New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 21, 1918, Page 5

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, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1918. | house which Miss Cor for some Years: Misg Corelli Decld Fear [0} "(F ERAL COUNSEL FOR R. R. ADMINISTRATION QUEEN OF ITALY - LAUDS RED CROSS j the front pages of all the great Eng- lish newspapers, enactment into law now commands only ing notice, and its relative importance to the other news of the day is so slight wrhe wheel o8 that the average reader might casily | | 0% 14 in overlook it altogether. | o place i “What does it all the | ©C @ o hard-headed, once uncompromising { ®MPE Englishman is asking. | mretidog 5 thing “It mea says Mis 3 the novi - after the war the straight its mean?” Officially Thanks Organizationf | sweet come pante Wi another Again chivalry, manhog be i | and Q58 beaut Marie Corelli, | woman's work . be very much on | simple lines of i nature—love, sweetness, and home! | Genoa, Italy, January 30 (Corre- |That's all work, which she i spondenco of The Associated Press).| S just now compelled to neglect—but only to cling to it more when the Qiean madness of the nations is past.” Red icans who, before the wdr, e | Genoa has received a telegram ex- ont to seck out-the places of ”? ] | pressing her appreciation and that of interest in Shakespeare’s } | King Bmmanuel for its “high and | ever failed to pause when they ‘WOMER | beneficent worl:” in opening can- { came upon the beautiful vine-covered teen refreshment place in the . raiiroad station at Genoa. The Genoa commitiee nized early in No- | vember, halet in the sta- tion yard ved as many as six | hundred in a singlo night, at of the Teutonic will and for Efforts in Her Country | woman's | —From of | American Helena Italy, the Cross committea for and was org crected ind s refugees ring the height on. Now that the dec sed, the work has ex British and [ through. Tho new work augurated this week in of municipal and army Paul Grosjean. manager branch of a New York chairman of the lozal , committee, spoke in hchalf the wholo Red Cross organization in Ttaly. A Bel- has enthusis Iy under- \meri 1l nations, rbarian, have than ever,” he said. * amplo to us. To theso have come in aid the great nations in an oufpouring of high idealism of justice. The American Red ('ross represents the spirit of humanity that | animates the entire American peoy It has given immediate aid to unfor- tunates forced to andon their homes. It works throughout Italy in harmony with the country’s institu- it inten he honds of soli- darity and sympathy between the two | countries. Out of the awful struggle | & good has come. Nations und ind ch other, draw n together, and ngthen their friendly relations. American Red Cross and the Italian Red Cross will work together in a holy mission ng comfort and aid.” Consul General David 7. cxpressed America’ cordial collaboration n by citi- zens of Genoa. The mayor of Genoa responded warmly, for the civilian au- thorities and General Garione for the military. “American, Tt flags were flying, thronged with a in- influx o scono fugees 1 of the cante inded to includ an, | sing | A new photograph of Judge John Barton Payne of Chicago, general | counsel for the railrond administra- | tion of the government. He t been in Washington several months assist- ing the government’s war work, and | since his permanent assignment to the railrond board has moved his family to the capital. He and Mrs, Payne have transplanted in their Washing- ton home a part of their plants which n € their home celebrated among horticultur- ists. PASTOR’S WIFE WORK: IN MUNITION PLA was formally in- the presence authorities, | the Genoa | bank and of of n rwh ong imead faith his n ex- little nations is A ConsTiTuTioNAL REmEeDyY That Removes the Cause You Take Cold .en you are run cown, over-tired — when your blood gets thin ard circula- tion is impaired. At such times coughs and colds get in their destructive work, and j long as you remain in this debilitated condition, just so long wiil the cold hang on. o tions, You Cure a Cold v suiding up your general health. 1f your blood is good and you sleep well and eat well you will be strong and vigorous. No cold can live in your system if you are well and strong. < rer | str e ‘The Cod Liver Extractives, Iron, Beef Peptoncs and Glycerophosphates contained in Vinol make it the best body builder and strength creator money can buy. That is why it removes the cause of coughs and colda. of Wilber. appreciation of shos YOUR MONEY WILL BE RETURNED if Vinol fails to benefit you. The Clark & Brainerd Co., Druggist Drug Stores; John J. McBriarty, Nathan Brita Liggett's Ri lian and Noveel . H. and the cheering Red Cross station v crowd.” Russell, : and all Jcading Drug Stores Everywhere. DEBT OF GERMANY 1% SUFFRAGE FAILS T0 EXCITE BRITISH Women Indiiferent Now That Bill Nears Passage lls or radical the piling indebtednes: measures fo up of the burden of Norden contrasts with the policy of Gery v, which, as f& known, ha ¥ 1 taxation to meet the interest on its | war debt and is paying a part of the ! interest coupons of earlier war loans from new borrowings, with that o Great Britain, which, he points our. had raised by taxation almost twenty- | five per cen(. of its war expenditures down to the end of 1917 The that a tion profits, which the bu the nominal Germany's capital, would with the productiveness of industry and the fear that taxation of incomes would Has Increased Twenty Times Over Since War Began v Marchant, wife of Rev. J. Marchant, pastor of the Baptist church at West Haven, Conn., is serving the country by working in a munition plant in that town, thereby releasing a man for a fighting branch of the service. She is here shown inspecting shells o ment war of a heavier taxa- | make up increase in interfere German ! increascd kill the of London, Jan. 31.—Now women of England virtually & sured of the vote, a d arisen as to what they will do with it = after the war. that the New Y Feb. 21. incre in Germany's national debt owing the war and the delay in adopting a sweeping plan of taxation reform to care for the increased The steady to liabilities of the Empire, already more than 20 times higher then the na-| tional debt at the outbreak of the war, is a source of constant concern to German financial experts. In the Berlin Tageblatt of January Arthur Norden, the paper's finan- al expert, sharply criticizes the fail- ure of the government to provide for any redemption of the war debt aside from a proviso establishing a redemp- tion fund for the 4 1-2 per cent. treasury certificates which formed a small part of the last two war loans. | matly | certain war-willingness of the population are dismissed Norden ai in ments of decided high cost extravaga the war p Norden American maximum raw mate: high war as unfounded. In rgues, to attack t incomes attained in dustries and by certain ele- the population would be of value in putting down the of living resulting from the nt standards of life among rofiteers. cites the action of the government in establishing prices for steel and rials of war . Mr. abnor. ! the imediately introducing high war taxes as an admirble example for Germany to follow and speaks wih admiration of the Wilson plan of taking control of the railroads Norden's scheme for taking care of ate debt comprises a radical in- crease in the tax on incomes, not upon capital as generally contemplated by German financiers. He bolds that the proposed taxes upon capital mere- ly lead to extravagant spending, while the income tax can be so adjusted to beat heaviest upon the recipients of Approval by parliament of the new franchise bill, which before the war undoubtedly would have been the signal for a great feminine demon- stration, elicited far less excitement than the average street queuec which forms nowadays in front of a corner grocery shop. While the mere mention of the in- troduction of such a measure for- merly would have been flashed across NEW MINISTER FROM HOLLAND TO Mrs. Etta Dorion, of Ogdensburg, Wis., says: “I suffered from female troubles which caused Ipiercin pains like a knife through my back and side. I finally lost 4l my strength so I had to go to bed. The doctor advised an ope ation but I would not listen to it. I thought of what I had rez’afi about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and tried it. The first bottle brought great relief and six bottles have entirely cured me. All women who have female trouble of any kind should try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.” How Mrs. Boyd Avoided an Operation. hio.—*1 suffered from a female trouble which ca(\:::dwge(z)nuch suffering, and two doctors decigled that I would have to go through an operation before I could g‘e‘thyexlllJ.other, who had been helped by Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound, advised me to try it be- fore submitting to an operation. It relieved me from my troubles so L can do my house work 2 difficulty. I advise any woman who is afllicted with female troubles to give Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound a trial and it will do as much for them.”’— Mrs. MARIE Boyp, 1421 bth St., N. E., Canton, Ohio. Every Sick Woman Shoulc LYDIA E. PINKHA | VEGETABLE COMPOUND [ Before Submitting To An Operation] | LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. LYNN.MASS, Makers of the Highest Grade N\ Turkish and Egyptian TR Cigarettes in the World Dr. August Philips, from Holland to the taken mpon his arrival in New York on the New Amsterdam. Minister Philips is one of the youngest men to be appointed to such a high dip- lomatic position; he is a business man, and one of the progressives of Holland. new minister United States,

Other pages from this issue: