Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 324, 27 November 1918 — Page 2

V PAGE TWO

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND ..SUN-TELEGRAM WEDNESDAY, NOV. 27, 1918.

ALLIES GREETED AS DELIVERERS BY TURKNATION Heir to Ottoman Throne Expresses Regret That Country Had Entered War. , (By Associated Press) CONSTANTINOPLE. Nov. 27 There are 50 British, French and Italian battleships, cruisers and destroyers In the allied squadron which anchored today in the Bosphorus. The newspapers and the population have acclaimed the allied squadron as deliverers. .7 .... .. .. , . , : .. The headquarters of the British and French contingents have been established in Constantinople. A British aerial force is on the outskirts of the city. Food prices in Constantinople, according to the Turkish finance minister, have risen 20 times above those ruling before the war. Disorganization of the railroads in Asia Minor today compelled the government to abandon

the ration of cheap bread it issued during the war. Of the 59 officers and men who, have remained with the United States gunboat Scorpion in the Golden Horn eince diplomatic relations were severed, 25 have married Levantine women. "This last war was the most disastrous in the history of Turkey, not because' she was beaten, but because it made enemies of nations naturally our friends," declared Abdul Medjid Effendi, heir to the Ottoman throne, to the correspondent of the Associated Press whom he received today. "The present Sultan and myself," he continued, "denounced the proposal that Turkey enter the war. Mohammed V, who was then reigning, showed weakness before a clique of adventurers like Talaat Bey and Enver Bey, then cabinet ministers and now 'fugitives, whom Germany had fed with dreams of powers. "I am more ashamed of the Armenian atrocities committed during the war than of anything in our history, but I must iifsist that they were ! against the will of the present Sultan and the nation as a whole. They were instigated by unpatriotic ministers who were guaranteed in their places by their services to German militarism. Milton, Ind. Miss Lorene Warren and Miss Mabel Wat of Indianapolis, were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Morton Warren.... Mr. and Mrs. Emory Baker and children of Dayton came Saturday to spend a few days with Frank Calloway Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Jones, Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Jones and sonJohn Posey Jones, were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Crawford Sunday Mrs. Charles Halo and Mrs. Walter Templin were Richmond visitors Friday.. .Mrs. William Sharp died t Sunday the result of influenza. She leaves a baby a few days old Miss Flora Broaddus, .Miss Bell Scott and Miss Lizzie Hinshaw of Richmond, and Miss Nellie Jones spent Sunday witn iurs. Alice urefn...Air. ana Mrs. rioya Wlssler and three children have all ' been ill with influenza.. .Mr. and Mrs. J William Anderson and Mrs. William ; jjanieis spent naay in rticnmond, tne : guests or air. ana Mrs. Bert Connie. ..Mrs. Lizzie Klmmel has been spending a few days in Centerville, the guest of her son, Leroy Kimmel and family... Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Newton and children spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Scafe Reed.. .Mrs. Fred Lantz has gone to New' York to be with her sister, Mrs. Birdsell, who is very ill with cancer. Mrs. Birdsell's two sons are in the Friends' reconstruction work in France Miss Vivian Cox and Miss Iola Hall were dinner guests of Jesse Revalee and family. Soils and

Carbunc

orse in

f Your Blood Happens to Be In Bad Condition, S. S. S. Will Correct It Now. .The peculiar effect on the blood caused by ike rapid changes of winter, the chilly blasts and dampness long continued, will undoubtedly have a disastrous effect upon your system if your blood happens to be in bad con dition. You should not allow yourself to run the risk of suffering with bolls and carbuncles, you should not willingly walk into the snare of pain and suffering :of - rheumatism or catarrh when you can put your blood In shape to prevent it by the simple method of taking S. S. S. for a short period during the fall. Boila and carbuncles are evidence f disordered blood. They do not necessarily mean an inherited taint, but they tell you that your blood is poisoned that the life-giving stream that should flow through your veins pure, vigorous and healthy has become upset, maybe by over-eating and drinking, possibly by constipation, stomach trouble or uric acid. Whatever the cause, your blood has become poisoned and you are not going to know what it Is to feel entirely well until the poison and impurities have been washed from your system. The, blood, purified and invigorated. wiHonco xnor perform its natural function of keeping the body full or health an! vie

New French Governor of Metz Sees Dream Come True

(Philadelphia Public Ledger) General De Maud'huy, who is a native of Lorraine, has been appointed governor of Metz, says a Paris dispatch quoting the Temps. The choice of General De Maud'huy as governor of the stronghold of Lorraine is the realization of a lifelong hope. Generad De Maud'huy was born in the city which he is now to rule and which his family left after the debacle of 1870, refusing to accept the German yoke. From his childhood it was the dream of De Maud'huy to regain Metz for France. Graduated from the military academy of St- Cyr, young. Maud'huy found advancement in the army a difficult achievement, because hia family took a leading part" in clerical circles. So he could not get very far in radical France. When the great war started he was low on the list of officers. By the end of August, 1914, he was merely in command of a reserve brigade at Dijon, behind a battle line. General De Maud'huy, however, was possessed of one idea to fight in Lorraine. He succeeded in effecting his transfer to another command and fought in a series of battles against the army of the German crown prince. He carried out his task so well that when the great retreat was ordered from the Meuse, De Maud'huy was one of the generals instructed by Joffre to hold out one day longer so as to show the Germans they would have no easy walk through France. The division commanded by De POSTAL TO FIGHT GOVERNMENT AWARD Clarence H. Following the announcement that Postmaster General Liurleson had awarded the- Postal Telegraph Company $1,680,000 per annum as compensation for the use of its lines. President Clarence II. Mackay of the company announced that the Postal will reject the award. The company will fight the award in court if necessary, he said. Better tenant houses on Indiana farms will help solve the ever present labor problem by getting married men to take the places of single men who change jobs more frequently. 6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief ELlrANS FOR INDIGESTION les Every part of the body is dependent upon the blood for nourishment and strength, and when for any cause this vital stream becomes run down, it Invites disease to enter. The liver and kidneys, failing to receive the proper nourishment from the blood, grow inactive and the waste and j bodily impurities that should pass oft through these channels of nature are left in the system to encourage some blood disorder. When the blood is in this weakened condition, it should be treated with a remedy that is not only thorough, but gentle In Its action. 8. S. S., a purely vegetable' remedy, made of roots, herbs and barks. Is Just what Is needed. It not only cleanses the blood of impurities and enriches and strengthens it, but gently builds up the entire system by its fine tonic effect. S. S. S. reinvigorates every part of the body, gives tone and vigor, to the blood, and as It goes to the different parts, carries health and strength. S. S. S. acts promptly and gives good results. It gives the blood power to drive out rheumatism, catarrh, boils, sores and ulcers, skin diseases and other blood disorders. Get it at your drugugist's and take it now. Meanwhile, write us if you need advice. Our Chief Medical Adviser is ready to tell you .what your best treatment is. Address Medical Department, Drawer A, Swift Specific Co., Atlanta. Ga. Adv. - --'

Mackay. I

Are Winter

Maud'huy became merged in the great army that gathered around General

Foch on the third day of the Battle of the Marne. General De Maud buy s light infantry was in the thick of the conflict and he and his troops were mentioned in the order of the day after the victory. When the Germans began their out flanking movement to the west the French commander-in-chief needed another army, and Joffre, looking- for the most likely man for the task I chose De Maud'huy, and at a stroke lifted him through several grades to the rank of army commander. He went to Arras and began shaping into an army the troops as they arrived. They sent him Turcos, Singalese, Territorials and reservises, considered the poorest soldiers in France, but there were no others. October 2, 1914, De Maud'huy took his first army into action and by October 15 he had them intrenched over a 30-mile front, running from a point south of Arras north to Bethune, where the English army took up the line.. The battle of Ypres has become his tory. But, after all, the English only i caught the third drive of the Germans, i after they twice had failed to break, through De Maud'huy's hastily gather ed army. The Bavarians and the Prussian Guard both broke down before Arras before they failed at Ypres. But no one has ever heard of the great battle in Artois that De Maud'huy fought be-

cause it has been France's policy not Chester, Sunday evening. ..Miss Marto tell. So De Maud'huy's first great jorie Pickett spent the week end with battle has not even a name. Mr. Ralph Kittle in Richmond.. .Mr.

and act: u4

I

ttt a

In spite of the fact that it is not a high-priced cigarette, Fatimas are smoked by more men who Can afford what they like than any other cigarette in the United States smoked for their pleasing taste and because they never disturb even though a man may smoke n-'- '

1

Police Reserves Called

Out to Prevent Clash NEW YORK, Nov. 27.--Police reserves from three inspection districts were order out at 10 o'clock last night to prevent a clash between soldiers and sailor3 and Socialists attending a meeting of Internationalists in East Fifty-eighth street. There was simi lar trouble last night, which resulted in riots between the Socialists and uniformed men of both army, navy and marines. . ( Chester, Ind, Mr. and Mrs. Pierson Barre of near Greensfork, and Mr. and Mrs. Morrison Pyle were Sunday guests of Elbert Kemp and family.. .. .Misses Marjorie Pickett and Blanche Carman spent Thursday afternoon with Miss Carrie Boerner.. . . .Mr. and Mrs. Warren Stigleman and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bulla visited Mr. and Mrs. Sol Stigleman at Cambridge City, Sunday.. . . .Mrs. T. S. Martin and Mrs. James Webster and Miss Florence Webster and Virginia Martin visited Mrs. Alice Boerner and daughter Carrie, Thursday afternoon. Miss Ruthanna Simmons went to Chicago last week to visit relatives. ..Everet McMahan of Richmond, visited Ralph Buroker, Sunday.. .Walter Ruhlen is sick with influenza.. . .Mrs. Edwin Crawford returned to her home in Richmond Saturday after spending the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Michael Kendall .Misses Bonnie and Blanche Carman spent last Sunday afternoon with Miss Carrie Boerner. .. .Ollie Boerner hauled his wheat to Richmond last week. . . Misses Bonnie and Blanche Carman entertained several friends at their home in at the NewWillard

the Shoreham, Washington,

At these, the two leading hotels in the Nation' s capital, Army and Navy men, statesmen, leaders of industry and prominent men from all sections of the United States may he found in greater numbers, perhaps, than at any other hotels in the country. At the Willard, Fatima is by far the biggest -selling cigarette which bears out, once again, what we have been saying all along about the nation-wide preference for this brand. This is even further borne out by the fact that at the exclusive Shoreham only one cigarette (a 25c brand) outsells Fatima.

rm Sensible Cigarette

and Mrs. Morton McMahan of Rich

mond visited Everett Hunt and fam ily Sunday.. .i. Rev. L. F. Ulmer and

THE WAR HAS TAUGHT US to save and to serve.Dont waste food or fueLWhenyou eat wheat be sure it is the whole wheat It is all Food

nothing thrown away.Ready cook ed,ready-to-eat. Saves fuel.saves fbod,saves healthJbr any meal with milk, or cream or fruits.

and D. C.

family were Sunday guests of Charles Buroker and family.. .Miss' Anna Cook and Lawrence Cook of Middleboro, and

whole wheat not hind wasted.

Jiafr 0 jut I ' itf ml a ' 'J i

:

Harry Wilson and family spent Sunday evening with Rev. L. F. Ulmer and family..... Everett Hunt is Improving. ,

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