Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, TQTU P T T ~ Fo URGES SCIENTIFIC BLOCKADE PROGRAM ‘Navy and Finance Traditional Weapons ol England, Says Hirst und Sim pié Rem edy that Relieved Child sMild Laxative Compound | Corrects Stubborn Case of Constipation. An important duty parents dren’s bowels depends in that devolves on s the regulation of their chil- Health later life | large meas on early training and a child should be taught from infancy to regular habits, | = When from any cause the bowels be- | comes congested with stomach waste a mild laxative should be employed to open up the passage gently and carry off the congested mass. A most effec- tive remedy for this purpose the combination f imple ive herbs ¥nown as Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pep- sin. Mrs, W. D. Bulls of Reed, Okla- homa, used Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pep- sin for her baby Harley Buren Bulls and says “It did him more than anything we have His bowels are very about acting, but they act casily every time I give him Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pep- sin.” (Corresnonderce of *he Assoctated Press.) London, Jan Francis W. Hi editor the with \ssociated representative of the in ire st. of onomist, 1ked the Press war and the tremendous ex penditures it is piling upon the fight- Mr. Hirst the ithorities question ing nations is one of recognized and financial | the Political tracted ng one of rfare clash of on s his work on onomy of War having widespread attention as be- the first efforts to consider s somcthing more than arms and the gathering of BULLS. | oldiers. (‘ol. House was av of | this, and so when he came here re- twent¥- | cently to guage sentiment, he turned vears and the family standby | to Mr. Hirst quite as naturally to thousands of homes, Druggists | the political and military leaders. everywhere sell it for fifty cents a bot- Mr. Hirst is strongly in favor of tle. A trial bottle, free of charge, | gajentific blockade instead of & ‘“block can be obtained by writing to Dr. | head blockade,” as he calls it, and his W. B. Caldwell, 454 Washington St, | advocacy of the scientific blockade Monticello, 1N, has much to do with the plans the governmental and naval authorities are now considering. He was asked the meaning of a scientific blockade. Some Distinction. It means, he explained, a blockade based upon some intelligent distinction Government W ants Future to | Know How Indians Talk s i » | blockade spread over everyihing with- la boy good - . R HARLEY BUREN market for given stubborn the five in more than is as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin con- tains no opiate or narcotic drug and is a splendid remedy for children and 9ld people as well It has been on Inteiligent 'un' regard to whether it injures or helps the enemy, and which ,in the was of benefit to Germany | There are a large number of articles | like tea, coffec and fruit. Mr, Hi pointed out, which are not necessar of life ,and cannot contribute to an: { Jarge extent in sustaining a popula- i tion and the endurance of a nation. 1t is such articles that a scietific block- ade permits to be imported into an enemy country, for the reason thut when imported from foreign indebt- cdness of the enemy country But the “block-head blockade™ does just the reverse, in shutting out these articles which are not necessaries of life; it relieves Germany from gold export ,and actually stimulates her Gomestic production, which she can pay for, not in gold, but in fiat paper money. That is actually what has happened in Germany, he says, and it is one of the things which a scientific blockade will seek to stop Traditional Weapons. Mr. Hirst holds that the traditional weapons of England are the Navy and Finance, and not a.large land force. That was the view of Mr. Lloyd- George spring ,and later of Mr. McKenna and Mr. Montagu, and the view of the board of trade as ex- pressed by Mr. Runciman. Referring to this Mr. Hirst said “In all wars of the past out of which Great Britain has emerged with o i NN— o ureater I of have mainly o ana We ha { never attempted to raise a great con { tinental army and have never adopt ed any form of compulsion for mili- tary service abroad. In the Napol- onic wars it is quite true that the Duke of Wellington was in command of the British army in Spain and at Waterloo. But I don’t think he had | actually A@’ 4 —— S - ——————— TURTING THE INDIRN TONGUE * or gree sucec led power always 1 on financial PERPE more and more the latier manners, the white man enters into the life of the Indian loses his distinctive dress, | customs, etc. The picture shows | Mountain Chief. an Indian of the Blackfyet Nation, making phono- | graph records at the Smithsonian In- | stitution, Washington. In the efforts are being made 1o | perpetuate the records of the Amer. ican Indians the government is ma ing pictures, still moving, phonograph records and is Jating a vast mass of material Washington. As the civilization and and accumu- in of instantly Served Everlastingly Good Nowadays, in many homes where health is valued, the table beverage is INSTANT POSTUM Not alone because it is served so quickly, but more because it is a pleasant, healthful beverage. Made of wheat roasted with a bit of wholesome molasses, In- stant Postum is entirely free from the subtle, cumulative drug, caffeine, in tea and coffee—free from any harmful substance. stant Postum is entirely free from the ubtle, cumulative drug, caffeine, in tea and coffee—free from any harmful substance. More and more, people are finding out by person al experience that coffee is the frequent, though often unsuspected cause of nervousness, biliousness, heart flutter, insomnia and various other ills and discomfor ts. The alternative when coffee doesn’t agree is POSTUM. cconomic | 1l | case of"the old “block-head blockade" | How To Make the Quickest,Simplest Cough Remedy Much Better than the Ready- Made Kind and You Save $2. Fully Guaranteed ® 00/0,00,0,0:0,0,00,0,00,0,0.0.00 000000} 'his home-made cough syrup is now used in more homes than any other cough remedy. Its promptness, ease and cer- tainty in conquering distressing coughs, chest and throat colds, is really” remark- able. You can actually feel it take hold. A day’s use will usually overcome the ordinary cough—relieves even whooping cough quickly. Splendid, too, for bron- chitis, spasmodic croup, bronchial asthma, and winter coughs. . “Get from any druggist 215 ounces of Pinex (50 cents worth) pour’it in a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain granu- lated sugar syrup. This gives you—at a cost of only 54 cents—a full pint of better cough syrup than you could buy for $2.50. akes but a few minutes to prepare. Full directions with Pinex. stes good and never spoils. You will be pleasantly quickly it loosens dry, hoarse or tight coughs, and heals the inflamed mem- branes in a_painful cough. It also stops the formation of phlegm in the throat and bronchial tubes, thus ending the per- sistent loose cough. Pinex is a_most valuable concentrated compound of genuine Norw pine e tract, rich in guaiacol, which is so he: ing to the membranes. To avoid disappointment, be sure and ask your druggist for *214 ounces Pinex,” and ‘don’t accept anything else. A guarantee of absolute satisfaction, or money promptly refunded, goes with this preparation. © The Pinex Co., Ft. Wavne. Ind. ———————————————————— more than 30,000 to the peninsula cam- Waterloo only 25,000 Eritish troops were engaged. In this war parliament has already sanction- ed an army of four millions, although the navy is on a much larger scalo than in the past and playing at least as much part as it ever played in wars of the past - During Napoleonic Wars. “Similarly in to During the Napoleonic wars we gave a number of small loans and sub- sidies to foreign Thus we gave loans of subsidies to Prussia and many other small German states, to Russia, Austria, Spain, Portugal, Swe- den, Sicily and Denmark. Most of these loans were sent in cash, but considerable quantities of arms, pro- visions, clothing and supplies were despatched at various times to onr allies. The total amount of the sub. sidies given between 1793 and 1814-- and there is not a single year in which we did not subsidize one or more of our foreign allies how- ever, computed by Porter at only 46,000,000 pounds sterling, although the total cost of the war to Great Britain—I speak from memory—was something like 800,000,000 pounds sterling, T think T am within the facts in stating that, up to the present, we have contracted or promised to our allies at least ten times as much in the course of a war of 18 months we contributed in the 21 years of French wars. And it will be oh- the sum is much greater well as relatively. ill perhaps explain the critici hoth policy to the may 1 that a very able business man in the house of commons Mr. Holt, stated the other day that we would be more likely to bring the war to a successful termi ation with an army of three million than with an army of four million men. This is clearly the case if those ® ® 0,0,0,0,000,C, surprised how average 50,000 men in paign, and at on the regard finance powers. as the served that proportionately as These facts 11 the reasonabler of which ha expeditionary of the army. I LORIMER PUT ON TRIAL " FOR FAILURE OF BANK I'ormer United States Senator Wi liam Lorimer, who was unseated, is an interested but not a perturbed spectator of the fight in Chicago to put him behind the bars of the state penitentiary. He was placed on trial before Judge William I Dever of the Criminal court, charged with conspir- acy as president of the La Salle Street Trust and Savings bank, to wreck the bank and its subsidiaries. Three in- dictments returned against him, charging conspiracy to defraud by false pretenses, receiving deposits when the bank was insolvent and a confidence game resufting from al- leged misrepresentation of the hank assets, were consolidated hy stipula- tion. will be that Lori- | intc SONNYBOY ALL TOGGED UP TO GO TO A HOLIDAY PARTY UNNATURALLY CORRECT This small boy wears a dress suit of black velvet over a very smart shirt waist of white georgette crepe- The collar, cuffs and front have a fluted ruche ‘to distinguish the shirt waist from his middy blouse of every day. I'rom the top of his Dutch cut to the toe of his patent leather pumps, which take white silk socks, sonny is fault- lessly garbed for gala; da; military experts are right who hold with de Bloch's theory that it is war of exhaustion and attrition, and that decisive military victories of the Napoleonic type are improable. Another member of parliament, Mr. Godfrey Collins, who has studied mil- itary finance very closely, predicted last week that as expenditures would rise in the course of a couple of months to 6,000,000 pounds streling, which would be at the rate of 2,190,- 000,000 pounds sterling ($10,950,000,- 000) a year. German Finante Crumbling. Meantime German finance crumbling. 1 judge that their expen- ditures are hetween 4,000,000 pounds 5,000,000 pounds a day, and the 1al economy of rmany is suf- fering more and more from issues of indigestible paper curren The expenditures and the depreciation of German paper would be much heavier but for the fact that the whole coun- try is on a war diet, and a great part ot the cost of the war is being paid by privation. To judge from the Ger- man newspapers‘ own account of con- ditions, discontent is steadily grow- ing, and in my opinion the main thing that maintains the military party in power is the fear of invasion and of dismemberment. If the wan goes on much longer I do not see how the German empire will be able to pay in- terest on its war debt. For the in- terest on debt, and the war pensions after the war, are likely to be as great or greater than the whole im- perial revenue before the war.” Mr. Hirst was asked what was come of these stupendous daily penditures—six millions sterling a day in England and five millions a day in Germany; could they go on? He said, however, there were sorne things he could not discuss and this was one of them. But he felt that Linonine A Great Home Remedy to ex- for Coughs and Colds Linonine brings relief, even in the most stubborn cases, and the world of medicine knows no surer curative agent for bron- chial afflictions than Linonine. When the throat is parched and the lungs sore with severe colds the flaxseed oil in Linonine promptly relieves this condi- tion, and the other ingredients set to work to remove the in- flammation from membrane and tissue. AND IT DOESN'T MATTER WHAT FORM OF COLD YOU HAVE, LINONINE IS WHAT YOU WANT. Children Cry N NANNNNN ST \ ture of Ch to_deceive you in this. pium, stroys assimilates the Food, givin The Kind You Hav Bears the d there are financial and economic fac- | to in the war that are as great or greater than military campaigns, ex- pedition and armies—factors which are:steadily increasing an importance and which cannot be left out of ac- | count by those enthusiasts who would | rush blindly ahead and who talk light- | ly of crushing nations and altering | all the old houndaries of Kurope. | Some of these factors and their in- evitable tendencies he had summed up in his Political Economy of War. as follows: Left to Tmagination. be the condition of through | “What will Europe, exhaustion, states have used up and borrowed all that rowed, may be left to the imagination of those who can see further than the writer through the gathering gloom. How commerce will be fin- anced, how manufactures will be re- vived, how banking will be carried on, how public bankrupteles on an | unheard of scale are to be avoided these are questions which defy e perience and baffle even the wisest heads.” And he adds: “If force leads nowhere and offers no remedy, then reason must be sum- moned to save Western Europe from social and economical ruin. Per- chance the New World may recall sanity to the Old.” Col. House had ample opportunity in his recent visit to note and de- velop this last sentence. TEETHING OF BABY SHOULD BE WATCHED) when peace comes the continental all their credit can be bor- | after Mothers Should Never Give Infant Patent Medicines Wash., Feb. 22—The baby usually cut his first teeth when he is 6 to 8 months old, and by the end of the first vear has 6 teeth The | should have 12 teeth at 18 months of age; 16 when he is two years old, and before the end of the third year the entire set of twenty “milk” teeth | The process of teething in a healthy baby cannot properly be held respon- sible for the illness commonly at- tributed to it. The first half-dozen teeth rarely give the baby pain, but as the double teeth appear there is occasionally at the same time a little disturbance, such as loss of ap- petite, and possibly evidence of slight indigestion, which may last for a few days But if the disturbance is more serious than this, other reason for it should be sought Mistakes in Feeding. through the | during the sec- ordinary, any some Teething takes place weaning period and ond year, when mistakes in feeding are so often made which upset the | baby's digestion, even if they do not make him seriously ill. On this ac- | count it is often unjustly blamed for making the baby sick, when the real reason lies in the fact that he was overfed or improperly fed perhaps that the weather was very hot. It must be remembered that exces- | sive heat aggravates any ill the baby may have, and is quite sufficient in it self to make the baby sick. It is nec- | essary in summer, therefore, both on account of the heat and because of the disturbances connected with wean- ing and teething, to take great care of the baby in all respects, and espe- cially to feed him with great caution Directions for feeding the baby are | given in a pamphlet called “Infant Care” which will be sent free to an one who asks for it, apply to the Chic of the Children’s Bureau, U. S. De- s The Kind You Have Always Boug Counterfeits, Imi ¢ Just-as-good ’’ are but experiments, health of Children—Experience ag: What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pares oric, Drops and Soothing Sj orphine nor other Narcotic substance. orms and allays Feverishness. thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colie, all Teething Trou= bles and Diarrheea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, & (4 For Over 30 Yea THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY. | quickest, izes the acids gases and for Fletcher’s ORIA N\ ht has borne the signa= H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision for over 30 years. Allow no one tions and and endanger the ainst Experiment. It contains neither It de= For more thamn yrups. healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Pana,cen,—’.['fie Mother’s Friend. e Always Bough Signature of . rs when he is well again, and eating full rations. The mother should never allow one to persuade her to give the patent medicines, sgen: as. sooth syrups to relieve the paim of teethil 1f they do relieve it they probi contain opium in some form, which much worse for the baby than suffering. It is a safe rule nevef give medicine of any sort to a save that which is ordered by a dog Care of the First Teeth. From the time when the dgu teeth make their appearance throi out life the teeth should have @i care. For the baby a very soft bi is necessary and the utmost should be taken not to injure im way the delicate tissues of the ma | when brushing the tiny teeth the baby has several teeth, the mo should see to it that no particl solid food are left between them & the baby has eaten. If the first teeth is well taken care of, the seg set will be healthier, and in addif the child will have been taught a gi habit that will last all his life- There is considerable variatig the time that the teeth first apj but if the baby has no teeth by time he is one year old, he she have medical attention to see if disease is causing this unusual @ in the development of the teeth, whether it is due to improper di MING OUT?_ HAIR CO Dandruff causes a feverish i tion of the scalp, the hair roots sh loosen and then the hair comes fast. To stop falling hair at o and rid the scalp of every partiel dandruff, get a 25-cent bottle Danderine at any drug store, poul little in your hand and rub it the scalp. After a few applicati the hair stops coming out and can’t find any dandruff. INDIGESTION AND STOMACH MISERY JUST VANISH moment_ “Pape's . DA reaches the stomach all distress goes. The Instantly gases, stops any heartburn, dyspepsia. acidity, “Really does” put order—'really does” overcomes inf ion, dyspepsia, gas, hearthi sourness in five minutes—t that—makes Pape’s Diapep the largest selling stomach regulaj in the world. If what you eat fi ments into stubborn lumps, you bel gas and eructate sour, undigested o and acid; head is dizzy and ach breath foul; tongue coated; your sides filled with bile and indigestl waste, remember the moment “Pap Diapepsin” comes in contact with stomach all such distress vanishi It's truly astonishing—almost velous, and the joy is its harm ness A large fifty-cent case of Pap| Diapepsin will give you a hundred & Jars' worth of satisfaction or ¥i druggist hands you your money b It's worth its weight in gold to ind women who can't get their sto regulated. It belongs in ¥o bad stomach and just achs | home-—should always be kept han | in case of a sick, sour, upset stom night. It’ surest and most harml tomach regulator in the world. Pape's Diapepsin instantly neut! in the stomach, sto food fermentation or souring, absol arts the digestion. T relief is quick, sure, wonderful—sto! ach sufferers have a pleasant surpi awaiting them. during the day or Notice. To Creditors and Noteholders: The First National Bank of Plai Plainville in the Si The defens lhe defen ville, located at partment of Labor, Washington, D. May Not Gain Weight- The baby may not gain in weight | during the cutting of his various double teeth, but it is not a serious | matter to ve the weight remain sta- tionery for a short time. The baby will quickly regain the lost ground ' “There’s a Reason” Grocers everywhere sell Postum. L.td., Battle Creek, Mich.,for 5-cup sample of Instant Postum. of Connecticut, is closing up affairs. All stockholders and oth reditors of said association are the: fore hereby notified to present th notes or other claims against the sociation for payment A A imer president of the bank knew nothing of any improper conduct of the bank's affairs, and so cannot be guilty of conspiring to bring about a situation that lost their savings to hundreds of depositors. On the other hand the state is bulwarked with neasly a hundred witnesses. Send two-cent stamp to Postum Cereal Co., MacLEOD, Cashis All druggists—25c, 50c, $1.