Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 316, 20 October 1919 — Page 11
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, OCT. 20, 1919.
PAGE ELEVEN
VIENNA ASKS WORLD'S HELP; STAGNANT LAND TVrl Q 1 t-t-1 mc F vl- 1 1 cf a C i fir
Faces Period of Absolute Want, Says Burgomaster. VIENNA, Oct. 20. The burgomaster Saturday gave to the Associated Press an appeal to the American public to tome to the relief of "this much tried city" before it is too late. After having rehearsed the hards-hips which the populace has undergone in the last five years, he predicts the most terrible suffering unless aid is rushed, declaring the city must live a hand-to-mouth existence. "We have been rendered absolute beggars a city of mendicants," he said. "There Is nothing but despair facing us. Methodical provisioning of Vienna ceased months ago. The Austrian grain supply barely suffices for upper Austria, while the rest of the country is wholly dependent upon importations. "All of the stocks of emtente origin have been exhausted, and no new contracts have been made because this is impossible for lack of credits Forage for animals also is exhausted so that we face a complete breakdown of transportation in the city "Our meat ration recently was fixed at three ounces a person weekly, but this amount is unavailable and Interals of weeks lrequently elapse between meat distributions Fresh milk is for infants, and for them only in limited quantities. The stock of condensed milk is approaching exhaustion. Eggs, beans, sugar, coffee and
potatoes supplies have been exhausts. Shoes Unheard-of. "Clothing and shoes are a non-existent quantity for the masses. There has been no importation of flax or rotten since the beginning of the war, and factories producing substitutes of paper of fibre for clothing have been closed for lack of coal. Clothing stocks on hand have increased thirty tiild in pric-. "Our citizens are herded like cattle. i." pei cent of the families in the city now living in one or two rooms. Neither the industries still in operation or transportation and power agencies know one day to another whether they can operate the next. There scarcely is a chance that more than a small percentage of the public will b able to cook its meals during the winter. "Our hospitals are. soon to close, one after another, so we are prepared for a terrible death rate. Our schools are with out fuel and must be closed. "The number of unemployed increases daily and it now seems to be certain that within a few weeks there will be no railroad transportation whatever within our country. The threat depreciation in our currency makes it impossible to purchase fuel or raw materials from abroad, thus to resume our industrial life. Only a foreign loan can save us, and we api ..-:. 1 to America.'
American Ideals of Roosevelt Outlined by W. Dudley Foulke
mi
iiOMINENT JAP IS U. S. VISITOR
V" .
By WILLIAM DUDLEY FOULKE
f n t 'EVER was tnere a great
American who showed his intense Americanism, either in his words or in his life, more clearly than Theodore Roosevelt. His declarations upon this subject were very plain long before he became
president. He appreciated to the full the great opportunities of our country. "Our nation is that one among all the nations of the earth which holds in Its hand the fate of the coming years." "We shall never be successful over the dangers that confront us, we shall never achieve true greatness nor reach the lofty ideals which the founders and preservers of our mighty federal republic have set before us unless we are Americans in heart and soul, in spirit and purpose, keenly alive to the responsibilities implied in the very name of American and proud beyond measure in the glorious privilege of bearing it" Forum, April, 1894. "Americanism is a question of spirit, conviction and purpose, not of creed or birthplace. "A Scandinavian, a German or an Irishman, who has really become an American, has the right to stand upon exactly the same footing as the nativeborn citizen." Forum, April, 1894. "As regards every race, everywhere, at home or abroad, we can not afford to deviate from the great rule of righteousness which bids us treat each man on his worth as a man." Address at University of Oxford.
While Mr. Roosevelt was president
he preserved this equality of treatment of all classes. Open To All "The door of the white house while I am president," he said, "shall 6wing just as easily to the pressure of the hand of labor as of the hand of capi
tal, and no easier." "The reckless labor agitator who arouses the mob to riot and bloodshed is in the last analysis the most dangerous of the workingman's enemies. This man is a real peril and so is his sympathizer, the legislator who. to catch votes, denounces the judiciary and the. military because they put down mobs. . . . "The demagogue in all his forms is as characteristic an evil of all free sosiety as the courier is of a despotism." Forum, February, 1 805. "No man works such incalculable woe to a free country as he who teaches young men that one of the
paths to glory, renown and temporal 1 success lies along the line of armed resistance to the government, or its attempted overthrow." Forum, Feb-j ruary, 1S95. j "It is just as un-American to vote against a man because he is rich as to vote against him because he is poor." Forum, April, 1894. "When once loyalty to a class has been substituted for loyalty to the republic, the end of the republic is at ; hand." Sorbonne, Paris, April 23, 1910. After be had ceased to be president he spread his gospel of democratic ideals among other nations. Thus he said to the people of France in his address at the Sorbonne: "The average citizen must be a good citizen if our republics are to succeed. The stream will not rise permanently higher than the main source of national power and national greatness is found in the average citizenship of the nation. Therefore, it behooves us to do our best to see that the standard of the average citi
zen is kept high and the average can not be kept high unless the standard of the leaders is very much higher." And he shows the way in which !his is to be done by action and by manly co-operation, not be mere criticism of what others are doing. "The poorest way to face life is to face it with a sneer. . . . "It is not the critic who counts, not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles or where the
doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose
face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs
and comes short again and again, be
cause there is no effort without error
and shortcoming; but who does actual
ly strive to do the deeds; who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devo
tions; who spends himself in a worthy
cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with
those cold and timid souls who know
neither victory nor defeat." Sor bonne, April 23, 1919." But high as were the aim? of Mr. Roosevelt he was still the most practical of statesmen.
"We believe that our ideals should
be high, but not so high as to make it impossible measurably to realize
them." Sorbonne, Paris, 1919.
His views in respect to war and securing the peace of the world ought to
be known to all.
"War is a dreadful thing, and unjust
war is a crime against humanity. But
it is such a crime because It is un
just, not because it is war. The choice
must ever be in favor of righteousness, and this whether the alternative be peace or whether the alternative be
war." Sorbonne, Paris, 1919.
"Unjust war is to be abhorred; but
woe to the nation that does not make
ready against all who would harm it!
And who thrice over to the nation in
which the average man loses the fight
ing edge, loses the power to serve as a soldier if the day of need should
arise." Address to University of
Berlin. Roosevelt Brought Peace.
It was Roosevelt who brought the parties together and secured the peace
in the war between Russia and Japan
For this he received the Nobel peace prize at Christiania. In his address
on that occasion he said: "I cannot help thinking that the constitution of the United States, notably In the establishment of the Supreme Court and in the methods adopted for securing peace and good relations among and between the different states, offers certain valuable analogies to what should be striven for in
order to secure, through The Hague
courts and conferences, a species of
world federation for international
peace and justice.
"Finally, it would be a master stroke
if those great powers honestly bent on peace, would form a league of
peace, not only to keep the peace among themselves, but to prevent, by force, if necessary, it being broken by others." Nobel Peace Prize. Perhaps the most eloquent expression of Theodore Rosevelt for true Americanism is found in the conclusion of his great speech at Carnegie Hall in 1912 on the right of the people to rule: "We, here in America, hold in our hands the hope of the world, the fate of the coming years; and shame and disgrace will be ours if in our eyes the light of high resolve is dimmed, if we trail In the dust the golden hopes of men. If on this new continent we merely build another country of great but unjustly divided material prosperity, we shall have done nothing; and
we shall do as little if we merely set the greed and envy against the great and arrogant, and thereby destroy the material well-being of all of U3. To turn this government into government by plutocracy or government by a mob would be to repeat on a larger scale the lamentable failures of the world that is dead. We stand against all tyranny, by the few or by the many. We stand for the rule of the many in the Interest of all of us, for the rule of the many in the spirit of courage, of common sense, of high purposes, above all, in a spirit of kindly
justice toward every man and every woman."
India Prison Commission Compliments T. Nicholson A letter complimenting Timothy Nicholson on the efficiency of the system of prisons established in Indiana partially through his and others, was sent to Mr. Nicholson by the India Prison Commission, which spent several days in Indiana. The letter and its signers follow: "The India Prison Commission, sent by the government of India to study the correctional system of the United States, is visiting Indiana. "The fame of your state reaches far
beyond its own borders and we were told in England something of what we should see here. "In the upbuilding of these great institutions you have borne a distinguished part, and we beg to offer you our greetings and appreciation of your
long and useful life."
FOOD PRICES DECLINE.
'By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Oct. 19. The De
partment of Labor's Bureau on labor statistics, as the result of an investigation, announced that food prices are cn the decline.
Women Who Are Always Tired Such women get lift!? ioy out of Hf. they are "d ragged-out," "worn-out," "tired-out" and nervous, but how few realize there is & way to overcome this condition? Druggists guarantee Vinol. the cod liver and iron tonic without oil, to build up strength and energy for over-worked, run-down, devitalized men and women or will retrun your money. Why not take advantage of this guarantee? Clem ThisUethwaite. Druggist, and druggists everywhere. Adv.
REDUCE YOUR FAT WITHOUT DIETING
Years ago the formula for fat reduction was "diet" "exercise." Today it is "Take Marmola Prescription Tablets." Friends tell friends doctors tell their patients, until thousands know and use this convenient, harmless method. They eat what they like, live as they like, and still lose their two, three or four pounds of fat a week. Simple, effective, harmless Marmola Prescription Tablets are sold by all druggists a large case for $1. Or if you prefer you may write direct to the Marmola Company, S64 Woodward Ave., Detroit, Mich. Adv.
Best Treatment for Catarrh S. S. S. Removes the Cause
For the Blood.
One you get your blood free from ' Impurities cleansed of the catarrhal poisons, which it is now a prey to be-' cause of its unhealthy state then ! you will be relieved of Catarrh the ' dripping in the throat, hawking and r pitting, raw sores in the nostrils; , and the disagreeable bad breath. Itwas caused, in the first place, because!
your impoverished blood was easily ir.-; j fected. Possibly a slight cold or con-' jtact with someone who had a cold.
1 J U t I IIV I'Vl.ll. V,V-.,AV- i III t t.' t "I'll, Catarrh it is not necessary. The remedy, S. S. S.. "discovered over fifty;
t years ago, tested, true and tried, is I
obtainable at any drug store. It has proven its value in thousands of cases. It will do so in your case. Get S. S. S. at once and begin treatment. If yours is a long standing case, be sure to write for free expert medical advice. We will tell you how this purely vegetable blood remedy cleansos the inpurities from the blood by literally washing it clean. We will prove to you that thousands of sufferers from Catarrh, after consistent treatment with S. R. S., have been freed from the trouble and all its disagreeable features. Don't delay the Treatment. Address Medical Director. Swift Laboratory, Atlanta. Ga. Adv.
A Word to the Wise
Bituminus miners demand sixty percent increase in wages and thirty hours per week. Granting such a demand means a big increase in the price of coal. Refusing means a tie-up of industry and inability to get coal at any price. November first is not far ahead.
Richmond Coal Co,
PHONE 3165
I. ' H. C. HASEMEIER CO.
Opened on Saturday
There will be nineteen sale days. This announcement is limited to yard goods. Other departments will be heard from later in the week. Visit the Harvest Sale early and often.
Baron Goto. Baron Goto, the distintruishe-J Japanese statesman, arrived recently in New York and will spend some time in this country. With member of his staff he is now in Washington where this photograph was taken.
Tell The World This Woman Says That Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound made Me a Well Woman.
Ill I illllili
I Use!;' ll
art a i
Los Angeles, Cal. " I suffered with female troubles for years, was sick
"tmost of the time,
was not able to do
my own housework.
and I could not get help from doctors. I saw Lvdia E. Pink-
pam's Vegetable
Compound adver
tised in the newspaCers, and took six ottles, and am a
well woman. You
can use my name to
tell the world the
good your medicine has done me as I 6hall praise it always." Mrs. A. L. DeVine, 647 St. Paul Avenue, Los Angeles, Calif. "Women who suffer from any form of weakness, a3 indicated by displacements, inflammation, ulceration, irregularities, backache, headaches, nervousness or "the blues," should do as Mrs. DeVine did, and give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a thorough trial. lor over forty years this famous remedy, which contains the curative, strengthening properties of good old fashioned roots and herbs, has been correcting just such ailments. If you have mysterious complications write for ndvice to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass.
TELLS WHY SHE BOUGHT SECOND I BOTTLE OF DRECO
Dayton Lady Had Tried Many Remedies for Constipation, Headaches, Stomach Troubles, But None Helped Like Dreco Did. "I tried one bottle of Dreco, and it did me so much good I got the second one, and now I am buying the third,
land I am feeling a whole lot better,' I said Mrs. Julia Bader. of 321 W. Hartjford St., Dayton, O. "I have suffered for years with a 'had stomach trouble, and all my food j seemed to ferment and fill me up with ! gas, and cause awful pains. It felt ! like I was choking sometimes, and I
could not swallow it down, nor spit it out. Constipation was a continual source of annoyance, and I often had splitting headaches, which nothing would relieve. My nerves were shattered and my sleep badly broken, for I would roll and toss all night long, and when morning came, would be exhausted. "So many of my friends had tried Dreco, with such good results, that I decided to try it also, and, without a doubt, it has reached my case, for I now eat most anything I crave, and it never hurts me the slightest. I am never bothered with the gas or pains, and the constipation has gone entirely. My nerves are much stronger, and I get good, full night's rest now, and wake up fresh and full of vigor. I haven't had a headache since the second day I started on Dreco. I certainly do recommend Dreco, for it has done me a world of good. Dreco does not contain any iron, mercury, potash, acids or oils, but is mad'i from the juices and extracts of many herbal plants, which combine with the juices of the stomach very pleasantly and act on the vital organs. Mr. Powers, the well known Dreco expert, has headquarters at Conkey Drug Co., to meet the local public and explain the merits of this great remedy. See him today. Adv.
In Our Silk Department
SILK AND WOOL POPLIN' 40inch, Silk and Wool Poplins; a beautiful bright finished cloth, in every wanted shade: regular $3.00 value. Harvest Sale 2.25 FRENCH SERCE 43-inch, AllWool, fine Twill French Serge. The most wanted shades are Plum, Burgundy, Brown, Beaver, Navy, Copen, Taupe and Black. Harvest Sale S3.00 WOOL JERSEY CLOTH 54-in. Wool Jersey, in a splendid line of shades, including all of the new Blues and Tans. Harvest Sale S5.00 SILVERTONE COATINGS 54Inch, the shades are Plum, Tan, Artillery, Taupe and Copen Blue. Harvest Sale 87.00 LUSTON'E COATING 54-inch All-Wool Coating in the three best shades. Brown, Navy and Beaver. Harvest Sale So. 50 TOURIST SERGES GS-in. Wool Storm Serges; a cloth which will stand hard wear in a good range of colors. Harvest Sale SI. 29 JAMESTOWN WOOLENS This cloth is 60 percent Wool and comes in Plaids, Stripes and Checks, the width is full 38-inch. Special for the Harvest Sale, 81.29 BROADCLOTH 50-inch, a complete assortment in all of the newest Fall shades. Price range for the Harvest Sale S5.00 to 6.00 SKIRTING PLAIDS A splendid range of All-Wool Novelty Plaids for separate Skirts, the color combinations are beautiful. The widths are 42 and 48-inch. Harvest Sale $3.50 and 5.00
Our Domestic Dept.
HOPE MUSLIN Genuine Hope Muslin, perfect goods, 1 to 10yard lengths, limit lu yards; regular 35c value. Harvest Sale 25c SHEETING MUSLIN Full 81inch, seamless hi-ached Sheeting, smooth finish. Harvest Sale SOC UNBLEACHED SHEETING 24 yards wide, fine unbleached seamless Sheeting Muslin. Harvest Sale "75c PILLOW TUBING The most wanted widths are 40 and 42-in. Special for the Harvest Sale 50C and 530 INDIAN HEAD -Yard wide, for Blouses, Dresses and Aprons. Harvest Sale 45C PERCALES Yard wide Percales, in full line of Light or Dark Patterns. Priced special. Harvest Sale 2SC APRON G ING HA M S St andard Lancaster Apron Ginghams, in a full line of Checks and Colors. Harvest Sale 25C CHEVIOT SHIRTINGS 30-inch Everett Shirtings in a good line of styles. Harvest Sale 35c PERCALES Norwood yard wide best Percales, all colors and patterns. Harvest Sale 35c BLEACHED LINEN TOWELING 500 yards lS-inch bleached, red border, linen weft Crash. Harvest Sale 23e U X B L h A C II E D LI N E X TOWELING 1.000 yards. Linen Weft, heavy firm crash, blue border; limit 10 vards. Harvest Sale 23C SHEETS AND PILLOW CASES "2x90 Seamless D. and L. Sheet wide deep hem. Harvest Sale, Sl.SO 81x90 HOWARD SEAMLESS SHEET Strong firm Muslin. Harvest Sale S2.00 90x90 ELMDALE SEAMLESS SHEETS A very special bargain. Harvest Sale 81.65 PILLOW CASES D. and L. in the two best sizes, 42x36 and 45x36. Harvest Sale 45C an 50C CANTON FLANNEL 10 pieces Unbleached Canton, good heavy weight and fleece. Harvest Sale 30c
BLEACHED CANTON Good weight, clean fleece, full width, speci.il Harvest Sale 25C UNBLEACHED MUSLIN Remnants 1 to 10 yards, good clean, and firm Brown Muslin. Harvest Sale 20C TURKISH TOWELS 10 DOZEN Good weight and size, all white. Harvest Sale, 25C c for 81.35 GUEST TOWEL Just a limited quantity pood weight and size. Harvest Sale J.5C dozen for SI. 85 FANCY COLORED TURKISH TOWELS The shades Pink, Blue and Gold. A splendid value Harvest Sale 35c' 3 for 81. OO BED TICKING 36-inch Susquehanna Ticking, special for the Harvest Snle 75C TABLE FELT 5 4 -inch. extra heavv Table Felt. Harvest Sale SI. 50 WHITE DRILL 30. inch, six-oz. Drill. Special Harvest Sale 27C COTTON COMFORT BATTINGS KING BIRD lu-oz. rolls. Harvest Sale 22c BOONE -Full pound roll, clean and white. Harvest Sale 37c SNOWY OWL 'Mb. roll. size 72x90. one rc'l makes a Comfort. Harvest Sale Sl.OO SOMETHING NEW Wool Processed Batt, looks and feels like wool, soft and fluffy, opens up in one sheet, size 72xS4. Harvest Sale 75c FANCY DRESSER SCARFS The sizes are 17x50. lace trimmed. Very special Harvest Sale 79C, 1.50, S2.00 ROUND FANCY LINENS The sizes are 36. 45 and 54-Inch, lace trimmed. "Priced special Harvest Sale S1.50, S2.00. 83.50 TABLE DAMASK MERCERIZED DAMASK The widths are 64 and 72-inch. In a beautiful line of Patterns. Special for the Harvest Sale Sl.OO. S1.25. SI. 50 UNION DAMASKS These are woriderful values and very scarce, the widths are 66 and 72inch, all new designs. Harvest Sale S1.50 and S2.00
Dress Goods Dept.
VELVETEEN 22-Inch Velveteen in a complete line of shades Harvest Sale S1.50 COSTUME VELVET 36-inch Costume Velvet, the most wanted shades are Navy Blue, Brown, Taupe, Black. Harvest Sale S4.75 $8.00 40-INCH ALL SILK VELOUR For Suits and Coats, good range of colors. Harvest Sale SS.OO SILK POPLIN Yard wide Silk Popiir.s in twenty good light and dark shades; regular $1.19 value. Harvest Sale QSc SEMI-SILK PRINTED CREPE DE CHINE Yard wide, in a beautiful line of combinations for Blouses. Dresses. Etc., Etc. Harvest Sale SI. 50 PLAIN CHIFFON TAFFETA Yard wide All Silk. This cloth has a fine bright finish in everv wanted shade. Harvest Sale S2.50 CREPE DE CHINE A cloth with a good weight and finish, in al! light and dark shades for Blouses, Dresses and Undergarments. Harvest Sale S2.00 SATIN CHARM FUSE 40-inch. The most wanted shades are Brown, Plum, Taupe, Russian. Navy and Black. Harvest Sale SI. 25 GEORGETTE CREPE 40-inch. All Silk Georgette Crepe, in 20 good shades, including Ivory, Flesh and Pink. Harvest Sale S2.50 NOVELTY SILKS Large line of Novelty Silks in Plaids. Stripes and Checks, in all of the new combinations. Harvest Sale 82.50, $2.25, $2.00
1
THE STORE WITH ONLY ONE PRICE
