Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 310, 13 October 1919 — Page 10

PAGE TEN THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, OCT. 13, 1919.

FARMERS TO LAY PLAINTS BEFORE INDUSTRY MEET

Lutheran Churches Start Drive for Old Clothes

Action Expected on Demands for Pay Equal to Work, in Reconvention. WASHINGTON, Oct. 13. Needs of American farmers, including recognition of the right of the farming class to remuneration on the basis of the number of hour? per day of work, will te laid before Hie national industrial conference when it reconvenes Tuesday. O. K. Bradfme of Xenia, O . one of lhe farmer delegates in the public ?;roup, announced today that the five farmer representatives attending the conference would have a resolution petting forth the views of the farmers leady for presentation when the conference resumes its sessions. Prior to the meeting of the full con

ference, however, it is expected that, definite steps will be taken toward the settlement of the issue raised by lhe requests of the labor group that the conference appoint a committee to arbitrate in the steel strike. Action Expected. Action of some sort on this issue is looked for tomorrow when the conference's general or 'steering" committee meets. Members of the committee woh spent the week end in New York are eptrted to bring back word whether mediation by lhe conference would te accepted by the United States Steel Corporation. The farmer delegates. Mr. Bradfute i-aid. do not object to the payment of wages to organized labor', on the basis of an eight-hour day, but they believe that, the farmers are entitled to remuneration ' for 'he longer hours of their working days.

Lutheran churches of Richmond will conduct a drive this week for old clothing to be sent to members of their denomination in Poland and oth-

i er Baltic states. i Reports from the Lutheran commission depict Indescribable misery in ! these lands. Thousands are expected I to die this winter from exposure un- ! less clothing is immediately sent to j them. There also is a crying need l for foodstuffs. I The collection of the clothing here

has been left to the discretion of the individual Lutheran churches, whose committees are making arrangements and handling the details.

; W EST POINT SHOWN j GREAT TIME IN ITALY

(Bv Associated Press) i ROME. Oct. 13. The cadets of the graduating class of the West Point .Military Academy who came here to I see and study the battlefields of the j great war have been welcomed and lavishly entertained with luncheons. banquets, drills and dances in ten Italian cities. Colonel John R. West, who ; commands the cadets was compelled itr rosnrnirt tr r, ndrtrPBSPS of welcome

WHOLE SHIP IS ROBBED IN ASIA

CBy Associated Press) BATOUM, Cancasia. Aug. 29., Via Paris, Sept. 16. (By Mail) Six robbers, travelling as passengers, commandeered the Russian steamer Constantino on her latest trip between this port and Constantinople, and robbed a selected list of wealthy passengers of 30,000,000 rubles. The robbery was conducted with the daring and finish of an American train hold-up. The Constantino carried merchants from Tiflis, Baku, Bagdad and Erivan, proceeding to Constantinople to purchase goods, -with cash in gold and Romaniff rubles for the purpose. There was nothing to indicate the character

I of the robbers until the ship was withI in 12 hours of the Bosphorus. when the captain and the crew, at the point of pistols, were ordered forward and l the engines stopped. The leading I merchants were lined up, as their names were read from a list, and their j persons and baggage searched. It was i a care of all firearms on the deck and arms aloft. The crew and the humbler j passengers were not molested. The captain was ordered to navigate

his ship close to shore, the pile of firearms was tossed into a life-boat, and the robbers moved to land. They immediately disappeared in the hills of Anatolia. The members of the crew who rowed them ashore received a handsome tip. Robberies around the Black Sea become bolder and of daily occurrence. Forty persons were rounded up on the high raod outside Sonchi yesterday and the valuables and better clothing of the party taken. The affair of the Constantine however, is the first time that bandits have transferred their activities to the water.

Perhaps the most extraordinary idea in tatooing ever carried out is that of a French coachman, who has his body covered with more than 120 different designs.

To express kilometers in miles, multiply by 6 and divide by 10.

Peptiron A Heal Iron Tonic Improves color, strengthens nerve?, restores appetite, aids digestion, and promotes refreshing, natural sleep. Alkde by C. L UooJ Co., Lowell, Mass.

in seventeen davs.

The facts in honor of the Americans began at Leghorn where the cadets landed in Italy and where they were guests of the Royal Naval Academy at an elaborate luncheon at which addresses were delivered by officers of the Italian navy and by Colonel West.

WAR'S OVER; BIRTH RATE BOUNDS UP IN ENGLAND

Col. House, Suffering From Illness, is Home NEW YORK, Oct. 13 Col. Edward M. House, personal advisor to President Wilson at the Paris conference, arrived here today on the transport Northern Pacific, suffering with a slight attack of grippe." Col. House spent nearly a year in Paris, where he has been representing President. Wilson in the supreme council since the latter's return home. With Col. House were his wife; Commander William McLean, his personal physician, and several others, who have been members of the colonel's party at Hotel Crillon. SURPLUS STOCK OF AMERICAN ARMY IN

i I 'By Associated Press) j LONDON, Oct. 13. More babies were born in England during August I than in any previous month since the j beginning of the war. Official reI turns show- the number to be 6.390, j equivalent to an annual rate of IS per I thousand, and 461 more babies than lover the same month of 1918. I "I believe that during and after wars

I more boy babies are born than girls."

said Dr. Mary Scharlieb. a specialist, discussing the report. "I think official figures will prove that more boys are

I born during periods of stress, hardjship and food shortage and more girls i during periods of wealth, ease and ! luxury."

!

Of coarse you desire it. Then read of this wonderful

hair elixir, KOTALKO Worry no rnerQ thout your hair, Miss. Mrs. or SlrE Throw away those Inaid lotion tint are only drying your scalp tod doing no good wnatawer. ion't shampoo Ui natural oils out of your salp. There't a hair elixir that is meeting wttli Increasing fa-or. for U Is altogether dinrent from the scented lotion, emulsions and washr. It ii kotalko. conioun'led from the Three Kingdoms of Nature ar.d Including twelve tnyedient. one of which is the genuine bear Oil. Whuti you have heard of a marvelous in fertilizing hair. No matter what conditio your hair Is In do not despair. Kotalko is compounded on tne principle that aided Nature In giving me a full growth of iialr when I was bald (see the picture below; and It is doing wonders for otacrs men, women and children. I could fill this whole paper with

copies of testimonials from persons wb3 endorse Koialko. Te enthusiasm la Preat when a pt-rson find, after all else as faded, that KotalJto Is jnt what Nature needed as ad la producing a Splendid prowth of hair. You may now obtain the penuln Kotalko under my rranti at the drug store, or the drugfrist will get it for you. but take nmhfnz else that Is

said to be "just aa good " for ymi will When Bald iiatr Cray:

men oniy aeimy ymir ue or rioiamo. Or, If yen wish first to prove Kotalko. send for a T eating box which will come to ynu by null promptly la a plainly wrapped package. Enclose only 10 cents, silver or stamps, la your letter. Satisfy yoursel'. You want to stop falling hair, eliminate dandruff, strengthen and develop renews growth of stronn, and silk-tike hair, or cover that bald spot with batr Buv KOTALKO at t: e druggist's, or ct iho dimo testing box by mail .NO'A'. aplj ouce or twice dUy watch la your mirror! Audrey. JOHN BART BRITTA1N, bcw , SlatiOD F. NEW YORK, N. Y.

This is Chill" Chasing Weeks

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Buy Your

Perfection Heater Today This is Perfection "Chill Chasing1 week right now your dealer is displaying and demonstrating Perfection Oil Heaters. A Perfection chases chill from any room these shivery mornings and evenings heats ten hours on a gallon of kerosene oil gives you cozy comfort in an instant and saves coal. More than four million homes now enjoy Perfection comfort gefyours early. Your dealer has one for you today.

Prices range front S6.2S to $11.00.

A wireless stat ion has been eon- j strucferl in the interior of China from j material brought in by aeroplane.

THE CLEVELAND METAL PtOWCTS CtV CLEVELAND. OW

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PERFECTION OilBeatm

AT AGE OF 73 GAINS 16 POUNDS TAKING TANLAG

Civil War Veteran Savs H '

GERMANY IS SOLD; Has a New Lease on Life,!

flew.

(Hy Associated Press) GERMANY, Oct. 12. Twelve hundred

motcr trTicKS abandoned by the Ger-1 rnsn army in the area taken over by j the Americans as part of the armis- I tire material were sold recently to a . syndicate of German automobile deal- , . is. This deal virtually completes the u-ork of the C'oblenz branch of the; I'niierl States Liquidation commission 'vhich h.j.s been under the direction of j .Junius G. Adams, of Ashville. N. C, special commissioner of the American , Army of Occupation i Continuaton of disposal of surplus ! army material in occupied Germany j will hereafter be. under direction of a ; penerii! sales board of the American j Forces in Germany of which Lieuten- ; ;nt Colonel T. H. Krut tschni! t has i beer, appointed as chief. The army i board will be under th supervision of

the liquidation commission with headquarters in Paris until the final stocks are Hold. The sale of surplus property of the American army at th" Antwerp base which also has been completed brought to the government $14. Otto, 000. most of the poods disposed of to the Belgian government, bringing a better price than could have been obtained in the t'nited States. By tho sale of a part of surplus stocks of the American Forces In Germany, much of which was sold to German civilians, the sum of ?ll,000.00it was realized. Anions the material sold recently to German dealers was L 000. ooo pounds of candy of a kind not pari iruhu lv in demand amont; the American s 'idicrs.

'WETS"

J. J. Terrell of 341 AYegt Norwood! street, Indianapolis, a veteran of the ; Civil war and a resident of Indianap-I olis for the past thirty-five years, relates an experience with Tanlac that ! is both interesting and remarkable, j "By the help of Tanlac," said Mr. Terrell .in an interview recently, "I j have cotten entirely rid of a case of

stomach trouble of forty years' stand- j inc. It has been that lone since Ij !could sit down to the table and enjoy; 1 a meal like I can today. I might say ! j my trouble started during the Civil j j war, for it was then that I became i constipated and have had to take a ! laxative every few days since. Tt was j iabout that time, also, that I com-j ; menced to have catarrh of the head j ' and throat. I would wake up in the j i mornings so choked up that I could , , hardly breathe and would gap and j j cough for an hour, before 1 could pet. i my head and throat cleared up. and ! ; I soon found myself with a chronic I I couch, especially at nipht and in the! early mornings. 1 had a disagreeable!

breath, and it wasn't long after this j until my stomach began to bother ; me. In a short while after eating I

would bloat up with sour gas and have such intense pains in the pit of my stomach that I could hardly stand it. "I hare been taking medicines constantly ever since my trouble started. Practically half the money

i T have made has gone for drug bills.

; but I could never get more than just ! !a little passing relief. During the! i past year or two I have gradually got- j

Men worse, and. as I am seventy-! POURING MONEY 'three years old. I had about conclud-j INTO OHIO. IS CHARGE ie1 ,hat n,-v aK va-s Setting the best i of mf I got to having attacks of i

' rheumatism in my shoulders, arms and i legs. My joints, especially, hurt, me I terribly. My stomach troubled me J worse than ever and I was losing j

; we ight. I didn't know which way to j turn next, as I had tried everything I in the way of medicines, and It- lookI od like I must just keep-on suffering, i "But Tanlac has made a wonderful ! change in my condition. In fact, ! I just feel like I have a new- lease on

life. By the time I finished my fifth!

bottle every sign of rheumatism was ! gone and now my stomach is in bet- ; ter shape than it was forty years aco I can eat and digest anything.

and I have an appetite like a school boy. Another remarkable thing Is the way 1 have picked up in weight. Yhy. I was completely surprised when 1 got on the scales the other day and l'ourcl that I had actually gained sixteen pounds, for I have not been faking Talac but about two months. 1 have also gotten rid of the catarrh, as well as that harrassing cough, and 1 sleep like a log every nigh' . When my sister, who is now seventy-five vears of ag. came 1o visit me from Cumberland. Ind.. a fehort time ago, and saw how Tanlac was helping me. she commenced taking it herself. She wrote me since that she stood the

trip home much better than she did j coming over here, and that Tanlac j had given her more strength and energy and built her up wonderfully. 1 i can certainly recommend Tanlac" and! several of my friends are now taking1 it on account of what it has done for ! me." ! Tanlac is sold in Richmond by Clem j Thistlethwaite; in Greensfork by C. D. i Corine: in Cambridge City by Mr.' Dean House; in Perrhing by Sourbeer & Rodenberg; in Centervilie by Cen-! terville Pharmacy, and in .Milton b W. It. Pnrkir

nd

' r. A i? r ' i l;i . .1 Pre. TO EDO. O.. f)-t. v:.- - Brewery

liq-.io!' Interests of the whole United States are dumpies money into Tolsdo. -Cleveland. Cincinnati and other former wet strrmgholds in Ohio in ef

forts t o swing ; -io st t olumn at : he next to V. A. Schreiber. the Anti-Saloon lea trirt.

e out of lhe dry e.-tion. according u peri n: en dent of ii'1 for this dis-

RUGS

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Carpet, !

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TE I CARPETS

eg and Drapery House

WWSliSW'9i ?6.x65 inches. 4x6 ft. and 0x ft and 9x12 ft. sp2 and in special sizes furnished In shortest

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Mr. Schreil.rr. cent inning

' Lew Mayer. Chieag.i lawyer representing liquor intere.-fs, said sometime ago that Ohio was the keystone f tate. in their fight this year. Mayer said if Ohio repudiated prohibition on Nov. 4 the wets wo.tld bring immediate action in all stares, which have the initiative and referendum with a view 'o knocking out their ratification of !ederal war-time prohibition '

The fir.;t. Enj;li?"h newspaper tveokly issued in !,ondrn in li;4

was a

Apply Zemo the Clean, Antiseptic Liquid Easy to Use Does Not Stain Creasy calves end ointmente should not be applied if good clear skin i3 wanted. From any druggist for 35c, or SI .00 for larse size, get a bottle of Zemo. When applied as directed it effectively removes eczema, quickly stops itching, and heals skin troubles, also sores, burns, wounds and chafing. It penetrates, cleanses and soothes. Zemo is a clean, dependable and inexpensive, antiseptic liquid. Try it, as we believe nothing you have ever used 13 as effective and satisfying. Tiss E. V. . Rcae Co. . Cleveland, U.

The Fall's display of Floor Coverings is now complete and all prospective furnishers should improve the first opportunity to see our exhibit that, for all the latest decorative ideas, is unequalled elsewhere. Bundhar Hardwick, Kashgar and Imperial Sarouk Wilton Rugs are leaders of the world for style and character, and we show about everything obtainable in these lines. Save by buying now. We Have a Complete Line of Wilton, Axminster, Velvet and Tapestry Carpets with or without borders. We can cover your floor all over or make you a room-size rug any size you may want very much lower in price than you can buy a made-rug. Prices Quoted Are for 9x12 Size

Fibre Rugs, Ideally beautiful and eflecUve I- A AA for bed rooms 51tUU Wool and Fibre In a variety of Self-Tones that popularize them for Inexpensive bed and other rooms priced $16.50 to S21.50 Feamless Brussels, geometrical and Persian designs In bright colors S25.00 to $34.00 Axminsters In the deep, rich shadings that make this weave bo popular 843.50 to $60.00 Wilton Velvet Rugs Many Chinese designs and pastel colorings $42.50 to $52.50 Royal Wilton, linen fringed, reflecting nkllled QPT Af Oriental creations ; "priced 5 tJ.UU Fringed Wilton Rugs, exceptionally artistically colored and designed and of remarkable durability. Gems of beauty $89.00, $110.00 and $123.00 Other sizes and qualities In proportion. Don't fail to see our DRAPERIES Nothing gives a room so homey anc welcoming appearance as windows correctly draped. LACE CURTAINS Durably made, beautifully designed and producing a sheer effect, vrith grratly enhanced charm by the proper use of overhangings of Silk and Madras. WE FEATURE THE FOLLOWING: Nottingham, the popular low-priced curtain Q-t OJ?

..$1.65 $3.00 S5.00 87.50

Bengal. Oriental and Royal Turkish Rugs Tortraylng faithfully the harmonious restf'il tones and refining character of the most 6kiiled artists of the Orient and with Bengal and Royal Turkish you have tho satisfaction

or a mKn ciass wriema: ituc ;u one-iounn us lurroiAiftin

cost. We shew them in sizes 25x40 inches,

?,8.x65 inches. 4xfi ft. and Gx! ft and Ssl2 fr nnd in special sdzes furnished In ehortes time possible.

ease

pair Scrims, attractively designed pair Quaker Nets, well mounted pair Cable Nets, unusually effective pair Dutche6s Points, charmingly patterened pair

Lace Paneling in 9-inch connecting sections. Use as many as width of door or window requires. Artistic, popular, economcal 65c, 95c, $1.25 and up each section. Madrases, Cretonnes, Etmalnes, Marquisettes, Voiles In the latest patterns by th yard.

WE SHOW AN EXTENSIVE ASSORTMENT OF THE BEST AND OTHERS RELIABLY MADE

LINOLEUMS WINDOW SHADES THE HOOVER ELECTRIC World-Famed Bisseil UnequallInlaid. Surface and plain colors, including Always come to us when wanting the best SWEEPER ed VaCUUm Sweeper, $1 1.00 to leryau Get orders in early to insure de- !s the best extant, the greatest time $13.00. livery when needed. Plisse, Austrian, and labor saver known. Let us demon- f ARPFT QWFFPFR Inlaid $1.65 to $3.00 Yard Casement Cloth. Starr Hand-Made Duplex strate. CJ Crt t C (hi Yard Surface $1.00. $1.25 Yard and Opaque. $47.50, $57.50, $85.00 $4.50 to $5.00

904-906 Main Street

NOLTE

904-906 Main Street

Only exclusive Carpet, Rug and Drapery House in city. Please give us call when in Richmond. Will be pleased to show our goods.

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