their districts to vote fOT corps of "francs-tireurs" for the pur-j wheat, that is, the glutinous part of the
suffrage amendment. p«.se of sniping the German army. grain, and the natural color of this rich
In its effort to refute the German food stuff is yellowish or amber. In
charges the Gelgian legation asserts 'ferior grades of these products are
that the German atrocities in Belgium derived from the starchy by-products
have been horrible beyond any belief, of wheat, which are neither tasteful
It declares that the Bryce investiga-| or nutritious, and which are. therefore.
tlons. as well as the one conducted by usually colored in order to give them
extras. 28: extra firsts. 27^ provides no state shall disfranchise its }je Belgian government, proves the(the appearance of finer brands. Boiling.
citizens because of sex. It is probable Germans to be barbarians in their it appears, takes out the coloring mat
that the Shafroth amendment, which methods of conducting war. ter, so that the cooked food is al
provides for a state referendum, also! "Up to the present time." says the ways white, and the good can not be ourselves that some other more worthy
will be reintroduced. I statement, "information has been re-' distinguished from the bad. instrument Ehould bo chosen. If our
amendment has been intro- bers of religious orders who have been] The manufacturers are urging the
duced," said Dr. Shaw, "and I hope no
put tQ
troops.
mut
ia'ted and tortured,
which in its 'white book' frequently
cites The Hague convention, began the
war by the most flagrant violation of
that convention in attacking, without
sion, when this amendment was voted rjght or Justice and in disregard of a wheat that might be used to make
down we had to give congress some- treaty, a peaceable, small and macaroni, declaring that such a limi-j
thins*
e:*- to consider in the way of
forty-nine priests and rnerr.- Makers Opposed to Coloring.
(jeath in Belgium by German bureau of chemistry to rule that the
some of them were frightfully use of dyes will be regarded as a de
ceit. It will be remembered that the
Tn conclusion, the legation says: ruling in the oleomargarine case pro
fit is useful to call attention to theihibited coloring matter for the same
fact that the German government, reason as that put forth by the macar-
CALLED
UPON TO DEFINE AND ISSUE
RULING THEREON.
MANUFACTURERS PROFESS
Hearing Given Makers of Macaroni and
1
Washington, June 7.—The United
States public health service has in
dorsed emetin, a form of ipecac, as a
but it was among the leading topics at It has been in use among dentists for and cheap foods whose use has been Reports fr0m Germany are to the effect
one of the conferences in the evening. some time, but the announcement to- recommended by state departments that the season has been a good one
Kindred Products United States
Large Consumer—Bureau of Chem
istry to Define What Constitutes
Proper Ingredients.
Washington,
practically all the newspaper notice
which the departmental hearing
It is caused by a ininute single celled May 14 received, has been of a jocose while sections of this country were
animal called the endamoeba buccalis. character, llippant and careless of the having wet and cold in May, it ia
This malevolent parasite does its work I really important issues Involved. shown by the weather reports other
in combination with the pus produc-
T!le
1
The
able rrne to "et rid c* a of the manufacturers is that of all progressive
malignant germs in this way. but the I manufacturers today. It is that they
results which have beer obtained have
been remarkably good The treatment
general. The bulletin
|aa-ln the matter of preventing mouth
etts Mrs. Orton H. Clark, of Kaiama- disease it is important that the mouth ywoducts and thereby discredits the en
zoo, Mich. Mrs. Henry Wade Rogers,
cleaned several tunes^
of Xew Haven. Conn. Mrs. Welter Mc- that a dentist be visited frequently to I
caroni and noodles are
(o be reearded from four ang
On the iirst point the argument was
Washington. June 7.—The Belgian developed that color in these nlimentary
legation issued a statement Sunday in foods is never for any other purpose jjje ^luft and tore thru the store build
denial of the German accusations made
1
than to conceal inferiority. The high- ,ngS
oni people.
On the other points the manufactur
ers were equally positive. They argued
against any limitation upon the kind of
whose only offense was ration would he as unjust as a ruling
v:
Speaking of fish stories, one cannot
help being reminded of the occasion
when a committeeman was examining
claaa of boys in the South. "Can
any of you." he asked "tell me what
'amphibious* means, and give a sen
tence to illustrate?'* A bright little
darky held up his hand. "I know, sahl
Ifs lying! Mob' fish stories am flbl
ons!"—W. B. Allen in Scribner'a Mac-
Hard Drinking Frowned On.
One can hardly take ap
dealing with the sixteenth, seventeenth
and eighteenth centuries and the early
part of the nineteenth which does not
teem with allusions to the prevalence
and popularity of hard drinking. But
within the paat fifty or sixty, years the
attitude of the British people of every
rank and class has changed. The
drunkard Is deapised by Jdgh and low*
that cocoa should be made only from
a particular variety of beans. Some
factories, it seems, employ lurum
(,uegtlon
of 710 nerw rural mail delivery routes jegs positive opinion.
"The congressional union has been to serve 82,360 families and the exten- .j.^ government is asked to fix the
interfering in the state campaigns In sion of existing service so as to reach quantity of eggs in egg I
Xew York, Massachusetts, and Penn- 5,460 additional families was announced
noo
Burleson.
oil r.f nt-ir rrnitM will
and, equipped with a pur* -food O. K*
redouble its efforts to make Anuficsn
Italians, American-Frenchmen, and
American-Americans eat the beat
noodles that the world has ever seen.
1
noodles is one of the questions that the
CANNON-RAIN THEORY BOSH.
Explosion of War Shells Has No Effect
on Weather, Declares Forecaster.
Washington, June 7.—Freakish con
ditions of heat and cold, rain and anow
l^at
TO STAND FOR PURITY.
narked the month of May In this
country can not be attributed to the
concussion of bursting shell and boom
ing cannon on the fields of Franco and
Belgium.
This is the last word of Dr. Harry
C. Frankenfleld, chief forecaster of tho
weather bureau.
The 300-year-old theory that cannon
concussion will bring rain or change
meteorological conditions was exploded
long ago." he cqmmented. "They tried
that experiment in Texas some years
ago to bring rain to end a long drouth,
and It failed utterly. It must always
tail, because it is not a sound or ten
aole theory.
"There have been many suggestions
I that our weather conditions have been
affected by the aerial bombardmjfots
in Kurope and the dropping thru or
exploding in clouds of shells and high
(Special Correspondence.] explosives. But I do not think that
june 7 What
are
1 Federal Bureau of Chemistry is now fecte(j weather conditions in the United
pondering, and conccrning which it is states."
expected to issue a ruling in due course Imperfect weather reports received
from the theaters of the European coa
of time. Contrarj to jflicts do not indicate, it is stated at the
such unnatural conditions have had
any effect on weather conditions In
a a
Europe certain
iy
sion, the matter of defining noodles »si weather bureau, the prevalence of jn
not as funny or as trivial as it may
usua
seem at first blush. Noodles and their jjjg jle
allied foods, macaroni, spaghetti, and There have been no reported periods
.. .vermicelli, are important, nutritious unusually heavy rainfall in France.
for
hearing took place' before the
ing bacteria or germs. The skilful joint committee on definitions ana fron, heat and drouth. At Ihe weather
teamwork between there two destroys standards, under the chairmanship of bureau it is stated that neither condi
Dr. R. Li, Kmerson. assistant chief of tion was unusual for the month.
the bvreau of chemistry. Present were
several officials of the department or EIGHT KILLED IN TWO WRECKS,
agriculture and bureau of chemistry,
agricultura! crops of all kinds.
living. Yet bartlefields as a natural condition,
They
of
sect
as well as representatives of the Amer- ©ne Train Runs Into Op«n Bridge Near
ic3n Specialty Manufacturers' Associ-j Lake City, Minn^ and Seven Dis.
Driving
uti^n. the Xational Association of
Macaroni and Xoodle Manufacturers,
and the macaroni section of the Amer
ican Specialty Manufacturers' Associa
tion. These bodies, it was stated, rep
resent 60 per cent of the makers of
1
noodles, macaroni, and allied pro
ducts.
Stand For Quality.
Pener.d p.isitiuii taken by the~e
desire sound federal rulings on qual-
which is endeavoring to sell inferior
emphasized by the suffering
they may cause and so seem unusual.
jon9 he country were suffering
La Ciosse. Wis.. June
blindly on in a rain storm that is un
paralleled in this vicinity, Milwaukee
passenger train Xo. 1, commonly
known as the "fast mail." ran into an
cpen bridge at Amherst Junction, two
I mileo north of Lake City, Minn., Sat
I unlay night and seven persons were
killed. The engine, baggage and mail
cars went {nt0 the waten but tho
irakes
kept the rest of the train on the
track
Tho er
ity. content, and so on. of food pro- Minneapolis, whose presence of mind
'si as to protect that section of jn applying the brakes saved the lives
which is trying to do an
.?ineer. William B. Taber, of 1
aI 0
According to the standards
put forth by the organizations men-
Ch
jje passengers but one, was
The others are:
t_h* .victims.
Roy
Brotert. fireman, Minneapolis
William Lacev. express messenger,
,cag0. Charles Brock, Red Wins,
Minn and
and twc tral
jes
(1.) The question of artificial
oring.
(2.) The question of variety of wheat
from which they are made.
(3.) The question of mctisture con
tent.
4.) Th question of egg contcnt.
and
1
wheat, sonae spring wheat, and some
a blend of both. As to moisture con
tent, it was urged that the maximum
content be fixed at 13Vi per cent, which
,ne
An(
waxnuun. ..c e„„
bringing up as it did. the
die» or mar'aroni. Some manufac-j
turers
eo
claim that the standard should
be two eggs to a pound, and some
claim that an egg and a half to a pound_
is enough. All agreed, however, that
in.rfny event, the whole egg should be
u^ad. and manufacturers who mix in
only the yolk, which Is the least cost
ly part, should be frowned down as
fraudulently endeavoring to secure an
egg color without the nutritious al
bumen content. In the course of the
hearing It was freely alleged that there
are on the market and consequently in
the kitchen pantry many pounds of egg
noodles tnat are not egg nooules ai all,
but "wafer noodles" masquerading as
the real thing.
U. S, Consumption Enormous.
It ls not ordinarily realized, perhaps,
that the United States is an enormous
consumer of macaroni and similar
foodstuffs. Our imports classified as
macaroni, for the year 1914 from all
countries, amounted to 125,483,413
pounds, a substantial gain over 1911,
when the amount totalled 114,096,110
pounds. The greater bulk of these
shipments came from Italy and France.
Our own macaroni exports, largely to
Italy, Cuba and Mexico, amounted,, in
1914, to only 51,132 pounds.
Undoubtedly the great war in Europe
will have a stimulating effect upon the
macaroni, noodle and alphabet indus
try. Imports in these necessities of life
have been largely shut off by reason
of the difficulty of sectoring transpor
tation as well as by reason of the gen*
eral bottling up of the nations involved
in the struggle. This, apparently, is
the time of all times for the American
Macaroni and Xoodle Trust to get
together with the government, secure
immunity from being broken on the
wheel of the Sherman* law aa a trust.
xl*
1
thev have not af
weather on the battlefields .lur-
0
heaviest fighting.
unidentified passenger
£ps
tramps.
co'~
About twenty persons were Injured
and they are being cared for in nearby
farm houses.
Xorthwestern passenger train No. 17
went intrf the ditch at Roberts, near
Eau Claire. The engineer was scalded
and died soon after being taken to a
hospital.
At Stockholm, opposite Red Wing, a
wajj
water ten feet high rolled down
the river front.
ori
Opportunities.
In our individuai life there come
opportunities, which we may miss be
cause we have such false standards by
which we judge things. We wait for
the great event and for the great oc
casion, and we call that great which
makes a big eplash in the world. Or,
when the trial comes we shrink from
it through false modesty, saying to
general attitude were right, we would
see the meaning of all that is called
opportunity. We are not alive to the
gracious possibilities of the unregard
ed chances of every day. We need a
more solemn sense of responsibility,
a more serious view of the ever-con
stant junctures that occur.—Hugh
Black.
k«*
TURKS NOW FIOHTINO.
WITHOUT SERVICES OP
QENBRAL VON SANDERS
News dispatches from the Darda
nelles state that Generar Lrfman von
Sanders, German commander of- the
Turkish forces at the Dardanelles, has
been wounded. Ho wag hit in the
fighting on Gillipoli peninsula. It is
said that he has been succeeded by
Admiral von Usedom.
American Literature.
"If one were asked what is the dom
inant tone in American literature and
life, the answer would be 'youthful
ness but this youth has attained all
the rices of age, and has conserved
a few of the charms proper to 1UT
period. It la a very disingenuous youth
Indeed. This insistence on 'boyish
ness' is unhealthy more, it ia de
praved. These boyish boys and girl
ish girls of the writer and the artist
are the indications of a real cancer
In American public life. Perhaps in
portraying them the writers and illus
trators are describing something which
is as true as it is detestable. The
cult, of youthfulness in America ia a
national calamity, far graver than
anything for which Europe has to
mourn. Youth has nothing to give
life but its energy it has even leva
to give literature, for literature la
an expression of the spiritual truth
which runs parallel with every mate
rial experience. It is not the retail
ing of petty gossip abojit petty peo
ple and when this youthful energy
is divorced from the control of ma
turity nobody can benefit from It ex
cept the middle-aged woman for
whom American literature ia now be
ing written."—James Stephens in tha
Century
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