Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 108, 17 March 1920 — Page 9

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGKAM, WEDNESDAY, MAK. 17, lyzo.

rN0 FOREIGN TRAVEL

DURING INQUIRY WASHINGTON, March 17. A vir

tual emnargo on foreign travel by American citizen was- in effect Tuesday with the expiration of 30-day period during which Under Secretary Polk acted as secretary of state, ad interim. No passports were issued at the department Monday and while, no official announcement was made as to the future," it was indicated that none would be issued until the senate had acted en the nomination of Bainbridge Colby to be secretary of state. Administration officials held that the department technically was without a head and that as passports must be signed by tho secretary or acting secretary none could be issued. 600 t0 800 Daily. . Prom 00 to 800 passports have been Issued daily during the past few weeks officials said, about 60 percent of them to persons going to Europe and 20 percent to travelers to Cuba. Officials of the administration did not agree with members nf tho cx,o

foreign relations committee that unoer the Overman act President Wilson had authority to designate some government official as acting head of the state department. They said the Overman act "ould not be made to ap-

iu niia case. t Tho senate committee had expected to continue its hearings on Mr. Colby's nomination today, but the Inability of witnesses to come to Washington caused postponement of the committee session.

Portugal is Quit Except For

Strikes, Declares Correspondent

Centerville Friends to Have All-Day Meeting a CENTERVILLE, Ind., March 17. a11 day meetlnS with a picnic dinner at the noon hour will be held next Saturday at the Friends' church. The following program will be given in connection with the Forward Movement: Morning Session, 10:30 a. m. Piano solo. Pearl Redding: devotional, Marie Cassell; recitation, Mary Frances Fort; brief history of our church, Andrew Tremps; "The Spiritual Resources", William Dynes; vocal duet, Grace Clark and Harry Blake; "The Varieties of the Opening Exercise in the liible Schoo. Callie Tremps; "How (o Interest Young Friends in tho Church", Esther Weis;Of; piano ko!o, Paul Early; Home Missions, Rosa Chamberlain; recitalion. Ruby Sparker; closing song; closing prayer. Ethel Tremps. Afternoon Session, 1:30 p. m. Devotional; P.ut-iness session; piano dut. Esther and Catherine George; "Tlio Evil of the Tobacco Habit", Alma Pom!: a playlet. "The Juniors"; "The MiHsinnaries, Our Need of Them, Their Ned of Us", Nora 10. Dynes; "A liit or IVjice", Laura E. Fort; vocal duet, Anna Carlson and Carrie FUyd; "The Value of Stewardship" Ruth Tremps: "All For the Juniors". Iva Lmginfelter: recitation. Ivan Fort; "Friends' Part in Reconstruction

Work". Floyd Tremps; reading. Esther Wciser; "Give the Flowers to the Living", Martha Green; "Why Every Member Should Attend Monthly Meeting". Ernest Tremps; closing song and benediction. 'Each of the-talkg is limited to five minutes. The general public is given a cordial invitation to attend.

(By Associated Press) LISBON March 17. Peace reigns in this city, nor has the quiet that prevails been disturbed for a long time. Reports relative to a serious state of affaira here, which have been current in the outside world for the last fortnight had their origin in rumors wbich could not be contradicted because of the strike of postal and telegraph service employes which cut off communication with other countries. Strikes are common throughout Portugal and affect large numbers of

working men including government employes, electricians, metal workers, and men employed ia the building trades but the movement has hitherto been confined to a silent protest against the enormous rise in the cost of living. Workers have found it impossible to exist on the wages they have been receiving. Inquiry in quarters thoroughly Informed as to the conditions and representing diverse viewpoints has brought a general response that the

working people of Portugal are not Infected with Bolshevist tendencies, that they do not desire a revolution and claim only so much as will permit them to live reasonably well. Taxes Cause Discontent. Financial conditions, however, mitigate against any radical betterment in the situation at present. The constant decline in exchange rates results in prices of commodities mounting higher every day. Levying of higher taxes has Increased discontent but these taxes made necessary by augmented national expenditures have not caused violent outbreaks of any kind. As the Associated Press correspond ent on his way to Lisbon traversed the country districts outlsde of the city he saw peasants working in the fields with their accustomed serenity, unaffected by any rumors which might bo reaching them. Streets are well lighted here, theatres and storea are open and street cars and taxicabs are running. Although railroad traffic Is somewhat restricted, trains are running on

an lines, ftiucn inconvenience has been

There's a lot of difference between 9 sunny smile and a silly one.

NO REASON FOR IT

When Richmond Citizens Show a Way. There can be no reason why any reader of this who suffers the tortures

of an aching back, the annoyance of

urinary disorders, the pains and

dangers or Kidney ills will fail to

heed the words of a neighbor who has found relier. Read what a Richmond citizen says: Mrs. Catherine Temme. 207 South Eighth Street, says: "Kidney complaint kept me miserable for a long time. I had a dull ache in my back and so much soreness, I couldn't rest my back against a chair. I tired easily and couldn't walk more than a block before I gave out. My sight blurred and I had dizzy spells. A friend advised me to use Doan's Kidney Pills and- they were just what I needed. I improved right away and the achins and soreness in my back was relieved. Doan's are just wonder-

iuj.

Price 60c. at all dealers. Don't

simply ask for a kidney remedy get

ixan s Kidney Pills the same that

Mrs. Temme had. Foster-Miiburn Co.,

Mfgrs., Huffalo, N. Y. Advertisement

Flaming, Itchin

Skin

D

seases

Cause untold suffering thai could be avoided.

It is now pretty generally conceded that a great majority of

the suffering that the human !

family undergoes comes through ignorance and hence could be avoided. This sounds like a broad statement, and yet it is only too true. So many people are drag-g-jnj? through life the victim of some chronic ailment that is either misunderstood or mistreated, when intelligent, ration

al treatment would if store them

their normal healthy condi-

lon.

upon the condition of your blood. Hence when you are afflicted with what is commonly called a skin disease, you may be sure that the real trouble is with your blood, and must be treated through the blood, if you expect real rational relief.

ft

S. S. is the most satisfactory remedy for diseases of the skin because it is the most thorough blood remedy ever discovered. It searches out and removes all impurities from the blood. ,

Diseases of the skin come from beneath the surface, hence they can be reached only by remedies that penetrate down to their very source.

And right here lies the secret of so much continued suffering from so-called skin diseases. Simply because the disorder is manifested by irritation, itching and often a breaking out and inflammation of the surface of the skin, the patient is misled into believing that the entire trouble is confined to this local disorder. Hence the mistake is made of believing that the proper treatment is the application of local remedies to the affected parts. Very often the itching and irri

tation are so severe that you feel disposed to try almost anything for relief, and that is why you rely upon local treatment of salves, ointments, washes and uch remedies. y But these remedies- cannot possibly have any real curative effect upon the trouble, because your disease comes from far below the surface.- The. condition of your skin depends entirely

Sir. Joe Katorkin, a leading furniture dealer of San Antonio, Texas, writes: "After six weeks

of continued use of S. S. S., and

bathing the affected parts as

directed by you, I wish to advise that I am wholly relieved of the miserable disease which has afflicted me for more than twelve years. I can highly recommend S. S. S. to anyone, and I wish to thank you for the personal advice given me in mv case, which

was positively beneficial." If you are afflicted with eczema, tetter, erysipelas, ringworms, pimples, acne, scaly

eruptions, boils, irritations of the skin, or other similar dis

orders, you need not expect any

real relief, from local apphca

tions, and the sooner you disard

their use, the sooner you will be on the road to recovery, provid

ed you will rely upon the use of

s. s. s. This fine old blood remedy

goes direct to the seat of the trouble, and by cleansing the blood of all impurities and disease germs, it keeps the skin free from infection, and restores it to its normal, healthy condition. For free expert medical advice regarding your own case, write fully to Chief Medical Adviser, 177-SwiftTjaboratory;vAt lanta, Ga. Advertisement.

caused by the stoppage of telephone, telegraph and mall service and no papers from abroad are reaching Lisbon but the citizens generally are not greatly, affected by these conditions. Reports from Oporto and other parts of the country indicate that, apart from numerous strikes, everything is quiet. Same as Other Countries "What is going on in Portugal today is merely a repetition of what is happening in other countries of the world which suffered from the upheav

al of the war," sair Premier Antonio Maria Bautista today, who stated he wished to make a statement to counteract the absolutely erroneous injures-

sion which has spread over the world recently through the currency of false

rumors. "No one can now foresee where the trail will end, but Bolshevism has nothing to do with affairs in Portugal. There is no danger or real Bolshevism here,, the example "of Russia being a warning to the Portugese if they ever thought of entertaining such notions. It is certain, however, that there is a very negligible element harboring Bolshevik ideas but they are among the lowest elements in the country. Everyone knows that Portugal suffered very much in the war and gained nothing when the uruggle was finished. Her heavy expenses during

tho years of fighting were almost overI overwhelming and many of these ex

penses will , continue for sometime. Revenues have decreased and our

economic situation is very bad, imports from our colonies - having fallen off to an .enormous extent owing to a lack of transportation. Thus the country suffers from lack of materials. "Regarding the labor situation, workers have undoubtedly made many demands but the increases of wages granted them have not been in proportion to the augmentation in the cost of vjjving, which has suddenly scared upward with the fall in ex change rates. There is no thought of revolution and complete order has been maintained without difficulty and without the use of force." The premier delayed a conference with his ministers in order to receive the correspondent When the latter

entered the room, Senbqr Bautista

f TGJtS I

onerous and it is necessary for him to hold daily conferences with heads of various departments and state and provincial officers, these often lasting far into the night. Discussion of the question-of the stability of the present cabinet in many quarters here has developed the impression that the people generally are of the opinion that Premier Bautista is the best man to deal with the situation. Even some of the reactionary

monarchists have given him support during the recent past. British Ships Salvage Millions in Treasure

Rub it in, pain goct ouL Bachache and pains from the effects of the Flu.

DR. JONES' LINIMENT

By Associated Press) DOXDON March 7. Sunken treasure worth $50,000,000 has been raised

was seated with amumber of his.Cabi-! sInce the war began arund the British net members and looked as if he had ' Isles- Tne Restorer and the Reliant,

just recovered from a severe illness,

Under present circumstances with many government employes striking his duties have been rendered very

two salving vessels that were bought

by a British concern from the Amer lean navy have a new device, an Oxy-

acetylene flame which is worked under

water for cutting holes In the sides of submerged vessels. Each ship has twenty-five electric pumps capable of pumping 1.000,000 gallons of water an hour and carries two divers, search-lights, line throwing guns, electric welding plants, rockdrills and other accessories. Each diver is equipped with a telephone. The Restorer last year recovered 1.000.000 In gold from the Laurentic off Lough Swilly and both vessels are now operating off Xew Haven on the channel coast.

DARTMOUTH TO PLAY FRISCO (By Associated Press) SAN . FRANCISCO, March 17. Terms for a football game between Dartmouth and the San Francisco Olympic club to be played here next New Year's day have been accepted by H. A. Weinberger graduate manager of Dartmouth, it was announced here Tuesday.

, J f C r " lift

PERU AND BOLIVIA ftU-

SQUABBLE RAISES TROOP ; ' (By Asaold PeT f", LIMA,' March' 15.Th;:CpBWvian legation at LaPaz, . the 4 Bolivian capital, was attacked last night by a mob of a thousand men, according to official advicea received this afternoon by the Peruvian foreign office. The Peruvian consulate and private residences of Peruvians were also attacked, the dispatches declare. - "

EM

5EEDD

Montr back without em boa If HUNT S S.lra falls ia t(M treatment of ITCH, KCZKMA. R I NO WORM. TKTTS or ether Itching ekiadimnei. Try Ji cent bos at our risk. .

D. oV S. Drug Co., Cor. 9th and Main

When Children are Sickly 1 1 fe. l' l - , t. . ...... aw.

are nsupai, reverisu, ury out in tneir Bleep, Take cola easily, Have Headaches, Stomach or Bowel trouble, Try MOTHER GRAV'S SWEET POWDERS

FOR CHILDREN

They are pleasant to take and a certain relief. They act on the Stomach, Liver and Bowels and tend to correct intestinal disorders, 10,000 testimonials from mothers and friends of little ones telling of reliet No mother should be without a box of Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for use when needed. Atk toay. At Druggists. The need of them often comes at inconvenient hours. , Used by Mothers for over thirty year. A ( Do Not Accept Any Substitute for MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POWDERS.

TBAUE MASK

The CANDY Cathartic

aak tawaaaW

WJMMI

Tamily sayu

Tine

A United States Army MAN

THERE is a Canal at Panama, linking two great oceans and carrying the commerce of the world. For a hundred years and more men dreamed of that Canal. De Lessens had the dream and failed, and the bones of men and wreck of machines remained to mark his failure. It seemed a task aknost impossible; yet that task was done. It was done by United States Vrmy men. In Cuba and Porto Rico yellow fever once claimed victims by thousands. Yellow fever is no longer a menace in those islands.

A great physician and his aids helped the people of those islands to conquer it forever.

Where the U. S. Army serves American troops are serving in Panama, Hawaii, the Philippines, Alaska, China, Germany, Siberia and here in the U. S. A. The recruiting Sergeant will gladly give you all the details. Like every one else in the Army from General to Buck Private, you're under orders and if your outfit moves and you're needed elsewhere, your duly is to go.

And they, too, were United States Army men. In the Philippines a new civilization is arising; and its foundations are laid upon the courage and devotion of United States Army men. You think of the Army as an instrument of war; and well you may; for the record of its men in France and Flanders will live as long as history is written. But the Army has tasks of peace no less heroictasks that mean a safer, and a better world. It is for those tasks that the Army asks three years of the lives of America's best young men. To those men the Army promises sturdy health an asset for their business success in all the years to come.

It offers them opportunity for training in a useful

trade. It gives them good food, good clothes and good care. It trains them to responsibility, it developes character and mind. It promises them travel, and the knowledge of other lands, that will make them citizens of the world. The United States Army seeks no inferior applicants. It wants men of whom it can be proud, during their enlistment, and in all the years to come. Men who will look back twenty, thirty, forty years from now and say : "These years were the most valuable of all my years of training. "They gave me health, and skill, and the capacity for managing men. They gave me a chance to share in giant tasks. "I am proud of the record of those years, and of what they have meant in my success. "Proud that I, too, for a little while, was a United States Army man."

The Nearest U. S: Army Recruiting Stations are: U.S. A rmy Recruiting Station

Cor. 6th and Main Streets

ALSO SUB-STATIONS AT CAMBRIDGE CITY, LIBERTY, LYNN, HAGERSTOWN A personal interview involves no obligation

Richmond

THE 14 ARMS OF THE SERVICE The Recruiting Sergeant can give you the information that will help you decide which branch fits you best. In all of them you will get the fine training as a soldier that the United States offers all its men in many branches you can get highly specialized training. INFANTRY The men who have made the name of "doughboy" feared and respected throughout the world welcome you to the comradeship. Fine fellow good fan and good training in any school at the post yon go 'o. CAVALRY When the horses are champing at the bit and the "yellow legs" mount up and the troop rides forth, there is a thrill that no old cavalryman can ever forget. A horse of your own a good outdoor life and training for future success. FIELD ARTILLERY "Action Front" cornea the command then watch the boys with the red hat cord snap into it. A happy outfit with the dash of mounted service added to interesting work that calls for head and hand. Motors if you wish. CORPS OF ENGINEERS Army engineering is known the world over for its excellence and an enlistment in the engineers cfen be the start of a young man's training in the various branches of engineering and in the mechanical and building trades. COAST ARTILLERY Living on the sea coasts, guarding big cities with big guns, getting time for study and a wide and good technical training, the C A. C man is preparing for a useful life and good pay and is having a good time while he's learning. The C A. C also mans the mobile big gun regiments throughout the country. AIR SERVICECnduding BALLOON CORPS) The man who gets the early edge in experience with aeroplanes and balloons has a chance to cash in big on his army training. For flying is only in its infancy and it's going to be a profitable business for men with the right experience. ORDNANCE DEPT-Theordnancsissppealing to the studious young American. To wide opportunities for stndy, it adds a baainass as wall as a technical training. SIGNAL CORPS Whether It's laying s wire from a reel-cart at a gallop or installing wireless station that will flash its message half around the world, the Signal Corps is then, and a man who learns radio telegraph and telephone work in the Signal Corps is always valuable. MEDICAL DEPT. Good experience, good pay. and training in all branches of hospital work. Excellent opportunity for future success. The Veterinary Corps teaches the cars of horses as well as meat and milk inspection. TANK CORPS The man who knows gas motors and tractors or who wants to know them Is invited to join the Tanks. Radio, macbina gun and ordnance work are all parts of the Tank Corps work. QUARTERMASTER CORPS The Corps that feeds and clothes the Army offers a valuable training for future business. Interesting work for the man who likes horses in the Remount Service. CONSTRUCTION DIVISION Practical work in the many trade is part of the every day Ufa of the Construction Division. Many opportunities to learn the trades of highly paid, specialists. CHEMICAL WARFARE SERVICE-For a man with a little knowledge of chemistry or for any ambitious young man who would like to get that knowledge, there is Interesting work and rapid . advancement in the C W. S. MOTOR TRANSPORT CORPS A thorough practical training in motors and their accessories, and in driving as well, is given in the wall-equipped schools of the Motor Transport Corps.

U N.1XEJ STATES ARMY