Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 290, 16 October 1920 — Page 10

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PAGE TWELVE

MARKET

GRAIN PRICES Furnished by E. W. WAGNER & CO., 212 Union National Bank Building. CHICAGO. Oct. 16. Following la the range of futures on Chicago Board

of Trade today: Open High Low Close Wheat Dec 2.18 2.21 2.12',i 2.13 Mar. ....2.11 2.15 2.06 2.0, Ms Dec. ....1 69 1 70 1.67 167 - Corn Oct 93 .93',i -92 .92 Dec 90 90 .87 .87 May .93 .93 .91 .91 Oats Dec. ..... .57 .57 .56 .56 May 62 .624 -60 .61 Pork Oct ..-25.00 25.00 Lard Oct. ...17.50 17-22 Ribs Jan. ...15.55 15.55

(By Associated Press) TOLEDO, O.. Oct. 16. Cloverseed Prime cash $13.40; Jan., $14.25; Feb., $14.30; March, $14.25; June, $14.05; Oct., $14.05; Dec, $14.20. . Alsike Prime cash, new, $17.45: March, $18.00; Oct., $18.00; Dec, $18. Timothy 1918. $3.30; 1919, $3.30; March, $3.50; Oct., $3.57; Dec, $3.57. Associated Tress) CINCINNATI, -O., Oct. 16. WheatNo. 2 red, $2.352.38; No. 3 red, $2.32 2.35; other grafles as to quality, $2.002.30. Corn No. 2 white, $1.01 1.02; No. 3 white, $11.01; No. 4 white, 9Sc$l. Corn No. 2 yellow, $1 1.01; No. 3 yellow, 99c$l; No. 4 Yellow, 97g99c. Corn No. 2 mixed, 9C.fi !)Sc. Oats Easy; 573S)Ac. Rye Steady. (Bv Associated Press) CHICAGO, Oct. 16. Wheat No. 2 hard, $2.22. , Corn No. 2 mixed, 9494; yellow, 955)96. Oatg No. 2 white, 5657; white, 57. Pork Nominal. Lard $20.75. Ribs $1718.50. No. 2 No. 3 LIVE STOCK PRICES (By Associated Presg INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 16. HogsReceipts. 6.000. Cattle Receipts, 300; lower Calves Receipts, 300; steady. Sheep Receipts, 400; steady. Hons Mixed loads, 160 lbs 160 lbs., $1C.10! 16.35; top price neavies, io.u-j, most pales, all weights, $15.6015.75; i miTPd 160 lbs. and up, $15.50 15.85: assorted 170 to 190 lbs, $15.60 15.75; assorted, 200 to 225, $15.75 15.S5; fat hogs, weighing down to iw lbs., $15 & 15.50; fat back pigs, under 140 lbs.. $15.25; light pigs and sows, according to quality, $12.00 14.00; sales on truck market, $15.6515.90; best heavy hogs a year ago, $14.35; best light hog-, a year ago. $14.25; hulk of sales a vear ago. $1414.25. Cattle Killing steers, best long yearlings, $17.00; 1,300 lbs. up, $16.50 17.00; good to choice, 1,250 lbs. up; $14.5016.00; common to medium, 1 250 lbs. up, $13.00014.00; good to choice, 1,000 to 1,200 lbs., $13.00 ii r.n- common to medium. 1,000 to 1,400 lbs., $10.50 $12.00; choice, 1.000 to 1,100 lbs. $10.00; common to medium, 1.100 lbs.. $910.50; good good to $9.00 i 1,000 to to best, under 1,000 lbs., $9.0011.00; poor to fair, under 1,000 lbs., ?6.00S.OO; good to best yearlings, $11.0014.00. Heifers Good to best, 800 lbs. up. $9.0012.00; common to medium, under 800 lbs., $7.00 8.00; good to best, under 800 lbs., $9.00$11.00; poor to fair, under 1,000 lbs., $10.00 12.00; good to choice, under 1,000 lbs., $11.75$13.75; common to medium, under 600 lbs., ?6.00$8.00. Cows Good to best, 1.050 lbs. up. $7 509.00; common to medium,! 1,050 lbs., up, $6.00 7.00; choice,! under 1,050 lbs., $6.507.50; poor to good cutters, under 1,050 lbs., $4.00 i 5.00; poor to good canners. $3.00 $3.50.' j Bulls Good to best. 130U ids. up, $6.50 7.50; good to choice under 1,300 pounds, $6.50 7.00; fair to medium, under 1,300 lbs., $5.50 6.00; common to good bolognas, $4.00 5.50. Calves Good to choice veals under 200 lbs., $16.00 17.00; good bolognas, $6.00; good to choice heavy calves. $S.OO 9.00; common to medium heavy calves. $5.00 7.50; -common to nieflfum veals, under 200 b $10.00 13.00. Stockers and Feeder cattle ijooa to choice steers, sou ids. up, jsuutt $9.00; common to fair steers, 800 lbs. up, $6.0007.50. Good to Choice Steers Under 800 lbs., $8.509.50; common to fair steers under 800 lb.-t. up. $7.00S.OO; medium to good heifers, $5.50 6.50; medium to good cows, $4.50 5.50; Rood to choice steers, under 800 lbs.. $8.50S9.50; common to fair steers, undei 800 lbs., $7.00 $8.00; stock calves, 250 to 400 lbs., $7.009.00. Native Sheep and Lambs Good t3 choice wether sheep, $4.505.00; good to choice ewe sheep, $4.505.00; common to medium sheep, selected ewes and wether lambs. $11 11.50; bucks, per 100 lbs., ?3.004.00; good to choice lambs, $10.5011 common to medium lambs, $S. 00 10.00. DAYTON MARKET Corrected by McLean & Company, Dayton, O. B?ll Phone, East 28. Home S1235. DAYTON, O., Oct. 16 Hogs Receipts, three cars: market steady; choice heavies, J15.50; butchers and packers, $15.00; heavy Yorkers, $14.00 15.00; light Yorkers, $13.0014 00; choice fat sows, $12.00 13.50 ; common to fair sows, $1012; pigs, $12 $13.00; stags, $7 9. Cattle Market steady; fair to good shippers, $12.0014.00; good to choice butchers. $11.00 12.00; fair to medium butchers, $10.00 11.00; good to choice heifers, $10.C0 12.00; fair to good heifers, $7.009.00; fair to good fat cows, $7.008.00; bologna cows, bulls, $3.005.C0; butcher bulls, $7.00 8.50; bologna bulls. $7.00 8.00; calves. $1517. Sheep Market steady; lambs, $S.00 11.00. (By Associated Press) CINCINNATI, O., Oct. 16 Receipts Cattle 200; hogs, 2,000; sheep, 25. Cattle Market weak; good to choice butchers steers, $10,000 10.50; fair butchers steers, $16.0010.50; fair $5.007.50; heifers, good to choice,

vs.uu&ll.oo; fair to good, $6.008.00; common to fair, $5.006.00; cows, $7.009.00; good to choice, $5.00g $7.00; cutters, $4.00 4.75; canners, $3.003.75; stock steers. $5.0010.00; stock heifers, $5.005.50; stock cows. $4.004.50; bulls, slow; bologna, $5.50 6.75; fat bulls, $7.008.00; calves, weak, lower, fair to good, $11.00 $15.00; common and large, $5.0010. Hogs Steady, higher; pigs, $1.50 higher; heavies, $16.00; good to choice packers and butchers. $16.00; medium, $15.7516.00; stags, $8.0010.50; common to choice heavy fat sows., $10.00 $14.50; light shippers, $15.2515.50; pigs, 110 pounds and less, $10.00 $14.50. Sheep Weak; good to choice lights $4.505.50; fair to good, $2.004.50; bucks, $2.004.50; lambs, weak, good to choice, $11.0012.00; seconds, $10 10.50; fair to good, $11.0011.75; skips, $7.009.00. (By Associated Press) PITTSBURGH, PA., Oct. 16 Hogs, receipts 1,500; market higher; heavies $16.75 $17; heavy yorkers $16.75 $17; light yorkers $16$16.25; pigs $15.7516. Sheep and lambs, receipts 1,500, market steady; top sheep $7.50; top lambs $12.50. Calves, receipts 300, market lower; top $18. ' (By Associated Press) EAST BUFFALO, N. Y., Oct. 16. Cattle Receipts 650, dull. Calves Receipts 200; 1 lower; $619. Hogs Receipts 3,200; slow; 15 to 25 cents lower; heavies $16.60(316 75; mixed and Yorkers $16.50 16.60; light ditto $1616.25; pigs $16; roughs, $13.50; stags $810. Sheep and Lambs Receipts 2,100. slow; lambs 25 cents lower; lambs $7 12.25; yearlings $68; wethers $6 $6.50; ewes, $35.50; mixed sheep, $5.50 6. (By Associated Press) CHICAGO. (U. S. Bureau of Mar kets), Oct. 16. Cattle Receipts 3,000; ! compared with a week ago, choice steers 15 to 25 cents other! steers ana Duiener came unevenly i to 1.50 lower; canners and bulls 25 lower; calves $1.50 to 2.00 lower; best westerns about steady; others mostly 50 to 75. Hogs Receipts 5,000; mostly steady to 15 cents lower than yesterday's average; closing weak on hogs weighing 130 lbs. down; top $15 90; bulk light and butchers $14. 40 15. 85; bulk packing sows $14.3514.65; good j mostly 25 cents lower; bulk desirable kinds $14.50 14.75. oiifep auu jaiiius rteceipis o.uuu; fat lambs closing 25 to 40 lower than a week ago; feeding and breeding stocks steady. PRODUCE MARKET (By Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 16. ButterFresh prints, 5962c a lb.; packing stock, 3335c. Eggs 58c a dozen. Poultry Large broilers, 33 cents; (springs 2434c; turkeys, 32 37c: duck, 20c; young geese, 23c; squabs, per dozen, 11 lbs. to dozen, $6; roosters, .17c; fowls, 24 25c; under four lbs., 20c; geese, 18c; springs, 28c (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Oct. 16. Butter Market Easy; creamery firsts 4054,,4. Eggs Receipts 4,296 cases; market unchanged. Jive poultry Market unchanged. Potato Market Steady; receipts 62 cars; Northern Whites, $1. 65f7 1.75; Early Ohios. $1.65 1.75; Michigan Whites, $1.75Trl.85. (By Associated Press) . CINCINNATI, Oct. 10. Butter fat, steady. Eggs Steady; prime firsts. 6L'c; firsts, 60c; seconds, 54c. Poultry Steady; springers, 30c; hens, 30c; turkeys, 50c. LIBERTY BONDS (P.y Associated Press) NEW YORK. Oct. 16 Prices on Liberty Bonds today were: 3 $92.46 First 4 89.30 Second 4 S9.20 First 4,i 83170 Second 414 S9 56 .90.80 .S9.52 .9618 .96.14 Fourth 4'v Victory 3 '4 Victory 4 94 NEW YORK STOCKS (Markets by K. V. Wagner & Co 212 Union Bank Bldg.) (By Associated Press NEW YORK, Oct. 16. Open Close. ."0M.. 70 Vi; 84 ii J29fc O JSI4 49 190 38 14 ::6 77 31 71Vi 57?4 127V4 77 S7, 57 4 6 14 American Can American Car Fdy. . American Smelting Anaconda Baldwin Locomotive Bethlehem Steel, B. Chandler Motors . . . Crucible Steel .1:144 . GO . 4934 H57s . 71 . StK, . 1 :n . :2--vi . Sl3..s . 1 S, i .'. . 50 .192 . MS . M6 . 9!l'4 ! Cuban Cane Sugar . (. orn Products 'General Motors .., j Goodrich Tires . . . j Mexican Petroleum Midvale Steel ! Pierce Arrow ..... 1 Reading j Republic Iron & Steel . . 77U Sinclair Oil 32Vs Strcmberg Carburetor ... 71V2 Studebaker 5SV4 Union Pacific 127 4 U. S. Rubber 77 U. S. Steel . Utah Copper ssi 4 1 ' ?8 White Motors 46 LOCAL. HAY MARKET. Steady; No. 1 timothy. $25; Clover. $22.00. (By Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS. Oct. 16. HayNo. 1 timothv. $27(a 27.50; No. 2 timothy, $2G(t 26.50; No. 1 clover, $24 25. 1 BUTTER QUOTATIONS The wholesale price for creamery butter is 62c a pound. Butter fat3 delivered in Richmond, bring 55c a pound. FRUIT and VEGETABLES Beets, 8c bunch, 2 for 15c; leaf lettuce. 20c lb.; onions, 8c lb; parsley, 15o bunch; green mangoes, 2 for 5c; garlic 65c lb.; new cabbage, 5c lb.; sweet potatoes, 10c lb.; cucumbers, 15c; ripe tomatoes, 5c lb.; green beans, 15c lb.; turnips, 10 cents per pound.; carrots, 8c lb.; 2 lbs., 15c; egg plant 15c. 2 for 25c; new potatoes, 4c lb.; 50c

THE KICHMQND PALLADIUM AND

dozen; cauliflower, 30c lb.; celery, 10c bunch. FRUITS. Bananas, 15c pound; lemons, 30c a dozen; oranges, 60c dozen; canteloupes, 10-12c each; fresh peaches, 10c lb., 3 for 25c; California plums, 19c; Maiden Blush apples, 10c lb.; honey dew melons, 50c each; Bartlett pears, 2 lbs. for 25c; white grapes, 40c lb.; Tokay grapes, 40c lb.; Nectarines, 30c lb.; grapefruit, 20c each. PRODUCE BUYING Country butter, 50c pound; eggs 60c dozen; old and young chlcens. 27c a pound. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Richmond flour mills are paying $2.10 for No. 2. LOCAL QUOTATIONS (Furnished by Wheian) BUYINfa Oats, 4Sc; rye, $1.40; straw, ton, $10.00; corn, 90c per bushel. SELLING Cottonseed meal, a ton, $6S.OO; per per 1 cwt. $3.50; 'Oil meal, per ton, $75.00; !cwt., $3.S5; Tankage, 50 per cent, $103 per ton; cwt., $o.2o; Tankage, 60 per cent, $115 per ton; cwt., $5.S5; Dairy Feed, per ton, $48.00; per cwt., $2.50 peck; green corn, home grown, 30c Insurance Men Chosen For Annual Convention (By Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS. Oct. 16. Five in surance agents from various Indiana cities and towns today were named to represent the Indiana Association of Insurance Agents at the annual meet ing of the National Association of Insurance Agents, to be held at Des Moines. Iowa, Oct. 19-22. The men are Elmer F. Abernathy, South Bend; Francis M. Presnnal. Marion; Ernest O. Ebbinghouse, Wabash; H. T. Roberts, Greenfield, and Charles Z. Graves, Frankfort. The announcement was made by A. L. Higbee, president of the state association. The Indiana delegation will leave for Des Moines. OURS A STRANGE RELIGION (William G. Shepherd in Harper's Magazine) The war, with its mingling of races, has shown some millions of us that our Christianity may be as strange and weifd a religion to men of other races as their religion may be to us. It must show definite and marked results to get their attention. To the millions of dark men who were dragged into the fighting and the misery of it, that Crucified Man with His message of love meant nothing. A British officer who acted as censor for an Indian regiment in France said to me: "I came across a letter the other day that made me stop and think. An Indian soldier was writing back to his folks in India. He said to them: 'The people are very honest here in France, you can leave a rupee beside the road and come back the nevt day and find it where you left it. They punish men who steal by nailing them to a tree. Everywhere we go in France we see wooden figures of a man who is punished this way. These figures are to remind the French people " that they must not steal.' ". HOOVER WAS AN "OUTSIDER" (Henry J. Haskett in the Outlook) The ignoring of Mr. Hoover at the Republican national convention was as significant of political motives as the nominating ' of Senator Harding. One man was wholly within, the other wholly without political tradition. No one could talk to the delegates at Chicago without realizing that they regarded Mr. Hoover for presidential nominee very much as the board of directors of a railway might regard a newspaper editor for president of the road. The fact that there was no connection between the undoubted Hoover sentiment in the country and the votes in the convention testified to the highly specialized nature of political organization and the futility of attempts of amateurs to make a serious impression. PARIS RAT DRIVESUCCESS (By Associated Press) PARIS, Oct. 10. A communique issued by Prefect of Police Raux at the close of the first week's battle against the rat, states that 10.SG5 rodents were killed. The offensive continues. According to the report of the experts, Paris had a rodfnt population of 8.000,000 when the drive started. This is one instance in Fiance where the "birth rate is quite superior to the death rate. SEAL AND BEAVER MAKES FUR COAT OF DISTINCTION Sealskin and beaver is one of the most fashionable combinations of the season for fur wraps. One find coats of either pelt trimmed witb I the other aIthou?h the seal trim- I med with the beaver as shown here is the more popular.

SUN - TELKUK AM. RICHMOND.

Five Minutes with

By JAMES James A. Garfield fell a sacrifice to the spirit of faction and of the spoils system. Although this gentle, kindly man was not of the heroic stuff that martyrs are made of, his blood became the seed, of better things in our politics. Rarely, if ever, has a president tak en up the burden of the office with a larger measure of good will from tho ! people, regardless of party and of fac j tion, than flowed out to Garfield as j he stood on the steps of the capitol j in the sunshine of his inaugural day, j the picture of robust American man- j hood in its prime. His first kiss, of ler kissing the Bible in the presence of 1 n.i.ltii . J , c r,. his aged mother, who in a forest hut had started him on his way to the White House, and who held a place of honor beside the schoolmate sweetheart who had been his faithful companion all along the road. " 'One thing thou lackest yet,' and that is a slight ossification of the heart," John Hay had written to the president-elect. This lack was fatal. Had his heart been harder, Garfield would have made his administration wholly his own, lifting it above factions, and he might have lived through a prosperous term. Instead, he remained his few months in the White House what he had been in congress a lieutenant of Blaine, whom he appointed to the secretaryship of state "with the love of a comradeship ot eighteen years" and who had become at once the power behind the throne. It was a saying of Emerson that "the president pays dear for his white house." Garfield quickly found it a purchase of repentance and doubtless longed for the geat in the senate, to which he had been elected only a few months before his nomination for the presidency. The only president to step directly from the Capitol to the White House, he was without executive experience; or tastes. His whole training had been to debate and compromise, not to act or decide on his sole responsibility. A lover of poetry and of all things beautiful and a constant student of literature, he groaned under the rude jostling of a sordid mob of office seekers, (an assassin among them). A genial soul, who hated to say no, he found himself saying yes, when he should not. "My God!" he exclaimed in bitterness of spirit, "what is there in this place that a man should ever want to get into it?" Garfield himself was rather indifferent to factions, liking to get along with all men. He appreciated Conkling's reluctant but timely support in the campaign and invited him out to Mentor in the winter to talk over the New York patronage. He thought ef inviting him into the cabinet until Blaine whispered no. Less than three weeks after he took his seat, Garfield told the senator that he was not yet ready to consider the question of filling the New York offices. Only . forty-eight hours afterward he tilled therii. nominating for the highest of these offices Blaine's best friend and Conkling's worst enemy in New York. With Garfield's hand. Blaine had thrown down the gauntlet to 1h.haughty chieftan of the "Stalwart" clan and a duel of factions was or. in blind fury. The administration succeeded in beating Conkling in the senate, where he opposed the con firmation of the offensive nomine:, but tho senator and his colleague, Thomas C. Phut, resigned their seats and appealed to the New York legis lature to re-elect them as a vindication of their course. This sensational act shifted the battle to Albany, where Vice President Arthur joined the two resigned "Stalwarts" and the "Haii! Breed?." When the conflict was bitterest and when the "Stalwarts" were losing at Albany, a- disappointed place hunter at Washington, Charles G. Guiteau, conceived the mad idea of saving the situation with a pistol shot, and he posted himself at the railway station, where his victim was to take a train for Massachusetts. The president was going back to Williams college, the goal of his struggling youth, and lay his honors at the feet of his alma mater. At a dare from one of his sons that, morning he had leaped over his bed at the White House, and was still smiling like a boy off for a vacation as he entered the waiting room at the railway station, with Blaine at his side. In two flashes of a revolver, he fell forward on the floor. With a shout of triumph,, the assassin proclaimed the wild motive of his deed: "I am a Stalwart! Arthur is now president!" It is unnecessary to say that the Stalwarts had no more knowledge of

f . . ' t - " - .j HmiT

IND, SATURDAY, OCT. 16, 1920.

Our Presidents MORGAN 1881 March 4, James A. Garfield inaugurated 20th president, aged 50. March 23, Sent to the senate the nominations of Federal officers in New York City. May 16, The senate confirmed the nominations. May 17, Senators Conkling and Piatt resigned. July 2, Garfield shot byCharles J. Guiteau in the Baltimore & Potomac railway station at Washington. Sept. 6, Removed to El berton, N. J. Sept. 19, Died, aged 50. 1882 lune 30, Guiteau hanged. Guiteau's purposes than the Confederates had of Booth's, hut just as the conflict, of sections had crazed the one, the other had been crazed by the fren zied quarrels of the factions over a division of spoils. The country was not only shocked but humiliated to se this genial, sunny-hearted president of the republic sent down, as Henry Watterson said, like a dog of a czar. Through more than eleven weeks, for seventy-niue days, a whole people, made kin by a touch of nature, anxiously watched by his bedside. When at last, the long, unequal light was lost, sympathetic hearts followed the wasted body to its native soil by the shore of LakeErie. After twenty years in our meagerly paid public service, Garfield had left his wife and children hardly better off than his mother and her little faru ily had been at the untimely death of his father. A grateful people eagerly welcomed the opportunity to pay trib. ute to his memory by providing a fund for the good woman who to to continue to bear his name through nearly forty years of widowhood, and for the education of sons who were to wear it worthily in high places. TheTheatres Continued from Page 10 said to come fast and furious. Cur Galloway "The Frisco Hobo" who scored such a hit last week at The Lyric, Inidanapolis, and The Lutes Bros., "Wizards of The Feet" are also on the bill. Eileen Percy, the new Fox star, will be seen on the screen in her latest comedy entitled "Her Honor The Mayor." Headlining the bill Thursday is booked The Five Musical Rosebuds, five attractive and accomplished youncr ladies who offer a novel musical levue; Charles and Helen Polly in "Genuinely Versatile" and King and Rose in a piano-logue with sonps. The screen feature for the week-end being Frank Mayo in "The Red Lane." MURRAY. A cartoon comedy film of unusual interest to motorists of Richmond will be shown at the Murray theatre for frm- days beginning Nov. 4. It is called the "Striking Tires" and is made up of thousands of drawings sketched by the famous cartoonist. Paul M. Felton. Tired of the abuses to which they are subjected, hundreds of tires leave their fivers and limousines to attend AAA MILE 5 30x3 . 30x3 . 32x3 i. 31x4 . 3x4 . $12.90 $15.90 $19.40 33x4 .. 3 4x4 . 34x4. 35x4 V2. , 36x4 - - $28.75 $27.50 $35.00 $36.50 $37.50 New, fresh stock in tires and tubes received every week. Nothing old or rebuilt. WM. F. LEE, No. 8 South 7th St., "Richmond's Reliable Tire Man" A BANK FOLKS LIKE TO PATRONIZE Safety and Service DICKINSON TRUST COMPANY

jr. Ribbonzine EmbroidMf4 cry (Twisted RibVTW bon French CordVjJ ing, Pleating. AfcJ LACEY'S SEWING Buttons MACHINE STORE Covered 9 S. 7th.- Phone 1756

INTEREST PAID JAN. 1ST, 1920 ON ALL SAVINGS ACCOUNTS WITH THE PEOPLE'S HOME AND SAVINGS ASSOCIATION Start your Savings Account with us any time and get dividends July. 1st end Jan. 1st following.

a mass meeting to protest against careless motorists. There they show bow they have been mistreated and neglected and demand better working conditions in the future. The film has a powerful educational appeal to the owner of a motor car. In an entertaining and humorous way it shows him that he cannot expect good service from his tires if he runs them under-inflated, bangs them against curbs, runs in car tracks, and neglects minor injuries. "Striking Tires" has been pronounced the best argument against tire abuse ever presented. Moreover. It ranks high among the best productions of the leading cinema cartoonists.

CATS DISRUPTED A ZOO (Philadelphia Record) Pittsburgh An army of cats, turned loose in the zoo at Highland park to clean out the rats, has shown the fallacy of many tales of ferocity told of wild denizens of the jungle. Rats'had become so numerous at the big zoo that it was found necessary to take some means of ridding the building of the pests, and the head keeper decided on cats just the plain alley breed. An advertisement brought them in droves and they were turned loose in the cages, cellars, supply rooms and lofts. No sooner had the cages been invaded than pandemonuim broke loose. Lions, tigers, panthers, pumas and leopards failed to recognize a distant relationship, and many of them went clear frantic with fear. Other animals, including the elephants, were not so timorous, but hippo and rhino were only a few seconds in making up their minds that discretion was the better part of valor. Hope deferred may make the heart sick, as the saying goes, but Its failure to be realized makes it sicker. Try Palladium Want Ads.

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Name Post Office Street and No

Margaret Hill Mc Carter

High School

Tuesday Afternoon, October 19th 3:30 o'clock

Republican Meetin:

USED

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1107 Main St.

Pad Jonesof Marines Breaks All Waffle Records (By Associated Press) NEW YORK. Oct. 16. Th title of champion waffle eater of the worlc today was claimed by Private Paul Francis Jones, of the U. S. Marine corps. He established his claim last night by eating twenty-six and a half of these corrugated pastries in thirty minutes flat, in a contest with a representative of the army, at the Grand Central palace. A large, mouth-watering audience witnessed the feat for which Private Jones rehearsed in the afternoon by eating a porterhouse steak smothered in onions French fried potatoes. as paragus, doughnuts and coffee.

WEBSTER M. E. AID SOCIETY HELD MEETING WEDNESDAY The regular monthly meeting of the Webster M. E. Aid society was held Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Carrie Plankenhorn, fifteen mem bers and one guest being present. After the business meeting a pleasant afternoon was spent. Refreshment were served by the hostess. The next meeting will be with Mrs. Will Cuibertson. Wednesday, Oct. 27. DR. R. H. CARNES DENTIST Phone 266S Rooms 15-16 Comstock Building 1016 Main Street Open Sundays and Evenings by appointment We can save you dealer's profit on a Used Piano or can trade your Silent Piano for a Victrola. WALTER B. 1000 Main St. FULGHUM Phone 2275 i. CHutzell.lt. P. pstoaotsT Ace. State dtm Auditorium GARS Phone 5200

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