New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 6, 1918, Page 9

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, SATURDAY, JULY 6, 1918 NERAL ERUW“ER l ’,‘W\/V\NVWW\NW next twelve months it is expected that $24,000,000,000 will be raised. This [iE )' Henry Clews’ I DB L pressure upon the money market, also that the regular |REFUSES PROMOTION ;_Weekly Lester {niiotrcusia. et se MEMB! have alrcady declined 20 per cent, = (Special to Herald and in event of an additional drop, a X MAI Dralt Leader Urdes Recoghition | ~ew vors uts woowo wuror the {0 SR8, B ot i soon be felt and may rank next to i | ons generally hoperul, though | gove ent requirements in impor forgkxemptiontBoardRVolunteersHEisceamErsss S at i s Sl e R S e s B uncertain The undertone of conti Liberty Loan, funds have been in | dence, however, is still running stronz: | somewhat better supply, considerable | Washington, July 6.—The army il | the military outlook being decldedly | new financing having been successful- conferces reached an agreement yes- | encourniging ermany’s supreme v floated in June. The new sccuri- terday on every point in controversy | fort has practically failed; since the | ties issued in that period, excluding between the two houses, The dificulty | Allicd arn have not been divided, | government loans, were $258.000,000 the British are nol driven into the [ an increase of $194,000,000 over the | sea, and Paris has not fullen into the | sme mounth last year. About §130,- encmy’s hands. While the drive will { 000,000 of these issues were for in- over the proposed advancement of Major-Gen och Crowder, P'rovost marshal general, to licutenant-general { soon he renewed, these contingencies | dustrials. Since June 1st, the total | Pl A | was solved by the gencral refusing | are now less remote than atany tme | new issues, railvoads and industvials, : ne § . el e SR e The reading of Gen. Crowder's 16t- | mrench and British are confident of | 000,000 less than a vear wgo. Mones ter to Chairman Dent proved the fen- | polding their own. Driving back the | conditions being what they ar ture of the concluding session of the | y\ygiiang over the Piave afforded | premature to any liberal continuance of | | conference The conferces then | | ) particular encouragement; not only by | new issucs and the consequent slowing ! adopted the general’s suggestion, and | gonroging Austrian morale and rais- | down of new enterprise was ilustrated Representative Kahn (Cal.) said: “We | {50 500 wn, bul also throush sax W the total of new chy s rted | wanted to honor Gen. Crowder in this | [ @ "0 roat industrial plain in | in June in the principal states, which | Room 410 Nai wayl Helhast beenl among tho load: el socints BEEa et o e i tad Lol anly 825 70000000 coms | ers which this war has developed. the ¢ 5 I | / have affected o he llies adversely pared with $423,000,000 a year ago. | least self-seeking, the most devoted [ oo el Gl ik il I - 1 | The greatest encouragement of all \ttention is still concentrated upon 3 ial. In this time of gauging the : ¢ will r X : » Thi i § ¢ 5 e el however, from the American stand- | Washington, which during the war wil or N Saturday Morning, July 6th. This Sale value of men on n percentage basis|. . the marvellous rapidity in | continue to he e dominating factor in | » e Gen. Crowder will have to be figured | R il uange o s frapitity i ontinaRs | v ! ‘well above par.’ perfecting plans for our entrance into | business and finance govern- | 8 Cl Ya . X = 3 abo i T S el o 5 ©achinery is now running much | Stein Bloch and Schuman Clothing. Ih his letter Gen. Crowder took the | (e War. There are now over a mil- | ment machinery is now running much | posiHEN AtHHE it somettansibicl toc{iionTS G cRniisoldicrs M REranteul A In oo i oo thlyian d S one fis e 1s | ognition of the devotion of the thou- Iy equipped, and by Januar , it ig | evident desire on the part of officia expected that we will have approxi- | to interfe s little as possible with | ; 2 o sands of citizens who volunteered L vp . ~—— y SUIT TROUSER! thelr services to conduct draft boards, | Mately 4,000,000 men in the army.'| legitimate business, while exercising | YT 5 advisory boards and commissions and | Submarines have proved a failure, and | @ rigid exclusion of profiteering and | Sy $35.00 ..... $28.50 $9.00 ... . 87.25 whe gave manths of arduous aloriin | the hugs shinbuilding canvpaisn ints ;.‘1 nomessential .“um! H'H‘x:- :\ ar s, Fifla ¥ l Q °Q = ny instances voluntary, to the cause | titted by our zovernment is now being | however, a heavy burden, even for a $33.00 . e ""00 $8.00 .. .. $6.50 :‘ cm.m:sm“m".\’f::‘m::f.l )\,-:.,\ H\\, | rapidly carried out. We M.;,.,,‘._\,,: voung giant like the United States, M $30.00 .......... $24.00 $6.00 $4.75 could not permit himself to he con- | the Fourth of July by luunching near- | and taxation weighs very heavily upon b $28.00 22.50 it % . H eiered as i oandldate Tor rowara Iv one hundred ships and fourteen | &l classes: those who pay little or | ey . sl epers ;“" $5.00 . Slavs Ready to Fight. destrovers, aggresating nbout 500.000 | no direct tax, carrving a load m\t‘nu | AR e 20.00 8 ) | tons, These vonderful necom- | Sciously in the high cost of z. | €22 00 18.00 $4.50 : 7 On the question of the creatton of & | jjishments, despite the criticlsms | Congress is at work framing a now | $22:00 e asE S 18, 1,00 3 Slavie legion as wn adjunct o the | oo, pon the administration :u j Pill, which for sake of the country as ! $20.00 EV TR 51600 $4.00 . .. .- American army. to be recrulted from oy months ago. IWe shall soon also | & Whols must be based upon soand | $18.00 $15.00 $3.50 the nominol subieCteRof usteia HOR i o Shinpios aaroplanes lon & Llntes just principles. The bulk of o o . .. < Pl Pe. . ! Bulgaria resident in the United Scale Industrinl mobilization of the X will fall upon large incomes and States and technicaily alien enemies. | Frot™ AN Skl S e e e although desirous for fighting side by 3 : A L e S Ck A He 1 1 Th gh At ALL STRAW HATS HALF PRICE. sids with the Allies axinst Raiserisan, | (71176 wir michiners of o countrs | proiiied the matn spurees of now cur ) SIOCKS - A6 Hesita I ou thelhouse Bconfanaes ylclded Bro Jtha 1ilkis f{ri6ti00t 46 Dossibie America | Point, which would seriou impair Loans %l the bill. The Slavic legion will be re- 8 = i o - i (b)) Acceptancs | | American army will soon enlighten In the financial district there is a her banks Qiscoul [ Culted at once under the terms Of the [, iuy as to Hs fehting tapaciiy | seneral undertons of optimism, based | S statute and as soon as the machinery - e : i el e ibe SR et b e {50 we may hope confidently for the [ uPOR satisfactory military outlook. Stocks were hesitant at the open- et . { victory which our aid will surely | Some industrials declined under g ing of today’s short s but [ " Provision for the creation of a Rus- ! 3 session im Bonds (other than Tibe | hasten ernment regulation. while others ad- | proved luter. “he moderate inquiry e | sian legion was stricken from the bill | Dast Eoannt nesulation el ad- liproved Huter: Bitlics moderate Unquis fter protracted discussion, the con INpeet Greater Sacrifice. b ool et oL A e stes of ‘I i e TR i e within narrow limits; sharp advan law-prived coalers, olls, Marine pid died to secure U, But there is another aspect ) foll i : Rt : g eing followed by profit taking, while | and specialtios, suct eric v 200,000.98 was not ripe for its adoption, and it | situation that cannot be ignored. This ¥ AR cia el as we e ricnn e ha . most issues responded mo T e natior rgicu s | Cimone mountains who had surren- |is understood that with the espected | terrible war involves vast sacrifices of TRl e a ol nteEnaniensl Arel L Eenie | dered and laid down their arms, were | solution of the vexed problem of | jiro blood and treasure, and the end R e “]‘ ¢ it at w ‘“‘*l“' 1 to 2 points. U.| S. Steel { l'ehot down by w machine gun of the [America’s relations with Russi and | is by no mea e : : a T wdvanced o large f tion to its high was restricted to independent steels i s hilea, i i sight =0x showing ontinned improvement in t 3 3% b 2] s the orld o N owing con €4 HIPToY eIy est quotatio ol the veek bu ed 5th Battalion of the 14th Regiment | Ttussia’s relations with the world Al yhile the cnemy may be weakening. | envmines sud fimencinn otatne Bubtio | ‘ t auo e e week ‘ falled of suebrian infanicy. The fow (sur.laves, that some BORt Of & BroctAmme | gyji ho fs niot beaten, and Binee 1t is [ netiles ore of ool eelioted ool o S At vivors of this butchery were thrown | Permitting Russian participation Will | 3 mutter of life and death for the mili- e e T o | ’s.‘v}n stments were exceedingly limitec fro i Pt . 2 . ons well understood overnment | The closing was firm. Sales aproxi- rom a preciplee tary autocracy of Germany, that party e . Dy N e G o IO e . ; ¢ generally f and show | mate 00,000 shares Liberty 3%'s irs, cut from the heads of Italian | The provision for opening American | yy¢t and will continue the war until S e e o T and threaded on strings, | training camps to soldiers of the undertone owing to military | cold at 99.56 to 99.62 first 4's at 94.08 t g o . Sy : 3 1 pllowing the report that o a ‘s at 96.16 to 96.22 fantrymen. One of them, who had hereaftergtoffen tlergith warx uinst | I follominegthpiropor r T | and 4 1-4's at 96.16 to 96.2 I l C 1l al 1 e lo it e s pioni.| Germany miso was stricken ont. This | b3 Allles than sny hitherto put forth. | lll?, l&lflfl aflp g J | provis it thought, might bhe government did not intend to Y Je 1 5 P g 1 This country must, therefore. be pre I New, York LO8 e CHEnESRIN oL vraised by the captain of the 17th | Provision, s higher interest rates on coming issues. used by 2rmian propa ndists in | | tions furnished | Richter & Co., | Regiment of Austrian infantry T : L L Soonen T One striking evidence of ew York, July 6.—The decision of ’I)H\r“n to (h\}:wr.\lmu\ by hunge I‘;::i::;":‘)l‘_“‘l‘l"(‘“,“'““’Y‘_ :l:‘” America al- | ®MY and even futher government reg- | rocord of failures which for the fir American Red Cross and the Y. |and goaded into battle by thelr officers, | PASIS f0r & CUars® T SHRCE M | ulation. Sad to say. it must also be A to extond their actlvities 1in |it is safe to say that the Austrian “"f‘i‘” I‘ T ean et Italy has been grected with expr l‘;-.ww are no less inhuman now than 1::hl e & % | Price fixing and yationing orders are . f keen appreciation by the}they were when these facts were rec- eET i : | especial sources of complaint; never- stal was helow $60,00 [ = i e amhime o et | e 10 M (mmrtant {1y | Mediend Corpn Reorgamiation. ! T Taciacni muat b sa: | B, okl vee delew 20008506 | A ‘Gun Ferrero, director of the Ttalian Bureau | the American public understand that lieorganization of the officers per- | pected, and it should he added that | the lehteet of amy month cines Son S Thformation The good work |the Allles on the Itallan front are|sonnel of the army medical €orps Wats { {ioy wre usually cheerfully met, the nee which these agencies will do, is not | combating the same kind of German | compromised on the basis of the ad- | policy of the the only basis for this attitude of the | Kulture that has horrifled the world | dition of two majors-gencral and two | ahly bieing to create as little friction ftalian newspapers. Ttalians know | in the case of Belgium and Northern brjgadiers-generals to the regular |, |ossible that now for the first time, the | Ifrance.” army’s medical department and one | ey Lo toaterie Rinsten sy (ol . American public will be given the — major-general and two brigadiers-gen- | 1, is the crop outlook, nature in this | E t. rer Bl Tioco ¥ > g 2 et it necessary to pursie a conservative | true picture of Austrian barbarity in eral to the National Army. The sen- | oqp oot having farticularly favor e s s PR wagir 1r and in dealing with civil ate provision had been for a larger | oy siates R e : > S Heth Y = t ‘ number The compromise also pro- | i ope ons. | Butte Sup Bz popillations damage to wheat, that crop 1 i s " ‘\ v ahe large has not realized vides for the increase in the number HENRY CLEW e Puo v LS . : s ho | Promises a very heavy vield, pro . heretofore the systematic infractions of medical uu»u»‘.».&y;u n: ; .{:13““::“"2‘;‘ | e sccond Tarest on rocarn, } ol ¢ ke R B ORI Dl Smssmaass e oo et o e CITY ITEMS % | colonel, thus smoothing a number of | pmbodied in the treaties of Genev ! S Laambar R e, R T 1 e Chino ( (.}. 3 difficulties and deficiencies o 2 —= oy and the Hague, practised by the Aus el eE mmulu ‘\r; 3 \m‘ which some | Whettt. which is usually about two f Belarnid D ; = o existed and by reason ch somc 5 . telarnijiar stillers trian army,” said Dr. Ferrero. he xisted an IR e S e isti U eTell Allies N of the most distinguished surgeons in street, asked the police last nig e talian battle ground was relativel anoed. viele ST S e 3 Italian battle ground was relatively 6 ies Not to Make Bfld America have been compelled to hold | Yanced. vielding excellent results, and | arrest n neighbor who had assaul tant and the nolse of the battle in T Jul i i s : indifferent rank in comparison to their | I luring July. | hep boy peoples of Belgium and Northern 1 = : SSas i " | bushels, or about 330.000,000 more L 3 ) 1 1 The increase in the rates of pay for 4 said that vo 1 Vorel GtolenllGENGE oie F'rance, downed the faint echoes from e AR .q | than last year; an ample supply f 1 were | ing t army nurses also were compromised | from his wagon e irniion : : s Parvis, July 6 “Tell the Allies not | but with a decided advance in (he a Juglish and the Ameri- . the protests of the Italians [0 make a bad peace. Tell them (o | salary rates. | pared with a rvanze of $1.08 to $1.76 the inhuman conduct of the | fiI8ht on until we are safe n 1911 Tn 1911 10 to 12 cents was An aged Belgian woman serving a 1 DEAD 100 bushels. Our cotton cren . mias | while she was in her room someons | Maxwe Belgian Countess Goblet d'Avriella X S & CLELOPORLLILE The | acerage is 6 per cent, higher than countess has been a prisoner e s ) A, Ul NN, | herself until last month when she | Kear-Admiral el was exchanged for an important Ger moembers of the New York Stoclk Iox- char heavier taxcs, for far more rigid econ- world as the soundness in business is i six months of the current vear showe | prepaved for a growing casualty list. i jiabilitics of only $70,000,000, the | Ajnska Gold smallet amount reported since 1907, | A @ Fdy Am Loco \m Smelting tember, 1906, The outlook for the | \ny s b m Sugar government unquestion- | stoelk Dassan market is favorahle; thougt o v Am Tel & Tel possibilities of disturbing news from Hmi= 5 con the front of Washington and the most encouraging business fac- our Allies as well as for ourselves. A woman living at the corner of Ken ( Fairview and Pleasant streets ‘com- | Lack plained to the police yesterday that! Lh \a | Mhe price of wheat is now $2 con then 1leva. Convention working 1 The pol questioned ' x the suspect and exancrated h Ne Co. H, Connecticut State Guard will | Ny x hold a special meeting at the A Yo it of cases of gross violations serve d Cross emblem can Dbe | last vear and condition 3.3 point | higher, indicating a yield of 15,300,000 | an pilsone l Hor s oitorin o | bales. This would be 4,000,000 bales | rhursday evening, July 9th a 8:00 | x5\ a prisoner of the Germans in Brussels Cuba—\Was ion of Honor Man,; More than last year and nearly equal | o'clock, to complete arranzements for was told to American friends at the [l e mmper cropRot 157682000 bt e Hotel Petrograd—the Y. W. ( A New York Rear-Admiral | in1911 In 1911, 10 to 12 cen troops gathered 37,000 of with documentary evidence A i ‘finish off” the wound Sunk One of Spanish Pleet in the first, part of the \ustrian soldier n Penn R Peo Gas | t 1 fleld day and outing. All members | advance into Bansizza i rd to attend this meeting Hostess House of Paris Aaron \Ward S N, retived, died | & good price for cotton. the pre D T e e inhuman we 1 : “Thirty Belgian women are shot by | of heart disci in his home at Ros- | Price being nearl treble those f Report of the Condition of Sl L g h“!\“v\‘}w the Germans every month—an aver-!jn L, 1., yesterday, after & short ill- | 2 o¢dless to say tho colton indust THE PLAINVILLE TRUST COMPANY SR L Ll e itial ness. Following @ brilliant career 1S SIUChRG E ir Ded e U rioeeio 3Tl shed) Plainvilie. Con the Navy marked especially by services in the Spanish-American war, men (o escape from the Ger- | \dmiral Ward retired from active service nine years ago to devote all most trivial offenses of pris- | pis time to the cultivation of roses, | Strikes in one dircction, prospects o 3 ol : not ret oners bring awful punishments. One |4 hobby which he and his wite had | Bovernment regulation and price fiy v Trace s souvce, the apparent | thing for which we are continually | «hared mpression on the part of the .Brit-Junder severe penalty 'is' trying tol| at Annupoils ton outlook in still another. Two and American press that Austrian fecommunicate with the men in our own When the Spanish-American war | ditional srowing months are still at troops are less barbarous than theit{army. Many and many a woman is | began he was a licutenant in com- | of us, and August il not JJuly German allies scems to be the resultlgerving from one to fifteen years in | mand of the converted yacht Wasp. | ually a month of more or less of ibtle Av method. "The)a German prison—and prisons in Ger- | in July, 1898, the Wasp, assisted by | deterioration, Tho government ptateme r S ding 10 | many are unspeakable—for sending | the Leyden and the Annapolis, sunk | fixed the price of copper at 26 e f er B B BUITISH CASUALTIES pr. Ferrero, i e th #h Aus letter to her man. Multitudes of | the Npanish cruiser Don Jorge Juan|a rise of 214 cents. This will assur ooz e e s Hungar f e ordered {our women have not heard from their | at Port Nipe, Cuba. IPor this and his| the copper companies contir Al 4 & unst the Iorench 'men since the war began—they do not | services in the naval operations off [ profits for a moderate period. yhich | U " Natio { from bharbar- | know whether they still live, whether | Porto Rico, he was advanced (WO [ the government probably considers | t RAS00[ davyins e Glie gregate t Italians. they were killed years ago, or are | numbers in grade £00d policy as stimulus to & prolific | siiy.y e The losses wer ded Austri 1 far- prisoners. The men know nothing Admiral Ward was an oflicer of the | source reaching power > Tngl v about their wives, daughters and | French Legion of Honor. In 1814, mothers left behind | he happened to be in England, and “We Belgians are very tired of war. | was detailed to meet on its arrival at jut America’s help has cheered us ! Falmouth the American steamship ymore than you can know. We have | Red Cross. He made arrangements ing s Ski andlec L1 . $ 000,00 .‘ I g ] g i '?. Occasionally - lived so long in the sound of cannon :'.'.y,‘,“,:;:'.f",y,‘,'”‘l,',y",: ‘x|‘x:‘“:x‘:~~-l:4“’;:1‘!.:u'r:”_',',[,i,‘ HW' :;::x»:i:;‘.\I\.-‘llf‘n:l'l‘:\ “':,‘_‘ :v‘l»‘mi el it s . s zaoonn0 | Connectlcut Trust and Safe Dep051t CO. E @ ' English-age of one a day”, said the countess man, Mr. A. Trevelyan of the British |.\ye 4re punished for everything. The Red Cr who spent many months |y o viest penalty falls upon those who on the Ttallan front to prove that in|.iq (he products are very high, staples has t ¢ Deinestion Gl thid e ing considerably more than doubled | Quring twelve months, while gpite of all provocation from the Aus- [y ! German troops, the Italians have | qpe manu wers are distracted by from the tme he wis o cadet | INg in another, and an uncertain cot- | 087 United Statex Deponits von land Britis) 1altic reported d he week ending to Killed or died of wounds 0; men 96 Wounded policy has apparently been exercised i v e Ferlaie o towards the steel industry which pro- & s it $99.00 of public revenue. The same vides the government with o very i lurge amount of revenu Apar corre . that when it dies down we miss it B L 7 A STRONG, RELIABLI CORPORATION decorated by limperor Francis Joscph | chase every two weeks $750,000,000 | Duc ) their sk - When the noise is the greatest, we Richard o, corres- know that the bombardment is \¢ London Times, said heavy and herc we say: ‘The Allies ent. frequently reiter- ;are fighting for us. Perhaps they will «trians were more ' come today.’ Do not feel that it is Companies 1.000 of Austria 4% per cent, short term freasury | oS Compan 194,001 organized and qualified through years of efficient, notes until $6,000,000,000 has been | Dreposit avings Department. | 224642 raised towands the next Liberty loan, | Bills T80 ¢ nu<rw0rthv service, to act as Conservator, Guardian which will probably be that amount o g Executor or Administrator. humane than mans, was based all tragedy in Belgium. Our courage | in Octolwr. During the fiscal year | | ot (o - we say ‘Ave the Allies forgetting us? l For this service he was afterward | fully handled, The banks are to pur. "t 4 A | 1 | | | LT h TaeGte o, DRI T B SRS el (| e Tt et S ety e s (@ Capital $750,000. Surplus and Profits $1,000,000 The case was quite the contrary, as ar ernment raised $4.000,000,000 in taxes ity i The ' Peace. We want our homes again and ¥ and $10.000,000.000 in loans: an alto- e 5 o the he liimself could: bear Witness. h Lz § sregoing is true to t Austrian troops had been ordered to "‘;;’” back o0 ""m’“ - Lt '”“;" lh\:n 27 gether unprecedented operation ang | best of wy knowl 3 : Connect]cut Trust and Safe Depos][ Co_ take as few prisoners as possible.'all We want to be a free peoplc « - one that wonld have heen impossibic @ A | subseribed and t N 1 HARTFORD. CONN. M. H. WHAPLES, Pros't, Accordingly, 1,600 Ttalians surrounded emooth working of e new | on the brinkvof a precipice of the jin possession of our own land. Federal Reserve system. During the | GIEORGE T BV INGTON, Judsc | s s e e beg you not to stop until we are again for the

Other pages from this issue: