New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 4, 1918, Page 12

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERAL ¢ l.nw.m«vm in its attempts to anni- }— — 5 = = — e e e WAL “A][Y EERMAN ”E S e R HAVE GULUR IN BHEEKS .| Movie of a Man Listening to a Liberty Loan Orator - - - | predicted such annihilations when our — ;r T ) AR e = nen we cailed to arms. e can onl . - WELL™- [ Feel “PRETT 3 w[]RSET Sonsloh o SR e BeBe“o-rLQOku-xg—Take | GOOD AND PATRIOT(C 'I\/YE’ ThaT'5 AS MUCH AS " THERE'S A FELLOW " GUESS SToP b, | pointment by inventing rumors of dis- Qlive Tablets | SUCHT SEEGA%Y by e (T(_'/:N AFFORD on MAKING A Goob MNVETSE A:; :2’:9'*\ | asters that e once hoped would oc- | ! BONDS ™ S LOAN SPEECH % s i \.Y",’, M‘”"“ i "U“"‘, Mv‘”;" e H‘ ‘_'""}‘ 1 your skin is yellow—complexion pallit IHSlfllOllS Rl]mo[‘s S ]‘ead {01 or being pathetic ; — tongue coated—appetite poor—you have p 2 | abad taste in your mouth—alazy, no-good 5 A | Beporied Edison in Jail feeling—you should take Olive Tablets. Weaken Morale in America \ Florida correspondent vepo Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—a substitute I heard local railvoad man, w forcalomel—were prepared by Dr.Edwards e e A after 17 years of study with his patients. (By Harvey O'Hig \ W e g e Dr.Edwards‘OliveTablcdtsar}elalpurely o o o i piosie S| =ocdilovl repeat @ rimos, yegetable compound mixed with olive oil. (h‘:!:!)‘l::]x'l:;)“t‘mnmuuv on Public In- | which he e romanotics eetebl k:wowptl)em.bytlxgir S A newspaperman writes to the com- e el d oL oN To have aclear, pink skin, bright eves, i L L e ol pinTles Rl el ing foffLuovancy, i Buffalo, N. Y A m‘”””: in gu ,'r R Fi = ld ok et :at t!:ccauflc.! heard anything about the old 7dth experinient on aquipment.” | °% ang"r,o‘““\]“i)-l‘ T o RGUMENTS ARE LITTLE FIGURING i regiment of this city, which is now, 1 have been pro-Gicrman ‘slan- hcys_tl“xlrttv:e ‘f,f'a“"vgvfrc?:g:;fgn:é GREAT- AND HE'S RIGHT HERE AUD NOwW believe, the 307th, being annihilated el e ey il b an=as in France. Of course 1 yromptly | i ) 5 5 anrnually at' c an M'cper_ 0X. i BONDS d promptly | ou \mevicans who have been || "Talke one or two nightly and Bo g branded the rumor as a German lie. Sl R R e i one of l e Jo It would be a terrible thing for the | no truth in any of them. At pre ————e e i Y mothers, wives and other relatives to | ti i popular vietims of these | &3 i ‘ } receive such an impression e e Madamie Schumann. |(andt serveito iceep Sfgolish Weredu- i Rumors of this sort represent a pit- | 1feink and e | lity from getting into worse mischief. | | iful German hope. The inventors of | newspapers have repeatedly printed a | Retlection on Men's Mox i ! them put them out to cause as much | denial of ihe rumor {hat either Ruth | - New Yorker writes to the Com- Bt wid dlatress o posmivls 20 16 | T oo Alonins Solitmear Mok iiae | mittee on Public Infomnation: “There shake our confidence in the news that | heen arrested ax @ CGerman spy. inqui-| 15 @ Story here that American officers | | We receive fram the battlofront. BUL | yies ahont their supnosed arfest come | e supblied by the army with blue | $hey put them out, also, 48 an unhap- | ts the Comumiliee on Public Informas | telets, upon exhibition of which they | py man consoles himself with dreams. | tion by wire or letter daily, 1t W'W\L re ol molested by the miltary police | The German army has been simgularly | that (he rumor is passed on hut the | e i ouis o "f..‘-l\llh‘-‘l::::l““; “BY Geomae - 1t T T S I‘\{,,,“,“'“”“ i et a2 | with the blue ticket is the story that Do T HUNDRE D _:ue.u;;? FoR_ Six nial of it is a sort of spoil sport. Al- {W”““"""“I"' uses are '“«“‘}‘ ined by UNDR&D 1 thot e A e Sl the War Department for the special | ClgarYou{ Skml {:,‘:,\».‘f,‘ b R e ool omicers ¥ein al ment enni = s With Cuticura] | heve of nis arirct would have been | 10U idle bar-room gossip but a story | ANl drogglete: Soapzs,| | printed on the first page of every | [hat is being circulated in New York, | Ointment 25 & 50, Tal-| | newspaper i She v there | @nd believed and passed on, in all sc- | FIm S Semple el il be ilways somieone oolish | IPUERESS By che peopls who ouShc o DeptE Botn™"" "] [cnousht to repear the rumor | KmOW better It was repeated to me Al Daliove Fortunately | DY one of the best known artists in | ¥ such rumors o e n.ux{.“\“" York who believed that it was | i true. 1t just happened that I knew ! = | how particnlar and careful our mili- | tary organiza m is to keep the men iway from vencreal contagion and i way from prost s g Uy, sa I was able to say to the who [\ { told mie this story i It is a lie that. in one form or g COPYRIGHT 1918, NEW YORK TRIBUNE INQ, { another, is exceedingly pop1lar among the Kaiscrites in America. It is a lie | * - — e = oW N S i B that e ihe Nhisner g ubich s L thousand. That is {o say, under Tl e bara RO ERTCR 550 R o fhwhTer | indidantlad curre TN ol 2o ldio e o ! it is a lie that our conventic i tary dicipline, the men are about ten jwere recently ordered to bura their |inoculated with poisinous serum and i ierm o, S S e fromt sexual vice and | sweaters, socks, etc., other than regu- |no doctors were court-martialled o1 | ey : b its effects they were in civil life. | lar isst This being a specific lie, | shot | from public contradiction. And it i & | Ay the stories of immorality amoag |can obtain a specific denial. The| This is one of the rumors about lie that is peculiarly distressing to the oy, mes are part of the German | Quartermaster’s office al Washington | epidemics in camps that were | most women relatives of our soldiers, which | “whispering propasin e n e e e LN SRR R o demics in e mDe hatirercjmont makes it a most valuable lie to ouUr [are hald lias with mo basis whate o ! lietioneblcfins ey Wil g enemic S The Poor Doctors, | 2 i 5 =] . ¢ 1 L0 oot | {reduced as low as 3 men per thou- 3 As a matter of fact, the campaign . " A Moretown, Vermont, has heard tha|.and per annum. The best record | our Surgeon General's “Red Cross Sweaters Taken.” ‘Ml\n\\k.»u picturesque v Mrs. J. | pitherto has heen the Japanese record | A A MILLS inst immorality aad vene Kinderhaok, [ll., reports a story 9. S of Los Ar Cal “,Mli“ s o s e iorall o b v a0 “f“,"‘.:'\l‘.‘\;‘l\ e | “tnat anl sweaters that Knit \,3‘_'?:;:"V“":I""Lf"k‘]f:‘\ ‘_::"“l*';,”":_:]‘:‘hr“l‘:“’;:"“";1nw Japanese death rate from’ disease | 80 WEST I\If\ll\I STI{EE r paigns of the war. When the drafted |[the Red Cro ire taken from the sol- | tea Her son e el s ‘w ‘\\}»lt; -‘[ :‘(‘1‘;”,-':‘.;‘ 1’1:3\‘\‘?1‘\[“1‘(1:‘«\:« l:»’n'\(l’:nl men were first called to camp, tha when they embark for ove drafted and sent to American Laks | men of military age in civil life is 6.7 | § G annual admission rate to the hv-rl This falsehood, and it is [ cantonment had been inoculated with | pep thousand per annum, so that aur | § BROS. (O, pitals was nearly 400 out of every lono of a large company of similar | poisanous serum, long with several|pmea in wniform have twice as good | | New Bittain Distribufors thousand men. In the past summer {mm hoods designed to discouragze | BnalbecRon il b 1l Gieqmnall e ad LRl Lss e e R e - . the admission rate for the whole | Red Cross work anaheilli i s et domne B e army has been as low as 40° per from Dallas, Texas, to the effect that | court-nm illed and shot.” No such | army. 5 i OTHING could stand against the mad dash of the French and American cavalry on the Marne—the German lines gave way,broke,fled; the day waswon. That fighting spirit of the men of Foch and Pershing, that Let us lend the wa y they fight Now—All Together! D, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1918, S =g el We must lend as well as they fight. And we must pull together with all the strength we have—now! Paris, Aug. 5—Tlie Americans cov- | | ered themselves with glory in the hand- | & | to-hand fizhting in the streets of | | Fismes yesterday when they captured | that German base. The fighting sald to have been the vitterest of the h whole war, the Prussian Guards ask- |1 ing no quarter and being bayonetted 1 or clubbed to death as they stood by their machine guns. is We must so order our lives that we can save—to the limit—and lend—to the limit—for Vic- tory. We must put America’s whole strength behind our fighting men _ united purpose —for Victory —must be the spirit, the purpose, of each of us bekind the lines. Let us buy bonds to our utmost

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