Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 21, 3 December 1920 — Page 19
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THK K1CHM0ND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., FRIDAY, DEC. "8, 1920.
PAGE NINETEEN
BLACK RULER, PURDUE CHAMPION STEER, SELLS FOR $1,75 PER POUND CHICAGO. Dec. 3. Black Ruler, Purdue university's winner of the grand championship award at the International Livestock exposition, was Eold for $2,270 to the Wilson Packing company of Chicago. The steer weighed 1,360 pounds and the price paid was $1.70 per pound. Last year's champion steer brought $2.G2 a pound. The champion carload, a lot of 30 Angus cattle fed by E. T. Hall of Mechanicsburg. 111., sold for $30 per hundred pounds, as compared to last
year's price of $45. Armcur & Co.,
bousht the lot to supply Christmas beef for a loop hotel. Beef cattle in the open market at the stock yards Thursday brought $15 to $16, mediums, $13 to $1.50. and fair, $12 to $13. Angus breeders from Indiana sold several animals at good prices, William A. Phares of Tipton, letting a 2-year-old cow go through the auction ring for $575, and two others for $470 and $475. Wilson Brothers, Muncie, rold a cow for $575, and a heifer for $400. A. S. Cecil & Son, Muncie. sold a senior yearling heifer for $650. McCray's Herfords Win. Herford breeders practically com- ' pleted their show tonight, and will hold their sale tomorrow. Governorelect Warren T. McCray took his usual number of ribbons, and so did the herd belonging to Frank T. Fox, of Indianapolis. J. Crouch & Son, Lafayette, had several animals in the money, with several other breeders from the Hoosicr state showing; the Hereford show was the strongest it has ever been. Several Indiana rhorthorn breeders have cattle consigned to their sale, which will be Friday. Krvin Snyder, Now Paris, Ind., is making a record with his Belgian horses, a two-year-old mare, Lady Balser, winning first in her class, and she is considered a good bid for championship honors of the breed. Snyder also took a number of other prize. Karl L. Ulmer, North Manchester, captured a number of prizes. At the annual meeting of the National Belgian Breeders' association last night, J. D. Comer, Wabash, lnd.. was reelected secretary-treasurer, and Roy Graham of Franklin, Ind., w?.s named a director. J. C. Agnew, West Point, was re-elected a director of the International Live Stock exposition. Indiana Poultry Prominent. Indiana took a prominent place at the national poultry show, which epc-iv k Wednesday at the Coliseum here. An exhibit showing proper housing is being made by Purdue university, the Indiana institution being the only one in the west represented. In addition. Professors A. G. Phillips, L. L. Jones and C. W. Carrick of Purdue, are on the program for a series of lectures Saturday and Sunday. W. R. Fry, of Crawfordsville, who is here with a number of Montgomery boys and girls, where he is a vocational teacher, has several Rhode Island Red3 entered. He sold one of the first prize pullets Thursday for ;50, a remarkable price.
GREECE IS WARNED BY ALLIED PREMIERS AGAINST CONSTANTINE
LONDON, Dec. 3. The allied premiers, in conference today, agreed to tend a note to the Greek government declaring that restoration of Constantine to the throne of Greece would be regarded as ratification by that country of Constantine's hostile acts and would create a new and unfavorable situation in the relations between Greece and the allies. The text of the note follow-: "The British, French and Italian governments have constantly in the past given proof of their good will toward the Greek people and have favored their attainment of their secular aspirations. They, therefore, have been all the more painfully surprised by the events which have just occurred in Greece. No Desire to Interfere. "They have no wish to interfere in the internal affairs of Greece, but feel bound to declare publicly that restoration of the throne of Greece to a King whose disloyal attitude and conduct toward the allies during the war caused them great embarrassment and loss could only be regarded by them as ratification by Greece of his hostile acts. This step would create a new and unfavorable situation in the relations between Greece and the allies and in that case the three governments reserve to themselves completo liberty in dealing with the situation thus created."
WHEN IRISH SYMPATHIZERS MOBBED NEW YORK CLUB
fefe& tmMmm0J , tftSMS
The police reserves dispersing mob before St. Patrick's cathedral. Note the American and Irish republic flags carried by the rioters.
Leaving St. Patrick's cathedral. New York, titer attending a memorial mass in honor of Terrer i MatSwiney's memory, hun
dreds of Irish sympathisers mobbed the Union club on Fifth avenue, nearby, when officials of the club refused to take down
a British flag. All the street level windows in the club were broken. Police fought an hour to disperse the nub.
Five Minutes with Our Presidents
By JAMES MORGAN
i
1909 March 23, Theodore Roosevelt sailed for East Africa. 1910 June 18, returned home. 1912 February, "My hat is in the ring." June, Roosevelt defeated for Republican nomination. August, nominated by the Progressive party. Oct. 4, shot in Milwaukee. 1913 Oct. 4, sailed for South America. 1914 May 13, returned home. 1917 June, his application for war service declined. 1918 Jan. 6, death of Theodore Roosevelt, aged 60.
Bold Burglars Roh Police Commissioner Bv Associated Press) PITTSBURGH, Dec. 3 Thieves operating in this city, turned their efforts to new channels yesterday and succeeded in robbing a police commissioner. Not content with the harvest they have reaped during the past two months from pedestrians, banks, private residences and business houses, certain members of the rob.bers' clan mocked the majesty of the
law by stealing Commissioner of Po-i
Iicr Shriver Stewart's overcoat. The commissioner had been called to a building to assist a patrolman in his search for burglars. When he entered the building the commissioner found that it was warm, and before inspecting the upper floors hs removed his overcoat and left it near a door. After' the search the commissioner returned to the ground floor ocly to find his overcoat was missing.
THE NIMROD OF THE PRESIDENTIAL LINE (ROOSEVELT) IN HIS AFRICAN COSTUME.
If ever the name of Theodore Roose-' velt shall cease to live in political history and legend, it will still shine ; forth from the metal tablets on the! exhibition cases in the National Mu-I seum at Washington, where curious i visitors in generations to come will : pause to look in amazement at the j great beasts which this Nimrod of the presidential line slew in the jungles of I Africa. Those cases should serve also to prove an alibi for Roosevelt from : the charge that he was the slayer of the Republican elephant. j Contrary to the unreflecting opin-; ion, the Republican party was already, disrupted and defeated while Roose- j velt was roaming the far-off wilds of j East Africa, which his political revolu-j
tion was completely overthrown by a counter revolution. As president he had made the party again somewhat like unto what it was in its youth, the great organ of liberalism and progress, giving it such a hold upon the people as it never had before. He returned to find it, as he believed, the party of standpattism and reaction, with a tidal wave of popular dissatisfaction flowing against it. Nevertheless he went at once on a wearisome, hopeless tour of the country in an effort to save the party in the congressional elections of 1910, and he took the stump a?ain in 1911, with the same barren result. The doom of the Taft administration in the presidential election of 1912 already was sealed, when a group of Republican governors appealed to the expresident to be the party candidate and to lead a forlorn hope. Even h would stand only a sporting chance to win, and he responded in sporting terms: "My hat is in the ring." Although Roosevelt swept, by a majority of more than 400,000, the eleven Republican states having popular pri-
pointed applicant retorted on the recent campaign slogan of the president He found proud consolation to the service in the field of all four of his sons. At the supreme sacrifice of the youngest, Quentin, who fell battling In the air, he turned a brave front to the public and gave no outward sign of the cruel hurt that the blow must have caused the heart of a father so fond. "Only those are fit to live who do not fear to die," was his message from the shadow of the loss of his baby boy. Old foes hailed him as the hope of the Republican party in 1920. He smiled at the suggestion, though his intuition and his increasing ailments may already have warned him that he had fought his fight and finished his course. Both his parents were 6hort lived, and he had exceeded his natural prospect of life, when . the final summons came to him as he" slept in his home at Oyster Bay before the dawn of a January day in 1919. The death of no other ex-president, of no other private citizen in any land has called out such a world-wide expression of regret. To Americans, it was like a death in the family. For 20 years "Teddy" had been passing in and out of their homes like a familiar, and touching their lives on every side. He had excited among them the same instinctive affections and the same furious resentments that are reserved for kith and kin. First and laV, all had agreed and all had disagreed with him, and with equal violence, but remaining all the while immoderately nroud of him as the very Dersonifica-
Ition of themselves, of America. Even
in his grave, he still bears mute testimony to the democracy and the real Amprlrnnfsm whieh were exemplified
the midst of his losing fight for the th manv.ded life of Theodore
ncpuuiicau , nomination : i leei as Roosevelt
strong as a duu moose. ine tsuu Moose" indeed proved to be amazingly strong at the polls, where it carried six states and left only two to the elephant Utah and Vermont with the Democratic mule winning the presidency in a walk. While campaigning in the middle of October, Roosevelt was shot by a crazy man in Milwaukee. "He pinked me," he admitted to the anxious bystanders, but he insisted on continuing his ride to the hall, where he was to speak. "I will deliver that speech or die," he persisted, and he spoke with the bullet hole in his chest undressed and bleeding. The next year, the unresting expresident outdid his African exploits by plunging into the tropic wilderness of Brazil. At 65 he was less fitted for the hardships which he had successfully braved in the Dark continent four years before, and he never again was to be the robust embodiment of that strenuous life which, for a genertation, he had practiced as well as preached. The dife of the Progressive party was as short as its rise was sudden. Although its founder smilingly vowed in 1916. "I am still a Progressive," he gave his earnest, if not enthusiastic, support to Charles E. Hughes, the Republican nominee. For two years before America entered the war, his pen he was on the staff of magazines and newspapers was continually goading the country cut of its K neutral position in the great struggle. After we got into the conflict, it continued to goad the counry to go faster and farther. Roosevelt was eager to lead another band of Rough Riders to the front, but President Wilson sustained the objection of the military advisors of
the government to any volunteer or-1 ganizations. "I am the only one hej has kept out of the war," the disap- i
Pale Children Need Iron
Iron in Syrup form is more readily digested and assimilated than Iron Pills or Iron Tablets, er.d naturally you get quicker results. The Iron in GROVE'S IRON TONIC SYRUP is digested as soon as it is swallowed and, therefore, is promptly assimilated. You can soon feel its Strengthening. Invigorating Effect. The Syrup is flavored and children love to take it. Contains no Nux-vomica or other poisonous drags, therefore, it can be ven to The Babe. The Child, The Mother or The Grandmother with perfect 6afety. 75c.
Look for this signature.
FOREIGN MINISTERS OF CHINA AND JAPAN ARE IN CONTROVERSY T3y Associated Press.) PEKING, Dec 3. The fact that Japanese authorities sent troops to the frontier town of Hungchun, in Chinese territory, for the announced purpose of protecting Japanese subjects, after the town had been raided by bandits, appears to have raised a serious controversy between the foreign ministries of the countries In question, and incidentally to have re-opened an old controversy concerning an adjacent territory known as Chientao. (Hungchun is a Chinese town on the Tumen river at a point where the borders of China, Korea and the Maritime province of Siberia meet. If is about 60 miles south of Vladivostok.) The Chinese press accuses the Japanese of being actuated by an ulterior motive in the course they have pursued. E. Lenox Simpson, statistician to the president of China, has pointed out that it is significant than such attacks by Chinese bandits arte always attempted where Japan wishes to set up garrisons. Early in October a band of butlaws which is said to have numbered several thousand and to have been well supplied with modern rifles arad machine guns, entered Hungchun, killed a number of people including, it is said, sesveral Japanese, and burned the Japanese consulate. After the -raid, and in the face, it is said, of an impending repetition of the outrage, the
NEW BRIDGE GROCERY and Meat Market Reduced Prices for Quick Sales A. O. FORSYTH E 98 Main St. (Across the Bridge)
FAMILY WASHINGS Called for and Delivered Rate, 11 cents per pound. The Excel Laundry 1020 S. C St. Phone 1975
Japanese moved troops Into the plaa and incidentally into the adjacent territory of Chlentao. .In the course of diplomatic exchanges over the situation, it appears that the Tokio foreign office assumed that Peking had agreed to "co-operation" by Japanese troops, whereas th Chinese foreign ministry alleges thai the invasion having already occurrec when the question of co-operation was first discussed, its attitude was on of protest against a fait accompli. Swat One Pair of Flies; Kill Billions Later NEW YORK, Dec, 3. Ono pair of flies swatted now will avert the possible plague of 324,000,000,000 potential descendants next autumn, it is asserted on posters circulated today by the Merchants' Association of New York city, which launched a winter fly swatting campaign. Placards
were distributed throughout the city
urging a concerted rfri on the pests between now and Chrlstmax - .
lb.
ugar
25 Lb. Granulated Sugar S3.50 Greening Apples, Basket $1.00 10 Bars P. & CL Soap .... 6S 10 Bars Star Soap 6S Per Box, 100 Bars C 4b G. or Star Soap $6.50 12 Lbs. Fancy Onion .50
Crisco, Id. n . - Fancy Bananas, dox, 20
6 Cans 23c Corn
-$1.00
E. R. Berheide Phone 1329 244 S- 5th St. Free Delivery
We can save you dealer's profit on a Used Piano or can trade your Silent Piano for a Victrola. , WALTER B. FULGHUM 1000 Main St. Phone 2275
SETH THOMAS CLOCKS SAM S. VIGRAN 617 Main St
maries, Taft was renominated by the aid of the delegates from the Democratic states of the South and the "steam roller" of the Gld Guard. This resulted in a bolt and the formation of the Progressive party. This naturalist in politics supplied a symbol and nickname for his new party when he assured a reporter in
DR. C. C. KRIEGH EYESIGHT SPECIALIST In Thistlethwaite's Drug Store 914 MAIN
FLOWERS Consult us on the matter of Funeral Flowers and Flowers for all occasions. THE WAYNE FLOWER SHOP Phone 26141031 Main St.
Buy Xmas Gifts of Furniture Weiss Furniture Store
505-13 Main St.
20 OFF On Everything In the Store
'I
uiehler Bros, Saturday Special
CHOICE POT ROAST, lb BOILING BEEF, lb
HAMBURGER, lb.
SIRLOIN STEAK, lb
BONELESS VEAL ROAST, lb PORK SHOULDER ROAST, lb. PORK CHOPS, lb. COTTAGE PORK ROAST, lb
10c - . 15c
.20c 23c . 23c
BREAKFAST BACON (sides or half) lb
SMOKED SHOULDERS, lb BEAN BACON, lb ,
. ... . .30c
18c
Mer Bros,
Hue
715 Main Street
9
Full to Overflowing with Xmas Gift Suggestions
KNOLLENBERG'S Buy Xmas Candies at Mrs. Keefer's Home-Made Candies
SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINT A. G. LUKEN & CO.
630 Main St.
INNER TUBES CARE-
FULLY REPAIRED Here at moderate cost WM. F. LEE No. 8 South 7th Street
"Richmond's Reliable Tire Man"
Ladies' Silk Plush Coats at unheard of prices $17.93, $19.98, $22.98, $24.98, $28.98 Rapp's Cut Price Co. 529 Main St.
The Victrola Store Is Open Every Evening - -
Your Photograph
In it all formality should be cast aside to make it most natural. We want you to come prepared for any sitting you wish. Wear the clothing you choose. You'll find here, all necessary conveniences for arranging your costume to suit.
COAT
GAINS
Our buyer shipped us 50 Coats from New York' which he bought at 50 cents on the dollar. We offer these to our customers at very low prices. Every Coat in this shipment is real merchandise" and not cheap junk bought for sale purposes. Read descriptions and prices. Come in and look at them. You are welcome whether you buy now later or never. ' FUR GOATS
S167.50 $112.50 ..$53.75
PLUSH GOATS.
$95.00
1 MURMOT, raccoon collar and cuffs $245.00 value, at 1 SEALIXE. black Marten collar and cuffs $195.00 value, at FRENCH CONEY FUR COATS 5S5.00 value, at
SHORT PLUSH COATS (Salt's Sealskin), squirrel trim, $175.00 value, at
OTHER SHORT PLUSH COATS (big' selection), raccoon fur trimmed. Australian oppossum trimmed, French Coney trimmed and self-trimmed priced C ft from $19.75 to
CLOTH COATS One lot of Brown Velour Cloth Coats, with Australian oppossum collars; wonderful values, at ,
$25.00
Other Cloth Coats from $7.50 to $75.00
Our Nightgowns are the talk of the country. Priced at $1, $1.25 Odd sizes $1.49
WATCH OUR. WINDOW For SPECIALS Did you see our Petticoats at $1.98
68 MAIN ST.
BETWEEN 6
