New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 15, 1916, Page 19

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, NEW BRITAIN MAN SAYS EE FEELS BETTER TODAY THAN HE HAS FOR A GREAT MANY YEARS CHEAP TOURS IN EUROPE AT END SPECIAL SALE ON 'VERCOATS | $14 and $15 Less Than Half Their Value 4 Travel in Central Empires to Cost As Much As in.U. 8. p Vienna, Dec. 15.- throug Cheap tours are considered qualified rope over for ever by men on the Pres which to speak subject Associated in an The doubled correspondent dollar days a and trebled in value by crossing a border a sidered The increase cost of labor, taxation due to the war, the wear means of travel, neglect | re con- gone. in the and tear on all angmented by the which the war brought about, and the great and general economic loss and waste the Central incident to present times ANOTHER BIG BARGAIN Uncalled for Suits $10 | Buy Now. M” have removed Europe from Be list of one could . spend a few weeks In great comfort pleces where d still save the price of a first class pteamer ticket. Travel after the war ill be as expensive in he United States, if some helleve. At the ag an empty room in a Vienna hotel Burope as in not more so, present time such a thing They Will Not Last Long URRAY | 397 MAIN STREET, New Britain, Conn. has ceamed to be. Nowadays a room worth having in a Vienna hote! can be obtainéd only by getting name on the waiting list, and even this is imposgible if the would-be pa- tron i» unknown to the management. Visitors still the that Vienna hotels are run on one's {¢ under impression the old. basis usually spend hours after their arrival trying to find a room and then end up by sleeping in some hotel corridor on & cot at which formerly would give good room. Thore unjucky enough o reach Vienna with a night train | may spend their first night in the station, At one of the best Vienna | hotels the price for a suite of two rooms and bath went up by 28 crowns a few days ago, this increase | being incident to a genoral rise which ndded from two to five crowns to evén the plainest rooms, In Buda- pest conditfons are pomsibly a trifle worse, HEven Sofla is meeing a rise n prices in hotel accommodation fvhich 1y unprecedented in the Bal- ne, and Constantinople, boasting of ut two flrst-ciass, and three second- lags hotels, has become altogether mpossible for the ordinary traveler. The cause for this is the same pyerywhere. The war prevents peo- le! from going to the wintering Plages In the south, and amusement | inciuding the selection of a governor, a therefore sought In the large | both parties have decisive planks, and :itler. Refugeos from districts in the | | shall feo hesitation making jar, zones, and the many officers on | my appeal. eave of absence or convalescense, not GANEER,—SG.M_TOLL MR. FRED W. HOLLEY. “Well,” ®aid the Herbal Lax-a-Tone man at the hieonomy New Eng- land Drug Co., “I see where Lax-a-Tone is fast gaining in popularity right here in New Britain. It is home testimonials that count—people you can go and see and ask whether I tell the truth or not. I am today publish- ing the signed statement from Mr. Holley, the well-known painter, residing at 194 Tremont street, this cit He say: “1 was very agreeably surprised at the prompt action of Herbal Lax-a- Tone. As my many friends know that I am a Marine Painter and have worked at my trade for forty-five years and have handled the most dead- ly paints, such as Verdigrus Copper paint, zinc and white lead, I have had my system so saturated with these poisons that I have had painter’s colic three times. T have suffered terribly from constipation, which resulted in piles for several years. From the first dose of Lax-a-Tone I felt better and have continued to improve and today I feel better than I have for many vears, and I can recommend Lax-a-Tone to anyone.” “The above statement,” said Mr. Martin, the Lax-a-Tone man, to show the wonderful effects of Herbal Lax-a-Tone. It will drive out poi- sons from the system, relieve constipation, sour acid stomach, gas bloat, will purify the blood and tone up the nerves. The Lax-a-Tone man is at the Economy New England Drug Co., 365 Main St., where he is introducing this wonderful remedy to the New Brit- ain public. a price them a Open Evenings SWISS DOLLAR DWINDLES. Geneva, 15.—"Tt absurdity,” in francs eighteen centimes, while Swiss [ of gold and lending belligerent nations, surrounded fighting and has contracted a debt, since war, of 700,000,000 francs, but its | credit is increasing the war pro- The Swiss government in- shortly to raise another loan 100,000,000 francs for mobilization other millions to the Switzerland 1§ the groups consisted of cases which both of the parents had died from cancer; and in another of the | : groups, a parent, and a brother or a | is a verit financial sister of the policy-holder had died {says the De ! from that disease. It might be exX-| ,onting on the low price pected, therefore, that if cancer were | | hereaitary it wou be shown | | | goes Switeerlandt Dee money is at a great premium in Paris, able Tribune by nations In Paris, e London and New York. for 100 worth 114 to 118 francs today. icans living in Switzerland are losing | | is | | by the exchange The -rn'.num“ Genois example, a franc Swiss note e Amer- of the dol- o : gresses lar in Switzerland now five com- | | is | | which rates. tends = worth francs . fourteen clearly in the family records of these persons, but this has not appeared. “Men and women who are in ar iety of mind on account of the pearance of cancer in their ancer or immediate family, may dismis: such anxieties, there no sti tical evidence at the present time that the dise of cancer transmitted | by inheritance in mankind.” - —_ centimes, | 1wdds that the situation is extraordin- five | ary because, where: is full the and vation better than congress i normal is do it for us. “On the home rule proposition, even i price America able to where: tagion. Twenty thousand applications for insurance were reviewed and it as found that in 488 cases one only of the parents of the-applicant was | stated to have died from cancer, and | ltn have died of that di There 1 were 122 times as many c¢: es in which | purposes, ap- as is no in “ase se is o mention innumerable government genty and purchasers, =also make oavy demands on transient llving yuarto | be a stronger test Vienna hag opened two large hotels | victims in United States Number | husband and wife.” since the outbreak of the war, and s g i As to heredity, Mr. about to open a still larger one, In 80,000 Annually, But Is | «M one parent had died of cancer as of those in which *both parents had died = = Savings Bank of New Britain 178 MAIN STREET. | of that disease. than the of Hunter first consisted of said: Disease investigation udapest a high class hotel was on he verge of golng Into bankruptcy pWing to lack of business, when the ar started. It i{» now running full blast and making money. Taxicab sine may also be men- tloned. Though most of them run on ‘“mechanical” tires of little or no shock-absorbing quelitles and have ot been renovated internally since August, 1914, their drivers want just four times what they charged before the"war. Higher cost of fuel and liv- Ing ls the answer. The same factors caused o slight Increase in Vienna | sireet carfaros recently. BAWATIANS SEEK SUFFRAGE Neither Contagious Nor Hereditary. New York, P study Dec. of original 15.—Two insurance statistic: vea indicate cancer is neither hereditary nor contagious, according 1o to the Association Presidents. here today President Arthur Hunter of the tuarial Society of America. After referring to the annual toll of thousand deaths from a paper Life by Ac- presented of Insurance eighty in the United States, Mr. Hunter said: cancer “No sooner do we become interest- prevalence of a dis- than we begin to it contagious or questions must be in the minds of hundreds of thousands wide cancer, ed the case in like is wonder whether hereditary Such Representatives in Congress Will Ask | of relatives of persons who have died from this dise: » and of others who are suffering from it “There seems little to support the view that cancer is the result of con- for Right to Elect Own Governor— Homo Rule, Their Cry. Honoluly, Dec, 18.—A bill seeking | to Zive the veters ef Hawall the right to elect the governor of the territory will be introduced in consress by Del- egate Kalaniannole, nccording to g statement jvsued by him Under the present laws, the gover- nor is appointed by the president, and lhg people of the territory have nroth- ing to say as to who their chief ex- ecutive may he. Mr. Kalaniananaole said: “In the vongiess | am zolng to work hard along the Mnes > home rale. One of the #Arst bills which F shall introdnee, »nd for which ¥ shal agk & speedy hearing before the ecom- mittee on territories, is a bill wi will give to the elestorate of Hawall fhe right to choese Its governor. With | the: trend of opinlon In congress towards home rule, I am hopeful that bill of this nature will he success- ; Bhou!d it be, it will be o prelim- inery step toward statehood, "Whenever any matter comes up in } oongress concerning Hawall, whether It deals with the subject of disposition ok tho public lands, with the selection of governor, or oven with prohibition, I shall strenuously insist, both before the committee and on the floor of the houge, that In motters of this nature the power of control should be vested in tho people of the territory. | & #We do not here want a commis- Mon form of government. We do not nére went matters in which we are vitally interested left solely subject to | B ontrol by congress. We have plenty f questions of vital {nterest to us, ¥ e are able to work out our own s next HAHD MADE EASTERN ! cases of persons insured in both | cancer prior to date of application for of | the insured, the c | given in 234 c from cancer; the cause of death was | stated in 184 of these as ‘old s the | average age at death of which was l In of the andparents the cause of death was not known, but | the age was en, the average being I 62; in 155 o neither the age nor the cause of death w known. Tt is | reasonable to conclude that if only two died of cancer oul of 234 parents of wmersons who died of ncer, that disease is not hereditary. The possibility of heredity in can- cer has generally been studied by ex- | periments on anima In the case of | human beings there has been no pre- | vious attempt, so {3 s T am aware, | to investigate the problem in fam- | jlies where there has evidently heer | cancer strain, if such a thing e 1Tn the present investigation, one com- | panies, parents having died of i insurance. grandparents of of death was »s of which two were se h s Get at the Real Cause—Take Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets That's what thousands of stomach sufferers are doing now. Instead of taking tonics, or trying to patch up a poor digestion, they are attacking the real cause of the ailment—clogged liver and disordered bowels. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets arouse the liver in_a soothing, healing way. When the liver and bowels are per= forming their natural functions, away goes indigestion and stomach troubles. If you have a bad taste in your mouth, tongue coated, appetite poor, lazy, don't-care feeling, no ambition or encrgy, troubled with undigested foods, you should take Olive Tablets, the sub- stitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil. You will know them by their olive color. They do the work without riping, cramps Or pain. . = Aki one 0{-’ two at bedtime for quick relief, so you can eat what you 1'\k‘c. | At 10c and 25¢ per box. All druggist DON'T FORGET YOURSELF Buy yourself a new Hat for shovring the New Winter Hais at VERY LOW PRICES. Christmas. We are Our Stock is alive with snggestions for Christmas. Far Scarfs, Moffs and Sefs. Ampmn Crrss wwel Seands, ery Manieore Sets, Toilet Seis, in a large variety Tovety Biblom Cost Hingers, Gpara Bags, Pin Cashiens;, ¢, Headymarters 223 Main SL Mew Britain Established 1862 The Banx Of and For the Depositors. Assets December 1, 1916 .. g $9,144,984.36 Assets December 1, 1915 .. $7,947,208.15 Gain im a2 Year ..... Deposits December 1, 1916 . Deposits . December 1, 1915 $1,197,776.21 $8,556,128.40 $7,431,947.71 Gain in a Year : $1,124,180.69 ALL ASSETS OF THIS BANK BELONG TO THE DEPOSITORS. DEPOSIT YOUR SAVINGS IN THE BANK PICTURED ABOVE! CHECKS, MONEY ORDERS AND CASH ACCEPTED FOR DEPOSIT. 4 PER CENT. INTEREST PAID ON DEPOSITS. BEGINS THE FIRST DAY OF EACH MONTH.

Other pages from this issue: