Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 320, 22 November 1918 — Page 3
i.
THE KiCHiUOi) JfALLADiL M AND SUN-TELEGKAM FRIDAY, NOV. 22, 1918, PAGE THKE1
GREATEST BLOOD ERA SINGE DAY OF BARBARIANS Great Cost of Victory Urged by Englishman as Argument Against Leniency. . LONDON. Not. 20. (Delayed) (British Wireless Service.) The Times In discussing the casualties during the war calls upon the allied governments to compel the Germans to treat the prisoners In their hands -without abuse. It says that the losses In tho war are the greatest since Asiatic barbarians carried on wars of extermination. . "Now for the rst time, the Times says, "we begin to learn officially at how great a cost the victory has been won. Our casualties on land amount to the enormous figure of 3,048.000. To judge .the full sum of bloody sacrifice the casualties of our allies and the murders Germany has done must be added. The Era of Blood. "Since wars of extermination were carried on by the barbaric conquerors of Asia no such sea of blood has deluged tho world. These published casualties are more than double the entire white population of New Zealand or of the union of South Africa. They are far greater than the population of any city in the world except London and New York. "Even now, when the Germans are whining and clamoring for the modifications of conditions Incomparably ' milder than those they forced upon Russia and Roumania, they show nel- . ther pity nor common prudence .toward the helpless victims still in their pewer. The brutality they are show, 'ins our unfortunate prisoners almost exceeds belief. Adrift With No Food. "They already have reduced the numbers by systematic cruelty and starvation. They now are turning them adrift without food, warm clothing, or money to find their way frontier as best they can. "It is time, and high time, for the allies to tell the Germans that this monstrous and inhuman abuse must cease promptly. They have the right to make the demand and the power to enforce it Their own peoples will fiercely resent any hesitation In the exercise of either." The Dally News urges that the names of commandants and all officers in the German camps which release prisoners In a helpless condition should be demanded at once, "preferably by wireless," so that they may be made to answer for their behavior. It adds that the allied governments should establish at once who it is that 'now is responsible for the conduct of affairs In Germany and what is the exact position of the new government. Chester, Ind. Walter Kendall spent Sunday with Wilbur Bateman. . . .Miss Carrie Boerner spent Monday in Richmond.... Corp. Merrel Hudelson spent Sunday night and Monday with his brother Mr. and Mrs. Ross Hudelson and attended the funeral of his nephew In Richmond Monday. Hudelson is stationed at Camp Sherman, O....Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Martin were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Caleb Duke. . ..Mrs. Michael Kendall spent Monday afternoon with .Mrs. Oliver Boerner. . ..Several from here attended the funeral of Mr. Ball Tuesday afternoon. ....Mrs. Edwin Crawford of Richmond is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Michael Kendall this week.... Mrs. Martha Kendall received a letter Monday from her son, Herbert Kendall, written at Indianapolis, Sunday evening. Kendall said that he spoke to an audience of over 2,000 people at Crawfordsvlllo Sunday afternoon. He started to bis home in Kearney, Neb.,
Sunday night.
Scarcity of Turkeys for Thanksgiving Dinners This Year It may be necessary to show your
patriotism by eating chicken or duck at your Thanksgiving dinner this year, j according to Richmond dealers. Thej great demand for turkeys for the boys ! In service has made the fowl a decid-j ed scarcity on the market, and it will be a case of doing your Thanksgiving j shopping early, the dealers say, in j order to get one of the few turkeys obtainable'. What the market price of
turkey will be this year has not yet been determined, but it will not run above 42 cents a pound. It is believed. Even though the war is over, the
Thanksgiving dinner will probably ; cost a little more than it did last year, j
Dates, figs, olives and imported foods wfll be double in price this year, what they were last, owing to .shipping difficulties. , Oysters are also very, high in price this season. Cranberries will be cheaper this year than last, but they are the only article on the Thanksgiving menu that will not show an increase in price. WILL MEINE ILL
Word has been received in this city that Will Meine, former gardener for William Dudley Foulke, Is. in a critical condition with pneumonia, at his home in Youngstown, Ohio. The pneumonia followed a severe attack of influenza.
On July 17. 1917, King George annminced to the nrivv council the new-
name of the royal house and family
to be "the ouse of Windsor. -
Fartiality Shown in Feeding Hun Soldiers WITH THE BRITISH-AMERICAN ARMIES IN THE FIELD, Nov. 22 German soldiers on the British sector of the Western front evidently were not as well off In the matter of food as their brothers who fought on the French and American sectors. The correspondent of The Associated Press found at Valenciennes, for example, that the soldiers' food consisted largely of black bread, pork fat and raw turnips. In the St. Mihiel section, on the
other hand, the Germans had biscuit made of white flour, compressed beef, butter and cheese. A part of these rations had come from Russia, having been Bent originally to that country for the Russian army by the United States. In the French from Rheims to Verdun, the food generally of the German forces was of better grade and greater in quantity than that of the men fighting In the north.
JAP DIPLOMAT DIES
KAMAKURA, Japan. Nov. 22. Viscount Kanetake " Oufa," Minister of Home Affairs in the last Okuma cabinet, ."died suddenly i yesterday, at his
villa here from congestion of the brain. He was sixty-nine years old. i ; Palladium Big Want Medium
6 BCLfaANS Hot water Sure Relief
ELL-AW S FOR INDIGESTION
VEGETK1E TABLETS The IdesJ Lsucatlv. and Lim Tonlo. Very few peopl .are entirely fire from constipation; tha nan or woman who has never experienced that dull, sluggish, bilious. feeling of distress which results from irregular bowel movement is rare exception to the-rale. -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 Vegetlae) Laxative Tablets. These tablets are compounded from purely vegetable) Ingredients that drive the poironoos waste matter from the system, stimulate the liyer, tone the intestinal tract and tend to restore a natural healthy bowel movement. Sold by druggist everywhere at 25c per package.
RANDOLPH. COATS IN CITY.
Randolph Coats, a prominent Indiana artist, formerly of Richmond, who
-was awarded the 1916 prize at the ex
hlbitlon of Indiana artists in Richmond, is in Richmond on his way to
Canada, where he will paint a few
months. He has been living In his
studio in Knoxville, Tenn., where he
conducted an Art school.
Jump from Bed in Morning and Drink' Hot Water Tails why everyone should drink hot water each morning before breakfast,
Why is man and woman, half the time, feeling nervous, despondent,
worried; some days headachy, dull and unstrung; some days really incapacitated by Illness. If we all would practice inside-bathing, what a gratifying change would
take place. Instead of thousands of half-sick, anaemic-looking souls with
pasty, muddy complexions we should
see crowds of happy, healthy, rosy-
checked people everywhere. The reason Is that the human system does not rid Itself each day of all the waste
which it accumulates under our pres
ent mode of living. For every ounce of food and drink taken into the system nearly an ounce of waste material must be carried out, else it ferments and forms ptomaine-like poisons which 'are absorbed into the blood. Men and women, whether sick or - well, are advised to drink each morning before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it, as a harmless means of washing out of the stomach, kidneys and bowels the indigestible material, waste, sour bile and toxins. Millions of people who had their turn AAnoilMttAfl tillfiiia a ft fir a aniA
stomach, nervous days and sleepless nights have become real cranks about the morning Inside-bath. -"A quarter peund of limestone phosphate will not cost much at the drug store, but is sufficient to demonstrate to anyone, its cleansing, sweetening effect upon the system. Adv. I
Making Sure TO be absolutely certain when purchasing Aspirin Tablets or Capsules, look for the Bayer Cross on the labels then on the tablet itself. It is placed there for your additional protection, so that you may be sure you
are receiving genuine Aspirin.
Th. tradc-mirk "Aaplria" . U. S. rt. OS.) to
Bayer-Tab
The Bayer Cress
W JOl. 1
narantee Out ma moaouaneaeid. OC ta Kltabl Barct m.nutirtiir..
'Aspirin
Your Guarantee of ftirity
'til s sill l 111 I II 1 Buy '
ft i i
m
! ::
Buy Swifts Premium Oleomargarine in This Package The name it bears has been a guarantee of purity and goodness for half a century. Made from Government inspected animal oils, pure vegetable oils, Pasteurized milk and butter, and finest dairy salt. It has the elements for growth that all children need. Not touched by hand in manufacture or packing. The U. S. Food Administration suggests Oleomargarine dietetic specialists recommend Oleomargarine millions of housewives are using Oleomargarine. Swift's Premium Oleomargarine has the better flavor. It is" easy to get the most widely distributed brand of Oleomargarine. It saves 20 cents or more a pound. Swift & Company, U.S. A. Other Quality Brands
Best White Oleomargarine.
Made Prom Nuts and Milk. .
I Best White Made Prom Nuts j! j I Oleomargarine, ; ' and Milk. .Y --v..-.
WW WWWWW WWWW w-wwwww wwwwwwwwww www wwwwwwwwwwwww ww-ww-ww
o o
WWWWWWWW
ME 1IH ID mm WIM
No Mafflter Wtatt OttBiicrs A s k You'll Always
BUY IT MERE for art Leasfi One-Third Less O It's a genuine pleasure to shop at the Grand Leader these days. There are so many things a person needs for Winter that It seems as if you wont JT have money enough to go around. But once you enter our store, read the low prices marked plainly on the different articles of merchandise, you Jj find that you can buy all you need and save money besides. If you've got a $5 bill to spend bring it here and take back 1-3 with you, or $1.66, your
n saving wnen you iraae nere. no matter wnaxoiners as you win ouy u nere ai unt-TniHD 1. too.
o o o a o o o o 8
o
o o o o o o 8 o o o o o o o o o a o o o a a a o a o
11
VOLUME BUYING SAVES YOU MOMEY When the ordinary store buys a hundred or two coats of a jobber, we buy a whole factory output. Operating a chain of underselling stores makes this possible. No wonder the other fellow can't compete in prices. Hundreds of Richmond women are realizing each week the actual saving to be found In our ready-to-wear department. If you're not wise ask your neighbor she knows. .
3
NOW YOU MUST SAVE MORE THAN EVER The war is over, but there are many things still to be done. We must save. There are Liberty Loan Payments, War Saving Stamps, War League and other obligations and the one best way. to meet these payments is to save and saving mans trading at the Grand Leader. That the way many economical shoppers are paying their patriotic dues. You can too. Shop here and realize in dollars and cents.
WOMEN'S AND MISSES $25.00 t
Imagine getting fur trimmed coats for such a price. Can you beat it? Well, we guess not. Values like these can only be bought at this great underselling store. This entire lot of coats of good quality materials, some half lined, others lined throughout,
some plush trimmed, some fur trimmed and
others plain tailored, come in
all sizes. Priced Saturday.
.$14.95
UP TO $40.00 WOMEN'S
MS.
Yes, Madam, we actually mean It. We save you up to $15 on this particular lot of coats. You can choose from Salts, Sealette Plushes, best Wool Velours, finest Broadcloths, etc. Lined throughout, trimmed with large fur or plush collars. Priced (POf PA for Saturday at DZ4rDU
c
1
nSBSBaSSBISBSeaBBiBMBBBBBBiBBBBMBBiaBBBBBiBn-eMaBeBaBBBBBBBeBBeV
WOMEN'S $30.00 AND $35.00
MOTS
Beautiful, wonderful or similar words cannot describe this lot of coats on sale Saturday. Your unrestricted choice of best All-Wool Velours, fine Silk Plushes, Wool Meltons, Kerseys. Pom-Poms, etc., in every wanted
color can be had in fur or plush trimmed or
plain tailored; sizes 16 to 46. Priced here at
$18.50
WOMEN'S $30.00 AND $35.00
sum
Women, these are no left-overs that are put on special sale. This lot consists of new sample suits, one and two of a kind, bought at a sacrifice from New York's best makers. They are made of best All-Wool Poplins, In many styles and colors, lined throughout with guaranteed linings. Priced J- Q f5A special for Saturday pxOOU
$45.00 WOMEN'S COATS, d00 ETA special at D47DU WOMEN'S AND MISSES' 1 f FA $30.00 DRESSES Mc7oDU WOMEN UP TO $18.00 . Tf fr DRESSES .....DUUU WOMEN'S UP TO $25.00 z A nr DRESES, at" dl4;7D
Up to $8.00 New Skirts $4.95 Up to $10.00 New Skins $6.95
MEN'S $2.00 UNION SUITS MEN'S $2.50 UNION SUITS MEN'S $3.00 UNION SUITS Medium weight fleeced rib- Heavy ribbed fleeced Union Good heavy silver fleeced, bed Union Suits; all sizes Suits; extra well made, per- perfect fitting. Priced here to 46. Priced QQ feet fitting m-j q Saturday 1 QQ here tj)0 Priced here at 4i-Ot7 at 3XOl Men's $1.25 Work ()c Men's $3.00 Dress Men's 75c Suspenders C Men's $1.50 Flannel- QQ Men's 25c Hose, -j Q Men's $3.00 Work QQ ette Shirts ......... 70C all colors 7C pants pl70 ju Fun, $1 Qg 59c K . $349 toni"S Men,g W()rk Hoge Men,B l 60 Sweaters QQ Men's $8 Wool Qr special IDC special aOC Flannel Shirts fPttUO Men's 50c Silk Hose, OOn Men's $3.00 Sweat- Q-j QO Men's $1.25 Dress QQ SFeC.ial' ' -' ' "C P' .BP,enlai, ' ' "'0 Shirts o"C Mens 75c Sllk Hose- AQ Mens 19c Canvas 19i ".' " special ftaC Gloves 12v Men's $1.50 Dress QQf Men's 35c Hose OQ Men's $2 Striped Q-j Q Shirts OC Supporters ........... tC Overalls V-L07
CHILD'S UP TO $8.00 COATS, at GIRLS $10.00 COATS priced at $8.00 AND $10.00 FUR MUFFS, at UP TO $30.00 FUR SETS, at
..$4.95 ,..$6.95 ..$4.95 $14.95
WOMEN'S $1.25 UNION SUITS
Medium weight ribbed, fleeced, low ir high neck, long or short sleeves, extra well made of good quality. Pricn 69c Women's $2.00 (ffc-f QQ Union Suits P J.sV7 Women's 85c AQ Vests VC Women's $1.25 heavy fleeced Underwear 89C
Women's $3.00 fleeced Union
Suits at
Women's 25c Hose, special
$1.98
19c
BOYS' $1.50 SWEATERS Cpme in dark gray only in all sizes to 16 years. Priced special at 98c
BOYS' 50c BLOUSE WAISTS . Come in either light or dark color ginghams in all sizes to 16 Priced special 39c
BOYS' $3.00 CORDUROY PANTS Made of extra good quality corduroy for boys up to 16 years. Priced special at $1.98
$8.00 PLAID BLANKETS Genuine Nashua wool
nap blankets,
large double
bed size," come
in all color.
plaids. Priced $3.98
$5.00 I BLANKETS j Come in gray or tan fleeced with pink or blue color
border. Priced
special at
$9.00 PLAID BLANKETS Nashua wool nap blankets, extra large size in a number of different color plaid3. Priced
$2.98 $4.95
BOYS' $8.00 SUITS $4.95 Made of fine wool worsted and novelties in new trench models with slit pockets all sizes to 18. $4.95
GIRLS' $2.50 SCHOOL DRESSES Of best quality ginghams and beautiful plaids and checks, all sizes to 16. $1.69
$5.00 COMFORTS Large double bed size, extra fine qual1 1 y sanitary cotton filled. Priced special "$2.98
Up to $8 Georgette WAISTS Women, this is actually the only store where you still get the same waists at the same price. Beautifully beaded, embroidered and plain Sft cTH 0 tailored models in all colors. $L Sn) rf Priced here at . f WT $5.00 $3.00 $1.50 WAISTS WAISTS WAISTS $2.98 $1.79 I 98c
Best $2.50 Bed Sheets, C"f ylO Child's $1.00 Flannelette JQ 81x90 '..OL&V Sleepers OaC 39c Hemmed Pillow Cases OQp child's $1.50 Flannelette $1 1Q 42x36 Gowns SS.8! S2.98 infants' $2.00 All Wool g jQ $2.00 Black and colored $1 QQ SWPaterS Ol.W Sateen Petticoats ......... pl.Oi7 Child's $5.00 All Wool $9 QQ $1.50 Flannelette or Knit QQ Sweaters ..iPtf&O Petticoats vOC Women's $3.00 Flannelette QQ Quart bottle Oil of Cedar QQ Kimonos ...pA0 Polish OaC Women's $5.00 Silk fl9 QQ Best $2.00 Front Lace d- OQ Kimonos $a0 TJorsets UOC AProns L'OU 50c Pink or White QQ 2-B0 GinSham House Dress Q Brassieres OuC Aprons J) AeUJ7
o (I (I
() O 3 a a a a a a a a a
See Our Selection of
Priced $2.89 Up
BLACK SATEEN BLOOMERS Girls', ages 2 to 6 years.... 59c Girls', ages 8 to 14 years ....69c Girls', ages 14 to 18 years.. 79c Women's sizes ............. 98c
IO0OO0O90O00CC0OOOCC0CO0COOOCOO00O0O0COCOCCCCOO0CCC0CCCCCCCCCCC
a a a a a a a a a
3 o
a a o a o o a a o o o o o o a o o o a 8 O o o o () ( o o o o ( a o o o o o o o o o o o a a o o o o o n if o 2 & o ci u o a o t$ o V ft) & o o a o o o ( v a o ( )
A
