Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 308, 8 November 1918 — Page 7

PAGE SEVEN BRINGING UP FATHER By McManus day. Nor. 11 opened at the box office Thursday," Not.' i: " This engagement bids fair of being largely attended and holds every promise of being the most delightful of this ' season's presentations in this city. -:- 1 "OU VOOLD HAVE TO A.- mv WOULD UK.E.TO RATHER FlFVT - f-j LEGS STIFF? JOINTS raw uijkj,iMuo nuiL : Limber Up! Rub Any Kind of. Pain, Soresness, Stiffness Right Out With "St. Jacobs Liniment."

'fPE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1918.

ILL iO RK.HT JV 0 ' I JOULD YOU VrMW T I TO His Opf1CE ' -JVn MMROISIF " OUN$ .U Ju ANQ that" I wkhim KJ K voudauThter how dare fou l WHAT HER FATHER bAD LJ I

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ALLIES MUST SEND MORE AID IN ORDER TO SAVE RUSSIANS (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON. Nov. 8. Additional ld must be furnished Russia by the allied and United States governments fsl once if that nation is to be saved, afta an appeal to President Wilson tnom the United Russian provisional government at Omsk, which was in the hands of the state department today. Tho appeal, which was delivered to Secretary Lansing, by Boris Ealthmetff, Russian ambassador to the United Ptates, declared that assistance already furnished the" Russian people will be in vain if "the new help arrives too late." "Every hour of delay threatens with Innumerable calamities Russia, the allies and other nations," says the appeal, addressed to President Wilson as "the head of the great American democracy, recognized apostle of peace and" fraternity of the nations." There was no indication in official Quarters today of possible action to be taken by the United States and the allies. YANKEE DESTROYER DANGEROUS GRAFT ON nOARD AN AMERICAN DESTROYER IN FRENCH WATERS, Nov. 8. Correspondence of The Associated Press. Ap American detroyer with her depth bombs ready to be discharged is indeed a dangerpus craft to monkey with. She1 is a menace not only to the enemy, but to ny other craft with which she might collide In the .darkness, running wlthput lights and to herself as well. If one of her depth bornbs loaded with Its heavy charge of TNT should be accidentally exploded there would be HtHe left of the destroyer. The deadly depth charge which is moving to be the conclusive answer o the submarine menace now is being released from every quarter of the destroyer. Two of these big cylinders of high explosives can be dropped from the bridge by the pressure Of a button, midships Thornycroft throwers drop a charge from either side of tho destroyer forming a barrage. "Y-guns" aro stationed amidshlp with two barrels, each of which throws a depth charge one to port and the pther to starboard. Finally astern, there are two long lines of depth pharges running on mlnature railway tracks, ready to be dropped over the Item. With all these depth bomb charges feady to be let loose forward, aft and amidships and complete enveloping barrage can be put in operation at any time. With the destroyers completely enveloping the transports tha water barrage extends its protecting pweep entirely around the fleet. Great care is taken against any Collisions In the darkness which would release the depth charge. While the shock of; a collision would not cause an explosion the depth charge might destroy its own ship by exploding when it reached the depth fixed by the fuse. Such an explosion has actually occurred in one case doing considerable damage but causing no fatalities. This incident has given warning of the extreme care needed to guard against night collisions when the fleet is going through the darkness with all lights out. Carrier Pigeon Hero of -Action at Verdun

"' . (By Associated Tress) VMVITH THE FRENCH ARMIES, ' Nov. 8. A carrier pigeon was one of the heroes of the most striking eplpodes of the battle of Verdun. During : the ilege of the fort of Vaux, Commadant Raynal had no other means , of communicating with the exterior. paring the fitrce fighting around the v Thiaumont farm, contradictory reports reached the rear as to the occupation i of the position. The carrier plgfcon was the only means by which the of- ' fleers In command could loam the exact situation. r While the Germans ware making one of their strongest attac ' all the telephone lines were destrted and the enemy's curtain fire made the use of couriers impossible. ReinforceV ments were required to hold a poslX tlon with no means of communicating .ilta the rear until Lieutenant Colonel Ofrardin sent several pigeons back to the headquarters where tljey arrived In twenty to twenty-five minutes and the reinforcements were promptly l sent up. When the Germans made a violent I effort to take the position of Froidl terre, Captain Dartiges; in commond I there, was cut oft from the rear. At I nine o'clock in the morning he sent a I pigeon back to announce that enemy I was within 500 yards of the works.

At ten o'clock he announced by the pame means that the position was surrounded by the enemy. At eleven pe Informed the staff that the situation was critical, but that the garrison would light to the last man. Thus kept in touch with the situation the ptAff was able to take steps that resumed in the breaking of the line around the position.

Two Thousand Soldier Baker Turn Out Bread for the U. S. Soldiers AMERICAN ADVANCE ZONE, France, Nov. 8. Correspondence of the Associated Press. Two thousand soldier-bakers turning' out a million pounds of bread a day this Is tho vast and animated work one sees here at the American army field bakery, which supplies the' staff of life to the American army in the entire area of the adva" zone. H J "iry qf tents, unlike the ordina V. ery within brick walla and fizzing machinery, but a fielg y rigbt out in the open air and . t fields,, half a military encampment and half an industrial city, and like all army camps capable of being picked up and transported to another point in a few hours. A city of tents marks the site of this huge camp bakery, along the country roadside about a mile outside of the large . cities of the advance zone : nameless as are all places in the zone of advance. The camp stretches over many acres, lately ploughed ground of a big farm, but now humming with the. activity of a huge productive enterprise. Above the tents one sejs countless smoke-stacks of the bakeovens, belching black smoke, and In the open air hundreds of soldiers, stripped to the waist, bending over the huge masses of dough, and hundreds more manipulating the loaves in the huge battery of ovens. The daily bread train was about to start for the front as we arrived. Although the camp is in the fields, yet spurs of railway have bun run along side, and each day this huge train goes forward so that every American division and every camp along the whole front gets its supply with unfailing regularity. The train wa3 nearly half a mile long, with some 50 box cars loaded solid from flqpr to roof, 20,000 pounds to the car, or a million pounds of bread to the train. Near by another train was discharging huge stacks of flour straight from American wheat fields and milling centers of the west and northwest. It comes in 98 and 140 pound sacks, of the best standard grades for nothing is too good for the food of the fighting man. Of late, however, said the escort, some of this flour from far western points has not bee up to the highest standard, indicating that the rush of an enormous shipment had led to a falling off in quality. . . The soldiers laboring among the flour sacks have now begun to look themselves like four-sacks, for they have adopted a strange uniform in which the empty flour sacks take the place of sleeveless shirts. The sacks are slit at the side for the arm holes. They are of rough white bagging, much cooler the men say than the army undershirt. Each sack has flaming red and blue letters of its brand, and so they work are resplendent with the whole range of American flour brands in their flour sack shirts.

TO AVOID AND RELIEVE INFLUENZA By Dr. Franklin Duane. Many people have been frightened by what they have read or heard of influenza. The more you fear the disease, the surer youare to get it. Go right about your business and forget it. As the disease is spread priaclpally by contact through sneezing, coughing or spitting, many health authorities have advised that everyone wear a gauze, which is daily washed and saturated with a one to f.ve hundred solution of zinc sulphate ?n water, and then dried before wearing over the nose and mouth. You should avoid crowds, common drinking cups and public towels. Keep your strength up by taking lots of exercise in the open air and plenty of nourishing food. If you have any of such symptoms s chilliness, naeal obstructions, flushed face, headache, feverishness, restlessness, weakness, or irritating cough, give up work :it once and go to bed. This will save your strength to help overcome the disease. Put your feet in hot water for fifteen minutes. Thoroughly loosen the bowels with some such mild and non-irritating ry ai Vm Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. "TT principally of hot lemonade and then cover up with plenty of clothes in beu so as to get a good sweat. When sweating is free and the fever reduced take a dose of two Anuric Tablets every four hours, followed by drinking at least a glass or two of hot water. Anuric Tablets help quickly to relieve the soreness of the muscles and bones from which most patients complain and help the kidneys flush out the poisons. To relieve nasal obstructions and excessive discharge from the nose, probably nothing is better than such a mild, soothing, antiseptic wash as Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. It will give great relief. Employed as a gargle, in same strength as made up for use in the nose, and as hot as can be borne, it quickly arrestyj soreness and dryness in the throat. Influenza weakens the patient's resistance to disease, so that there is danger of bronchitis and pneumonia developing. To combat this tendency and fortify the patient's strength insist that lie keep Jn bed at least two days. Probably nothing will at this stage hasten the recovery and strengthen the patient more than an iron-tonic tablet called "Irontlc" or that well known herbal tonic, Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, which has been used by thousands in the past two generations. Adv.

MIAMI U. PLAYS OHIO WESLEYAN

OXFORD O., Nov. 8. Miami University's football team left at noon today for Delaware, where they will tomorrow play Ohio Wesleyau University. -The team was not in the best condition to fulfill this important engagement, as several of the best players are more or less on the crippled list. It would not be surprising to learn that the up-state Methodists had won the game. Industrial Games for Saturday Scheduled Industrial games scheduled for Saturday night at the Y. M. C. A. are called for 7:30 o'clock and 8:30 o'clock. Wayne Works will play the Indianapolis Glove factory at 7:30, and the second game will be played by the F. & N. Lawn Mower company and Swayne-Robinson company. Ladies' swimming classes will meet regularly tomorrow at the Y. M. C. A. gym classes being held from 1:40 o'clock to 2:39 with swimming until 4 and gym classes again from 6:40 to 7:3Q followed by swimming until 9. It has been necessary to advance the time for the employed boys' gym class on Wednesday. The class regu larly held at 7:30 will meet hereafter at 7 o'clock. THAT ANNOYING, PERSISTENT COUGH iea(i to chronic lung trouble, or mefn that tie chronic stag already U rJI Aed. la either cb try ECKMAN'S ALTERATIVE ? u treatment vrithout "ttoft! stomach. Contains no Alcohol. .Narcotic OS Ilablt-Fonahnc Prus. $2 Ize, now $1.50. $1 ize, bow 80c JMco includes war t as. All r??s$s'

STICK TO SENRECO AND YOUR TEETH WILL STICK TO Y01 THOUSANDS DAILY JOIN SENRECO FAMILY TEETH BECOME WHITE, CLEAN AMI FASCINATING IN FEW DAYS GUMS FIRM AND HEALTHY

Dealers Amazed at Fast Growing Popularity of Remarkable Dentifrice

Don't neglect your teeth whatever else you do or you'll surely be forry later on. Your dentist is one of your best friends don't forget that; see him often many thousands pf men and women are enjoying life today because of the dentists' knowledge and skill. You can have white teeth so radiantly clean and fascinating that they will compel unstinted admiration. You can have firm healthy gums with no taint of disease if you will only visit your dentist occasionally and use Senreco' toothpaste svery day.

1M UM.m.SjT' j. E

TODAY AND SATURDAY Better Come f arly U. S. GOVERNMENT'S SECOND GREAT WAR FILM Big Official War Films

V Here is a wonderful production that American

gee vhat our boys are doing; "Over There" in camp and on the actual battlefield. This picturization of the greatest war drama in history is made to show you what your money irvested in JL-iberty Bonds is doing. DON'T MISS IT.

EATON CELEBRATED

EATON, O., Nov. 8. When word reached here Thursday evening that the Germans had signed the armistice terms of the Allies, there was a general rejoicing of the people. Fire bells, church bells and whistles were sounded and the streets were filled with shouting crowds. On The Screen WASHINGTON. Mabel Normand in "Back to the Woods," lier latest Goldwyn production, promises nothing but laughter and thrills to her admirers when she comes to the Washington theatre, today and Saturday. The story abounds in those moments peculiar to Mabel Normand, and she takes advantage of them in her own inimitable way. Tired of society and the vapid men surrounding her, Stephanie Trent begs her father to send her somewhere else. She wants to meet a real man like her father. Accordingly he arranges for for Stephanie to go as a school teacher, under an assumed name, to a village near one of the logging camps. There the girl meets Jommy Raymond. VE6ETII1E TABLETS Tho Ideal Laxative and Liver Tonic. Very few people are entirely free from constipation; the man or woman who baa never experienced that dull, sluggish, bilious feeling of distress which re Bults from irregular bowel movement is a rare exception to the rule. The surest, safest relief for conditions resulting from improper activity of the bowels is to take only what is best suitable for your condition and which nature has provided in Vegetine Laxative Tablets. These tablets are compounded from purely vegetable ingredients that drive the poironous waste matter from the system, stimulate the liver, tone the intestinal tract and tend to restore a natural healthy bowel movement. Sold by druggists everywhere at 25c per package. Senreco is a dentist's formula, a com bination so perfect that, besides being th finest cleaner of teeth and the most en joyable of dentrifices, it is an active ene my of the vicious germ? of pyorrhea that all too common and abhorrent disease that attacks the gums and causei them to bleed, recede and grow oft, tenter and spongy. Get a tube of magical Senreco todaj the good results will astonish you in just a few days your teeth wU radiate Purity. EK3 it is the duty of eyery patriotic to see THE OFFICIAL U.S. FILMS

MURRETTE. Dennis J. SulUvaa, manager of Domestic distribution for the war pic: tures of the Division of Films, who arranged the details with the World Film corporation and who has formulated the new plan for a country-wide distribution of "America's Answer," says: ' "One thing must constantly be borne, in mind by all concerned the government pictures are not issued as a money-making proposition. It is, of course, necessary that they should produce at least a sufficient inepme

mm FOR YPiS Mrs. Courtney Tells How She Was Cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Oskalocsa, Iowa. " For yeara X was simply in misery from a weakness and awiui pains a u u nothing seemed tQ do me any good. A friend advised ma to take Lydia E. Pinkhatn's Vegetabla Compound. I did so and got relief right away. I can certainly recomtnepd this valuable medicine to other women who suffer, for it has done such good f work for me and I know it will help others if they will give it a fair trial' I Mrs. Lizzie Courtney, 103 8th Ave., ; West, Oskaloosa, Iowa. Why will women drag along from day to day, year in and year out, suffering cuch misery as did Mrs. Courtney, when . cuch letters as this are continually being published. Every woman who suiters from displacements, irregularities, inflammation, ulceration, backache, nervousness, or who is passing through the Change of Life should give this famous root and herb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, a trial. For special advice write Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. The result pf its long experience i3 at your service. Youv Child's SMa Will be free from chafing, scalding eruptions and all soreness if you uss Ske3 Oosisfos'a Powder For more than 25 years it has been he'diug and preventing skin soreness. 3o at tho Vinol and other drua store? The Comfort Powder Co., Boston, Mass. PREVENT LA GRIPPE OR INFLUENZA DR. HEBRAS SANI-SBPTOL Is a most effective and far-reaching prescription recommended by pbysiciane, surgeons and hospitals as a preventative against the influenza bacteria. Directions Use undiluted as a gargle. For spraying the nose and throat in catarrhal affections, croup, sore throat, etc., add a pinch of salt to two ounces of solution. 5 Bottles for $1.00 Thistlethwaite's Cut Rate Drug Stores P. S. To build up the system and ward off disease we recommend the use of Bio-ferin. AdTPICK 0' THE PICTURES Goldwyn

The romance of a girl in a lonely cabin with a man Also Showing Harold Lloyd Comedy TWO mORMmiJED AND THE POPULAR PATHE NEWS

H Adults 15c

to meet the heavy expense entailed in their production. The real purpose of the war films is to 6tir up interest in the war by showing what is being accomplished by our armies on the other side, to stimulate war production and a generally helpful Interest in all government war activities. "America's Answer" at the Murrette today and tomorrow.

.MURRAY The seat sale for "My Soldier Girl," coming to the Murray theatre, MoaFORJPGO Try Mustetole. See Hov Quickly it Relieves You just nib Musterols in briskly, and usually the pain i3 gone a delicious, soothing comfort comes to take its place. Musterole is a clean, white ointment, made with oil of mustard. Use it instead of mustard plaster. Will not blister. Many doctors and nurses use Muster cle and recommend it to their patients. They will gladly tell you what relief it gives from sore throat, bronchitis, croup, ttiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, congestion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbar pains and aches of the back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet; colds of the chest (it often prevents pneumonia). Always dependable. 20 and 60c jars; hospital size $2.50, Home of the

Today and Saturday STONE and HAYS est Comedy Act in Vaudeville FLAGLER and ftlALIA "DOWN MELODY LANE" MUSICAL BRBTTONS Instrumentalists

MOTE: This vaudeville is proclaimed by those who have seen it "The best ever seen on the Murray stage."

Wallace eid -in

A Virile Production portraying life in a logging camp. Plenty of Action.

-TODAY AND SATURDAY-

presents the Rainbow Girl of the in Continuous 1 :45 Till ll p.

Don't stay sore, stiff and lame! Limber up! Rub soothing,' peneratlng "St. Jacob's Liniment" right in your aching muscles, joints and painful nerves. It's the quickest, surest pain relief on earth. It Is absolutely harmless and doesn't burn the skin. "St. Jacobs Liniment" conquers pain, It Instantly takes away any ache, soreness and stiffness in' the head, neck, shoulders, back, legs, arms, fingers or any part of the body r nothing like it. You simply pour a little in your hand and rub "where It hurts," and relief comes instantly! Don't stay crippled! Get a small trial bottle now from any drug store. It never disappoints six gold medal awards. Adv.

MURRAY Matinee Night ' MONDAY, NOt. 11 LE C0OTE FLESHER-hsa THE GORGEOUS 20 BIG TUNEFUL run SOMG-HITS FEATURES FLIRTATION WALK-AN AERIAL FUGHk GIRLS' AVIATION CORPS INACTION. BALLET OF BEWITCHING BEAUTIES. BRIGADE OF WONDERFUL GIRLS I PRICES Mat 50c, 75c, $1.00. NIGHT 50c, 75c, $1.00, $1.50. War Tax Extra SEATS ON SALE THURSDAY ran Big Pipe Organ MUSIC THAT CHARMS Screen f! n m m. Children 5c

- I MM WMW- iuitu

SMART JkYV)r)rtASK9W SWJFTM jiljVj wva.

BALLET

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