The Republican-Record (Gage, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 7, 1920 Page: 3 of 8
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THE REPUBLICAN RECORD UACE OKLAHOMA
Beginning a $5000000 Shrine nr Washington
CE7 YOHi'l (IHITEflS tmm HEADS THE mm
Mpj Tirnpi I ifrii— wr cincum!
111 CULLLIUi Man Aa National Commando
Koop Nautral In Politics
Clevenland O— Tbo American Le-
gion convention throw another plum
Ohio’a wmjr when It aelected former
Col Frederick W Galbraith Jr of
Cincinnati aa Ita national commander
for the ensuing yeyr
Galbraith tbo candato of the “In-
ner circle” of the legion's works won
out on tht second ballot after a tussle
with former Lleut-Col Hanford Mnc-
Only 2000 Vano Available to Trane-1 Nider'of Iowa who waa vociferously
port 75000 Families — Officials backed by the "ratin' to go” element
I from tba Western atutes
Find the Wtsa Prohibitive Tba thfd candldate John F u Her
New York — Municipal officials are ?' ha‘Ied from Worcester
‘ - The vote on the final ballot showed
making efforts to °rdr ®f Gabralth 686 MacNlder' 275 and
confusion whlch reuUed from Herbert 145 MacNlder Immediately
of thousands of lies t retain and m0ed tQ maka CaIbralt0
their homes ag ns -101601100 nnanimous The convention
or to find means of moving to new concurrad and then pr0Ted that t
iuarters ‘ r o hadn’t used up all of Us demonstration
Hundred of tenant swarmed the Lblllty 0n Tuesday by welcoming Its
offices of the mayor com new commander with a volley of yells
rent profiteering with appeals for aid 0albraith commanded the 147th In-
in retaining their homes or pr®e“' fantry of the 87th or “Buckeye” did-
- tog rent increases Arthur J Hilly I son overgea aervlng n tbe Baccarat
I and Ypres-Lys sectors and later par-
statement urging these tenants to co- tcpaUng n the blg of st
operato and consider the merits f Mlhle and tha MeuBeAreonne He
engage-
ment and wears the distinguished ser-
vice cross and the Croix de Guerre
operato ana couwuer u “ Mible and the Meuse-Argonne
their own cases pre?fnt was wounded In the latter e
York courts from becoming hopeless-
ly clogged with tenant-landlord cases
Evc T®nn I with palm for heroism in the Argonne
Aaron J Levy c ief Jus I But although the western delegates
municipal court announced telegrams dldnt over tbeIr candldate they
lad been sent to the chief clerks of I r
n rf
C ’b -
U' v Q-Y
W?mt
)-W-
fr vodSrtt I lYMl NflftssliiKS
Cardinal Gibbons othcluted at tbe laying of the cornerstone of tbe Shrine of the Immueulut Conception Cutholtc
University of America In Washington lie Is here shown descending tbe steps from tbe platform Tbe shrine-Is to
- cost $5000000
SAUCE FOR THE TURKEY
did put the convention on record us
in the various districts direct- favorlng the Paclflc slope’s anti-Jap-
t no warrants of eve o -I ane8e re80iutlon which denounced Nip-
ponese Immigration as “a grave mn-
lace to the people - of the United
had
courts
- lug that
eued In any landlord and tenant pro-
ceedings commenced before Septem-
ber 28 This means Justice Levy statea called for the canceiiation of
said that no tenants can be evicted the -gentemen-8 agrcement” between
-except those subject to eviction under thIg country and Japan and for tbe
the new bous ng laws passed at appointment of a committee of the le-
recent special session of e s a gjon tQ gQ lnto the wbole Sllbject thor-
legislature oughly and report to the next conven-
Announcement also was made that Uon The re80lutlon was adopted
a mass meeting of citizen- will be practlcany unanlmously
held In Carnegie hall to consider the he convention did a thorough Job
housing situation Governor ' Smith K yotlng down unanimoU8ly a resolu
and United States Senator William M ton whlch provided that It might en-
Calder will speak gage In limited political activity and
- Moving Rates Are Prohibitive refusing tD modify the nonpolitical
J- waa estimated that seventy-five cjause in lts charter This did not
thousand families would attempt to CQme about howeyer until after a
move with hardly more than two thou- 8tJff flght waged by varlous 8tate dele
sand moving vans available Many of gatlons which wanted permission to
the tenants planned to go to quarters g0 after certan Qf thelp hom0 poll
which scheduled to become vacant Oc-
ticlans with the whole strength of la-
tober 1 were occupied by other fam- gjon condemnation officially expressed
tiles unable to find new quarters
Commissioner of Accounts Hirsch-1 q £ q frQ- nr fuil flDCM
field afteran Investigation of condl-1 Ur lnlLUnCN
tions declared moving van rates are
“prohibitive” and will prevent many I National Safety Council’s Campaign In
from moving Schools of the Country Brings
Justice Levy in his statement said Good Results
‘ that “thousands upon” thousands of I '
tenants ” would have been subject to 'Mllwaukee —Greater safetv of chil-
eviction October 1 under proceedings ' MiiwauKee— oreater sarety or chil-
I dren’s lives throughout' the nation re-
tbat have been started His decision
sultant from the national safety coun-
ordering warrants'- held up resulted
from a conference of municipal court If 8 of instruction in pub-
JSS ht s“d!wnill be heWbOctoberf after l6a tfn a half year’s acUvitles
rgThVntw8 1“
y ® - I al safety council read before the
THREATEN A RESERVE BANK “‘“f “““1 8afetf pnf88-
The school safety instruction - was
School Children of Japan
-r -v- npt-4 '
o : - aJ
a
Cranberry pickers la the bogs nt
Carver and Tremont Mass ure busily
engaged In picking the crop for the
coming holidays Men and women
pickers earn 75 cents an hour while
the children are paid 35 cents a box
In the photograph an old native of
Carver is shown at work In the
soreenlng house where ail the berries
are sorted - ' - -
- — A
“ SHE IS A-JUDGE
Officials of Kansas City Federal lntl-flated by Dr E George Payne
tutlon Receive Anonymous Warning frinc11 of he Harrls teachers’ col-
lege of St Louis the report stated
and added that twenty-nine cities and
Kansas City — On an anonymous I towns have adopted his plan
“tip” admitted by officials of the Fed- Milton C Potter superintendent of
oral Reserve Bank to have been re- 'schools of Milwaukee said annual in-
celved here an extra force of police tra-sehool accidents in Milwaukee
and federal agents are guarding the prior to the war had been reduced
” R A Long buildings Tenth street and 40 Per c®t but that during and after
Grand avenue home of the Federal Lhe war a reaction was felt which
Reserve Bank swelled the number of mishaps ma-
The “tip” is said to have been that terially
an attempt would be mad j to blow
up the building at 3:30 o’clock in the BREAKS WITH THE RADICALS
afternoon
Officials of -the Reserve Bank ad-1 American Federation of Labor Repudi-
mitted Mayor Cowgill had received an ates Doctrines of the European
anonymous letter of warning which Groups in -Printed Statement
he sent to J Z Miller governor of I
the bank I New York — The American Federa-
At the office of Fred Tate1 in charge I tion of Labor has broken completely
of secret service investigation here it I with European radical labor groups in
wara said Mr Tate was out of town a statement in the current-issue of the
' An investigator in the office however American Federationist its official -r-did
not deny the report of a threat gan according to the New York World
was true - I The statement repudiates completely
the doctrines of the British Labor
MORE LUMBER PRICES CUT party and the International Labor
party
Finish and Flooring Drop 2 Per Cent I “Tbe American Federation of Labor
at Kansas CItiy— Dimensions s not a revolutionary body and has
- Are Down Too I never had any affiliation with any rev-
I I olutionary body which would require
Kansas City— Announcements were I it to give serious consideration to rev-
made by all Kansas City lumber yards olutionary proposals of any kind” the
of a reduction of prices approxi- article said
mating 10 to 20 per cent according I “While recognizing the need of revo-
to grade This puts the local retail I lution against autocratic governments
market in-line with recent reductions I organized labor in this country regards
In the wholesale market and marks the American government as being es-
a decline of 20 to 40 per cent from j sentialiy democratic”
the peak prices last May
The reduction is the fourth made I Appeal Again to League
this year and local lumber dealers be- London— The London Times says It
lieve now that the bottom has been 9 informed that the Lithuanian gov-
' reached and then with an enormous eminent has made a -fresh appeal lo
demand for lumber expected for the League of Nations asking an im-
spring building prices will be Inclined I mediate meeting of the council in or-
to advance with the certainty of a I der to consider the situation created
stiffening in wholesale prices by the Polish invasion of Lithuania
A picturesque gathering of Jupanese children waiting to be admitted at
one of the primary schools In Tokyo Ihe little scholars are almost patheti-
cally alike In dress and appcnrance Mosf of them are wearing the typically
Japanese print gown although here' and there may be discerned a more eiag
orate robe The little boys have their heads closely shaved
Boy Scouts in Bolivian Mountains
CONSIDERABLE POINT
- “Offlcvc” Inquired the testy Judge
“what’s all that rumpus iu the Jury-
room V-
honor the foreman says they’re
arguing a valuable poiut”
“Oh tell them that they have my
approbation hut aMk tbetu to he a lit
tie more quiet about It” '
“X"! honor” replied the courtroom
dignitary on his return “tb’ Jury-
wishes to thank you for your appro
batlon but the point they’re arguing
Is one of penochle for $5 a side”—
American Legion Weekly
When Homer Nods
The Highbrow — So you’re a poetl
An honorable and ancient art Even
before the days of printing the poets
used to rend their works aloud In
public places
The Popular Lyric Writer — That’S
the' way It should be now Then a
guy could read the long lines fast and
slow up on the short ones and s q
make ’em come out about even
THE OTHER MAN’S GAME
Madam Zlxxl: What you brpkel
I thought you was makln’ all kinds of
money at the clairvoyant game
Professor Zoom: I was but I lost
It all In stocks
vo Point? yi?w
nfst rind an opjlrtiTst werv
The Paragon
Ng man la perfect— though sometimes
' There’s one in wlfey’s view—
The mart she could have married If
She hadn’t married you
tr f
" - '
Two
A pesslmf
discussing life from their different
vfyvpQiot
"I really believe” said the former
“that I could make a better world my-
self" - :l-
i-’Wellj”' said thq optimist “that’s
iiWhol we are here for Now let’s get
to work and do It” — London Answers
5TT'
‘A Little Mixed - -
' “Wliat Isfll embargo Bill?”
“It’s what you put on ships to keep
’em from going out Sam”
“It ain’t you fool That’s the' an-
chor” '
Quite Different
“Did you apply an astringent to the
wound?” '
“I didn’t use any of them expen-
sive remedies The doctor said all I
needed was something to draw It up”
A Good Place
“Somehow In spite of all their pro-
testations reformers never can find
Ihe man higher up”
“Why don’t they hunt for him In the
aviation service?”
This Is Miss Katherine Sellers ap-
pointed by President Wilson Judge of
the Juvenile court of the District of
Columbia
GOMPERS UP IN THE AIR
rnmatuimms
Make Fuel From Mine Waste I Federal Council Ends Session
London The chance that British I Akron O — Tb 6 federal highway
coal miners will go on striking and J council closed Its two days’ meeting
causing national distress has turned recently with the announcement that
- - Boy scouts of the American Institute learning to wlgwng in mountainous
Bolivia under the direction of teachers from the United States
Cutting the Cost of Fertilizers
the attention of experts to the great
heaps of “smsll coal” and coal dust
on every pit head
Big Cut in Motor Cars
New York — Hare's Motors Inc op-
erating compacy for the Locomobile
and Mercer concerns announced re-
cently the price of standard Locomo-
bile cars hfd been reduced $1350 and
Mercer models $1000
it will raise a 4-mlIlion-dol!ar budget
for the coming year and enlarge its
membership
Postal Service From France to Brazil
Washington — Postal service be-
tween France and Brazil under the
supervision of the French ministry of
public works has been provided for
according to a report from Paris to
the depsrtment of commerce
'Et-'-v
I
f-'oxovtll
AN OLD TIMER
1st Cold Storage Egg: I’ve been In
year when did you go in?
2nd Cold Storage Egg: It’s been
so long ago I’ve forgotten
Above the Practical
She cannot cook she can now sew
Of business she has no knowledge
She cannot even make a bed—
Shu learned too much at college
The Easy Way
“You recommended that man very
highly”
Yes”
“But he proved to be utterly use-
less” “I thought he would but you see I
had to get rid of him as easily as pos-
sible”— Detroit Free Press
Even Sniuuel Gompers president of
the American Federation of Labor
finally succumbed to the thrill of avi-
ation and as our photograph shows
took an air ride the other day from
Buffalo to Rochester X Y
Law Is a Chsss Champion
I'onsr Law Is the champion chess
player of the British bouse of com-
mon a
The basis of practically all mixed fertilizers Is phosphoric acid which Is
obtained from phosphate rock While this country has larger deposits of this
mineral than any other nation we are throwing away several million tons an-
nually because of the present methods of preparing phosphate fertilizer The
scientists of tbe bureau of soils department of agriculture are engaged In
working out econoinh-ti! methods of eliminating this tremendous loss Tha
photograph shows an oil-burning furnace with auxiliary equipment for tbs
productlou of phosphoric acid
Sad Future
Randolph — What’s the matter old
man? You look as If you'd been sen-
tenced to hard labor for life
De Broke — P a fra hi I have been
Miss de Millyuns hna Just refused
me— London Answers
Any Excuse
“I suppose the dry-law enforcement
agents will be down on the father of
that shrilly crying Infant"
“Why so?”
“Because of Us Indulgence In high
bawls”
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Hill, Bert E. The Republican-Record (Gage, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 7, 1920, newspaper, October 7, 1920; Gage, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1794457/m1/3/?q=%22new-sou%22: accessed June 26, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.