Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 325, 28 November 1918 — Page 7
BRINGING UP FATHER
By McManus Under government protection th brown bear has so increased In number Ein Alaska that cattle and sheep are safe only in strong buildings. - VELL- 4OO0 NKiHT - 0I VE MAO A RWQ NIHTMakes Quick Work of Coughs and Colds Rub in Petrisol. Penetrates and Drives Out the Inflammation. Th congestion. Inflammation and soreness caused by colds, coughs, snra throat, can be drawn out quickly. Rub tn Petrisol. Feel how H penetrates, the trouble loosens up right away. Inflammation fades, and the passages clear up. Apply It at night and notice the big difference by morning. For quick relief and real benefit, you never Baw Its equal. Petrisol is also the best thing known for any Inflammation like lame back, sore muscles, stiff neck, muscular rheumatism. Better than plasters. Just rub It In. Don't have to bind It up. Costs little. All druggists. Adv.
PI we 00- I ,T WAb TOUh Wv If! YOU tkAID IT- M V0 WE O0,HT Yj , vFD. fc 'if ; """Vl ARE X 1 NldTHEE 4 rU. J' Jl OUT Nftw VE BE OW THAT M J' 4 " . I ,L0
. l!Li:J., . ........ , At8.
PRESIDENT IS FACING CRISIS ' IN HIS CAREER rlas Got Out of Touch With American Domestic Ques- . tions, Claims New York Writer. (David Lawrence in the New York Evening Post) WASHINGTON. Nor. 2S. Presilent Wilson ia himself so strong an idvocate of frankness In public busiaess and politics that he will not mistake the sincerity of purpose and disinterestedness of his many friends who believe that he is face to face Mth a crisis in his own career both is the leader of the democratic party md the representative of America at the peace conference. Briefly, there is a dissatisfaction tnd discontent inside the democratic part of which the public has hitherto oad no hint, but which, if left uncorrected by the president himself, will mean that as he goes to Europe he will le&va behind a dejected and depressed following whose enthusiasm tor him will have been seriously diminished. Men who are officeholders but unlelfish friends of the president are grieved" and disappointed. They are not republicans, they are not his po
litical foes, but tncy are me men wno Helped elect him in 1912 and in 1916, md they are talking earnestly among themselves about what can be done to make the president see that he must clean house, that he must 'reorganize his entire cabinet, and that he must, indeed, reorganize the democratic party in congress so that he will. have advisers in the executive branch of the government and leaders In the legislative branch who are in sympathy with the true wishes and spirit of the American people. See Mistakes by Wilson. ' After talking with dozens of these men, the names of any one of whom, If published, would carry the conviction that they are seeking only things which will help and not hurt the president, one gets a consensus of opinion which la unmistakable. Here and there are suggestions of method which differ, here and there are different degrees of dissatisfaction, but, put categorically, these are some of the mistakes which the president himself is declared to have made or to be making today: First, the president, in his absorption in foreign questions, has gotten out of touch with the true spirit of America on domestic questions. He . has listened to a small group of advisers who have had his ear to the exclusion of the greater group of friends who come from the middle West and West and sections of the East where people are finding it. difficult to reconcile the brand of democracy which Mr. Wilson preached At the outset of his administration with the retention of distinctly autocratic and bureaucratic advisers and with his own exeluslveness. Second, the friends of the president arc unable to understand why George Creel should be taken to Europe as the head of any committee on public t format inn whpii Mr. Creel, notwith-1
standing his fine personality and close personal friendship for tho president and sympathy with the Wilson ideas, has lost the confidence of the American press, and thereby the people.
lleve a grave mistake was made in
announcing the dispatch or Mr. creel f Europe at the same time that Postroaster General Burleson was permitted to take ovor control of the Atlantic cables. These things have been denounced as "colossal blunders," not merely by Republicans, but by Mr. Wilson's most loyal friends, who mean nothing personal by it, either. Cabinet In a Rut. Fourth, they believe that Mr. Wilson's cabinet is superannuated and In a rut, and that the resignation of William Gibbs McAdoo deprives the administration of one of its most efficient public servants, and that the
president 6houul nave never permitted him to resign until after reconstruction was well under way or at least Mr. Wilson had returned from Europe. Fifth, they consider that Southern domination in congress and elsewhere will prove fatal to the Democratic party's chances to regain the confidence of Western electorates. Sixth,, they are deeply disappointed lhat Mr. Wilson himself should have kept himself aloof from men from various States who have sought to aid him in the past, and that he Bhould have depended so much on his own judgment or the advice of a small group of provlncially minded advisers. Seventh, and most important of all,
there is a deep-rooted feeling that Mr. Wilson has not taken account of the resentment of the American people for his failure td take into his councils on foreign affairs Republicans xis well as Democrats. It is true that there are some Republicans who are not in sympathy with Mr. Wilson's Ideas, but many Republicans would be if taken into the president's confidence. Close friends of the president believe it is his duty, at least, to call into conference, Republicans of all shades of opinion and lay before them the program he intends to pursue at the peace conference. The last suggestion probably will not please the president, but the time is past when friends of Mr. Wilson out of mere respect for his likes and dislikes can afford to remain silent One of the most curious features of the situation is that some of the men with whom I have talked do not feel that they can very well tell Mr. Wilson the truth. Some of them would be willing to tell him the truth about his loss of prestige in this country if he only gave them audience. Others would Just as soon write him their views, and some have done bo. But the majority of President Wilson's friends are talking among themselves of the necessity of bringing forcibly to Mr. Wilson's attention that he is drifting away from the original precepts of openness and managing the government in a personal and private way which does not square with his professions of democracy. Objects to European Trip. Perhaps the most severe criticism heard Is of Mr. Wilson's decision to go to Europe at this critical time. Nobody begrudges the President a great part in the settlement of the peace of the world, nor his remarkable influence in bringing victory to the Allies; but the feeling of the men who are fond of the President and who have
the courage to tell correspondents how they feel is that he treated the American people with indierence when he failed in his first announcement to tell the exact purpose of his Journey and the provision he planned to make for the transaction of public business in hi3 absence.. The revolt inside the Democratic party is not of recent origin. It has been growing for several months, and may explain the lukewarm activity of many Democratic national committeemen in the recent election, many of whom felt a large part of the Republican criticism of the record of the Democratic congress was absolutely true, and that it was useless to try to make the people think otherwise. Mr. Wilson Is considering the appointment of peace delegates. Some of the names mentioned have rankled in the minds of disinterested friends who want to see America represented by broad-mmded and able men, in
stead of he same type of provincialism which has caused dissatisfaction throughout the country before. President Wilson may not know it, but the morale of his friends is at a low ebb. There is no one but himself on whom responsibility can be placed, and no one but himself who can restore the confidence of the people in him at a time when he must needs tell European statesmen, skilled in the bargaining methods of the Old World diplomats, that he speaks for a united America, which doesn't want to se selfishness supercede a spirit of justice at the peace table, and is particularly anxious that the sacrifices America has made 8.uh11 not have been made in vain
DEATH RESULTS FROM FALL. HAGERSTOWN, Nov. 28. Mrs. Esther Foyst died Tuesday atternon at her home as the result of a fall a week ago. She Is survived by two brothers, Cash and Gilbert three sisters, Mrs. Alice Hussong, of Marion; Mrs. Bertha Kinsey and Mrs. Seward Hardwick, of Hagerstown. Funeral announcement will be made later.
Rheumatic Torture
Take "Neutrone Prescription 99" and the Pain and Aching Will Vanish. " Rheumatic misery 'i now a thing of the past. It matters not how sore your jolnta are, or how swollen and painful, one bottle of "Neutrone Prescription 99'' will make you feel fine and comfortable. "Neutrone Prescription 99" is a dif
ferent remedy. It Is a liquid that : eliminates uric acid by absorption j through the blood and quickly soothes i and heals the inflammation. ! It quickly takes the agony out of
joints and muscles and makes them like new. "Neutrone Prescription 99" is a good thing to have on hand at all times. It is especially efficacious when an attack is coming on as in almost every instance it will, after a few doses, rid the system of rheumatic poisons. 60c and f 1.00 the bottle. Conkey Drug Co., and leading drug' gists everywhere. Adv.
NO TONIC LIKE HOOD'S Sarsaparilla For a Time Like This, After Influenza, the Grip, When purifledHblood, rebuilt strength and" regulated bowels are essential.
In the after-effects of influenza, the j
grip and oth.er prostrating diseases, Hood's Sarsaparilla has remarkable health-helping effect. It expels the poisons that have weakened and depleted the blood, causing pallor, anemia, flabby flesh
and lax muscles. It Is the standard blood remedy with a successful record of nearly fifty years.
Many people it is really astonish-1
ing how many need a fine, gentle, ! easy cathartic in these trying times. We recommend Hood's Pills, used in
the best families, and equally effective with delicate women or robust ,
men. Easy to take, easy to operate.-Adv.
jSBBJBSaBSBSSBSBSBBBSSBSBMBBBBBBBBBSaBBBBSBSBKSx
II I hll i I I
if.
SB m - m ft i mm
k P Tiilred u Fuhio ParH
3E
HOW A SAL.E8MAV Sl'FFEnKD. K. J. rorter. Sterling, Col , writes: Tor six months I suffered with a painful weak back. As a traveling salesman I had to stoop frequently to pick up my grips, which I grew to dread as tiii pain when I straightened up was awful. Numerous remedies failed to (reach my rase. I was Induced to try Foley Kidney PillJ. Relief was lmwedlate. Suy, thoy are great! Anyone afflicted as 1 was should try a bottle (tir two of Foley Kidney Pills." Good If or pain in the back, rheumatic pains, (aching Joints, sore muscles. For sale by IA. a. L.uken & Co. Adv.,
I GASH ADD CARRY
GROCERY
WITH THE Churngoiu Store Comb Honey, per lb. ......34c Corn Syrup, 5 lb. per bucket, 48c Buffet Syrup, 2 lb, can 20c Peaches, per can, 35c; doz, $3.75 Peaches, per can, 24c; doz. $2.60 R.vpberries, per can 29c Strawberries, per can 30o Cherries, per can 32c Pineapple, per can, 18c, 29c, 34c Grape Fruit, each 5e Onions, per lb., 5c; 3 for.... 13c Rice, per lb., 12c; 2 for. 23o Prunes, per lb. 18c; -2 for... 35c Peaches, per lb. ..24c Apricots, per lb 28c Navy Beans, lb. 14c; 2 for 26c Pinto Beans, per lb 12c Lima Beans, per lb 18c Cracked Hominy per lb 7c 2 lb. for 13c Pear Butter, per can 22c Churngold Oleomargarine. per pound,41c; 5 lbs at 40c per pound. Urngold Coffee, per lb .. ..30c
Mr. H. C. Bowers, Mgr. Phone 1702. 7 .S 6th
Fashion Park Clothes
The finest garments made for men -particular about their dress. No better material no better style and no better workmanship found In any clothes equal to that found In Fashion Park. We highly recommend these garments and can show you many attractive Suits and Overcoats priced at $20.00 to $45.00 For That Boy Sampeck Clothes are America's best We offer an excellent line at $5.00 to $18.00 BUY HIS XMAS GIFT HERE We have Ties, Mufflers, Belts, Manhattan Shirts, Holeproof Hose, Etc.
The Model .. W. E. Jameson, Prop.'
The Nation Gives Thanks
A MOST WELCOME VISITOR
THE entire nation today is giving thanks with a fervor that Thanksgiving Day heretofore has seldom known. Thanks that it is a united nation, united in the spirit that made it a nation, and that its armies are showing the same spirit that gave cause for the first American Thanksgiving, and that has maintained American principles. Thrift has succeeded extravagance among us, and the economy that demands equality in value received for value of money expended, is more and more recognized as the true economy. And let us unite in serving and saving until we make possible the great Thanksgiving which will recognize the triumph of the American creed of freedom. And remember the economical way to buy clothes and sikoes is to put "quality" first. If you are not a customer we urge you to try us for your next suit or pair of shoes, and next Thanksgiving you will be thankful for the money you have saved on best quality merchandise.
r WM-M-W fWAMfTlf
A n A ppeal to Reason
Steam Heated Winter Storage for AUTOMOBILES Don't the Idea of a STEAM-HEATED Garage for the Winter Storage of Your Car Appeal to you? Most Assuredly, if you Plan to Lay it Up. And while it is true that the Central Auto Station Garage has large storage capacity, not a foot of it will be vacant this winter. Hundreds of cars will be "LAID-UP" a little later. Safe and warm storage will be in great demand. . . at the LAST MINUTE. Make Your Storage Arrangements Right NOW and prevent disappointment when snow blocks the roadways. Come in and talk it over tomorrow. You are no weather prophet- nor are we . The Central Auto Station is Centrally located. We are "In the Heart of the City." Our storage rates are most reasonable. Let us tell you about them, before it's too late to benefit you.
Rie-Nie Absolutely Non-Freezable A gallon can of Rie-Nie absolutely insures against radiator freezing. It costs less than alcohol and goes farther. Two cars which withstood 24 hours of exposure at 25 below zero last winter, without freezing, gave abundant proof of this. Don't stop driving your car for fear of your radiator freezing this can be avoided if you use Ris-Nie in your radiator see us now for full particulars and prices.
EXIDE SERVICE STATION
See us about winter storage for your battery. We will give It expert attention.
We give the best of service. It includes Oil, Gasoline, Tire Repair, Washing, Polishing, etc. Open Day and Night. We have in stock a good supply of Weed and Rid-O-Skid Tire Chains. CENTRAL Auto Station
1115 MAIN STREET
PHONE 2121
III :
in a?
