Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 46, 3 January 1921 — Page 10
PAGE TEN
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., MONDAY, JAN. 3, IBZl.
CHINESE STUDENTS START AN AGITATION AGAINST JAPANESE
(By Associated Press.) PEKING, Jan. 3. Chinese students nave become active in an effort to
arouse the populace to realization of the alleged seriousness of, Japanese aggression In the Hungchun and Chientao districts, by means of street -demonstrations. Several thousand men and women students representing 29 schools and colleges congregated recently in the plaza before Central park here and marched to the gate leading to the presidential palace, thence the foreign office and several of the ministries, carrying flags and banners with patriotic Inscriptions. At the foreign" office, Dr. W. W.Yen spoke to the students from a balcony He Is said to have assured them that the military governor of Manchuria, Chang Tso-lin, had entered Into no agreement with the Japanese, as reported, for military co-operation in policing Manchuria, nor had the foreign office recognized any right on the part of Japan to send troops into Chinese territory. . The students were orderly, and there was no work for the extra police who were rushed to the various localities visited. For several days street orators have been harrangulng crowds in the streets. The Japanese sent troops to the frontier town of Hungchun in Chinese territory in October for the announced purpose of protecting Japanese subects after the town' had been raided by bandits. This involved the foreign ministry of China and Japan into a controversy. Commenting on the affair, E. Lenox Simpson, (Putnam Weale, statistician to the president of China) said that Hungchun was the nearest lmportalnt point on Chinese territory to the Soa of Japan, to which Japan held all the keys. Mr. Simp-
eon pointed out that such faint at
tacks as those at Hungchun "were always attempted where Japan seems anxious to install garrisons." Hnngchun is about 60 hiles south of Vladivostok where the borders of China, Korea and Siberia meet, and is close to Possiet boy, on the sea of Japan.
Better Than Whiskey for Colds and Flu
New Elixir, Called Aspironal, Medicated With Latest Scientific Remedies, Used and Endorsed by European and American Army Surgeons to Cut Short a Cold and Prevent Complications. Every Druggist in U. S. Instructed to Refund Price While Yoo Wait at Counter if Relief Does Not Come Within Two Minutes.
Delightful Taste, Immediate
Relief, Quick Warm-Up. The sensation of the year in the Irug trade is Aspironal, the two-minute cold and cough reliever, authoritatively guaranteed by the laboratories; tested, approved and most enthusiastically endorsed by the highest authorities, and proclaimed by the common people as ten times as quick
and effective as whiskey, rock and
rye, or any other cold and cough remedy they have ever tried. All drug stores are now supplied with the wonderful new elixir, so all you have to do to get rid of that cold Is to step into the nearest drug store.
hand the clerk half a dollar for a bot
tle of Aspironal and tell him to serve you two teaspoonfuls with four teaspoonfuls of water in a glass. With your watch in your hand, take the drink at one swallow and call for our money back m two minutes if you cannot feel your cold fading away like a dream within the time limit Don't be bashful, for all druggists Invite you and expect you to try it. Everybody's doing it When your cold or cough Is relieved, take the remainder of the bottle home to your wife and babies, tor Aspironal is by far the safest and most effective, the easiest to take and the most agreeable cold and cough remedy for infants and children. Advertisement
ALARM CLOCKS SAM S. VIGRAN
617 Main St.
Empress Eugene Bequeaths Portrait to 1870 Rescuer - (By Associated Press LONDON, Jan.. 3,--The most romantic touch in the will of the former Empress Eugenie of France, probate on which has just been granted, is her bequest of a little greuze portrait to Sir John Burgoyne, on whose yacht
she escaped from France to England on Sept. 6, 1870, two days after the fall of the French empire. It was Dr. Evans, an American den
tist, who brought the empress in dis
guise to Deauville, and she secretly
embarked on Burgoyne's yacht at mid
night' an hour after the vessel hAd
been searched by the French police.
Eugenie, who was once considered the most beautiful woman in Europe, and who died in Madrid on July 11 last, aged 94, left an estate estimated at $10,000,000. Deposited at the Record office along with the will is a copy which Eugenie wrote with her own hands, when the Germans were bombing London, and
DR. R. H. CARNES DENTIST Phone 2665 Rooms 15-16 ComstocL Building 1016 Main Street Open Sundays and Evenings by appointment
We can av you dealer's profit on a Used Piano or CSw trade your Silent Piano for a Victrola. WALTER B. FULGHUM 1000 Main St. Phone 2275
the was afraid the original might be destroyed. .
j " Masonic Calendar
V - Monday. Jan. 3 Richmond . Commander? No. 8, K. T.. stated conclave and installation of officers. . Tuesday, Jan. 4 Richmond Lodge No. 196, F. and A. M.. stated meeting and Installation of officers. Wednesday, Jan. 5 Webb Lodge No. 24, F. and A. M., called meeting: work in Master Mason degree, 7 o'clock. ," Thursday, Jan. Wayne Council No. 10, It. and S. M., stated assembly; installation of officers, work in R. and S. M. degree. Refreshments. Friday, Jan. 7 King Solomon's Chapter No. 4. R. A. M.. called meeting; work in Royal Arch degree, 7:00 o'clock. -
Students In St. Louis are not permitted to belong to any secret high school fraternity or sorority.
VISITORS MUST TELL BUSINESS IN IRELAND
DUBLIN. Jan. 3. Ireland today Is a land where it is advisable for the newly arrived, unacquainted traveller to tell the hall porter at his hotel who he is, his nationality, his business in ton and bow long he expects to stay, then be mo3t circumspect in whatever he does or says. People with uncertain backgrounds or on indefinite missions get courteous receptions, but it Is futule for them to expect their welcomes to be tinctured with anything approaching familiarity, normally one of the dominant Irish characteristics. Therefore the wisdom of "singing out your business," as one American traveller expressed it, to your hall porter. Uninitiated Americans perhaps would not understand .the important position occupied by this functionary.
He ,is a veritable encyclopedia of- in
formation and "Who's Who" of everything important concerning the hotel, Us management and staff and its guests. ... .... It is this individual that raiders almost , invariably consult when they make their unconventional visits to hostelrief! in search of wanted person. His statement that a person asked for was an American or Frenchman and that he came to town for some legitimate purpose has been known to save the guest an abrupt waking and quiz, possibly at the point of a revolver.
Portland Exposition, 1925, ; to Feature Sew Highways PORTLAND Ore., Jan. 3. An exposition will be held in Portland in 1925 to commemorate-the. linking of the east with the we6t and the north with, the south by means of paved highways from New York to Portland and from the Mexican line to British Columbia, it is announced. v Electrical development will be featured. It, has been - determined that the
Atlantic-Pacific Highways and Electrical exposition, the name chosen for the affair, shall- be along educational lines and that there shall be no profits. A $5,000,000 corporation under these conditions is proposed to launch the enterprise.
OHIO STATE PUTS ON STYLE SHOW FOR FARMERS' WEEK COLUMBUS. O., Jan. 3. It won't be Just pigs and cows and tractors and such things for the farmers' wives who accompany their husbands here for Farmers' Week at the Ohio State University from January 2 to Feb. 4. They'll have an opportunity to see
ASK FOR and GET KlB)irOflcCs9s The Original Malted Milk for Infants and Invalids Avoid Imitations and Substitutes
Just what the newest styles are. on living models, and in addition, opportunities will be afforded for conferences over personal clothing pioblems. The style show is being arranged now and Is expected to be a big attraction.
What One Doctor Says Dr. M. C. Lyons says: "After careful Investigation I heartily recommend it (Rheuma) for all forms of rheumatism." Quigley's drug stores sell and guarantee it. Use of one bottle will convince you why this wellknown doctor praises it so highly. ' Advertisement.
Dr. J. A. Thomson Dentist Murray Theater Building Hours: 9-12, 1-5, 7-8; Sunday -12 Phone 2950
IMS '-.ess ' "13 n l-spf I I J , ?. 'n ill 9TfS US 1 I -r ' h fflfl II Jx. m Pi' y il ion hp i si 8 FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY OF GOODRICH 8
rail
MONEY TO LOAN "PRUDENTIAL Phone 1727 Room 202 K. of P. Temple
PRICE COAL CO. S17-519 N. 6th St. PHONE 1050 Dealer in High Grade Coal
4 I
I1TH the close of 1920 Goodrich completed
fifty years of serviceIb have lived these fifty years is much. To have grown the full fifty years is more. For the true test of an institution is more than its age it is how much
it has written into the progress of the world, and how much benefit it has been to the industry it represents. Fifty years ago when Goodrich was founded the uses of rubber were few. It was just beginning to be appreciated as a factor in industrial life. Since that time the ingenuity and inventiveness of man have created of this material many thousands of products which today are absolutely essential to the continued progress of the world. The site of the little factory of fifty years ago is today part of the city that Goodrich built the"city of rubber " comprising 63 great buildings of brick and steel, towering into the air, reaching into the ground covering 110 acres of land. Throughout America and the world its
influence is felt and its products are in wide demand. Looking back through these fifty years, it is worth while to realize and appreciate that the Goodrich organization has always endeavored to meet its responsibilities and perform its tasks with a full sense of its obligations toward the public. From the day when Dr. Benjamin Franklin Goodrich opened his small factory in Akron, Ohio, in 1870, one ideal, one principle, has always dominated its efforts. It is the simple creed voiced by Dr. Goodrich when the company was founded: "Let us make goods destined for service." Goodrich is what it is today because during these fifty years it has adhered to high ideals, and the years have woven a web of tradition which is not only sacred to the organization, but which also furnishes a powerful incentive to pass the heritage on from one generation to another. An Interesting Booklet Few persons realize the interesting side- even the romance of the rubber industry and its history. We have published a booklet commemorating our fiftieth anniversary. It tells the story of rubber. This book, The Golden Year of GoodriclCwill be sent in response to a request on your business stationery.
THE B. F. GOODRICH COMPANY AKRON, OHIO
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