l
r
-mm -nwtfr'ii fa
Hi'"
Afto'ther day, It isn't necessary .
j npr is it advisable to let that
1d run another .hour. Kerr's
Flax-Sced Emulsion, Unonine.
Is tlv standard remedy for
coughs and colds, even stub-,
I xirn bronchitis yielding to its
gr?at healing properties.
INFLUENZA AJVD GRIP VICTIMS
A TIE QUICKI1T RESTORED TO
(TIUENGTII' AND VIGOR, HY UNO
NINE, TIIE MOST HEALING OF
MEDICINES.
At all (Ivug stores.
Two S'iv ;' awl JS1.2.
rTAAOC MAM
Mesci
TAKE If IN TIME
Inst As Scores of New Briton People
Have.
Waiting doesn't pay.
If you neglect kidney backache,
Bladder troubles often follow.
Doan's Kidney Pills are for kidney
backache, and for other kidney ills.
New Britain citizens endorse them.
Mr. John Schilling:. 309 Maple St.,
S'cw Britain, says: "Over-work and
jnmpnrss and cold always affect my
Sidneys. I can tell when they are out
sf order as I have terrible sharp pains
:n mv back and my kidney's don't act
right. Doan's Kidney Pills always
sh e me relief, and I recommend them
i'cry highly."
60o, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn
Co.. Mfgs. Buffalo. N. Y.
NOSE CLOGGED FROM
A COLD OR CATARRH
Apply Cream in Nostrils To
Open Up Air Passages.
Ah: What relief! Your clogged
nostrils open right up. tls ar passages
f your head are clear and you can
wreathe freeiy. ino more nawKing,
snuffling, mucous discharge, headache,
dryness no struggling for breath at
night, your cold or catarrh Is gone.
Don't stay stuffed up! Get a small
ott!e of Ely'a Cream Balm from your
Sruggist now. Apply a little of this
fragrant, antiseptic cream In your
nostrils, let It penetrate through every
ilr passage of the head; soothe and
fceal the swollen, inflamed mucous
tiembrane, giving you instant relief.
Ely's Cream Balm is Just what evcry
iold and catarrh sufferer has been
eelcing. It's Just splendid.
GIVE
GWE
Give
CHARLES PROTESTS
LOVE FOR PEOPLE
In Abdicating, He Sends Farewell
v Message to His Subjects
Copenhagen, Nov. 14. Emperor
Charles on Monday, according to the
Vianna Correspondenz Bureau issued
the following1 proclamation:
"Since my accession I have inces
santly tried to rescue my peoples
from this tremendous war. I have
not delayed the restablishment of
1 constitutional rights or the opening
,ef a way for the people to substantial
national development.
"Filled with unalterable love, for
my peoples I will not, with my per
1 .son, be a hindrance to their free
I development. I acknowledge the
decision taken by German-Austria to
form a separate state.
"The people has by its deputies
taken charge of the government. I
relinquish every participation in the
administration of the state. Likewise
I have released the members of the
Austrian government from their
offices.
"May the German-Austrian people
realize harmony from the new adjust
ment. The happiness of my peoples
was my aim from the beginning. My
r
1
v
Dainty Maidens Prefer Cuticura
To clear the skin and keep it clear.
In purity, delicate Cuticura medica
tion, refreshing fragrance, conven
ience and economy, Cuticura Soap
with touches of Ointment now and
then as needed meet with the ap-
firoval of the most discriminating,
deal for everyday toilet uses.
BampU Sack Frw ky 1UU. Address pofcardi
'0Ubi, Orpt. 8A, Bortcn " Sold evrrwhr.
Soap 26c. Ointment 25 kird EOo. Talon m 26c.
give
NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, -NOVEMBER 14,-1918.
A
mm m m
A
UNITED
warmest wishes are that an internal '
peace will be able to heal the wounds
of this war.
(Signed) "CHARLES."
(Countersigned) "LAMMASCH."
Emperor Charles I of Austria, King
of Hungary, 'was an unpromising
maJoT in an Austrian infantry regi
ment when the shot of the assassin
who killed th Archduke Francis
Ferdinand on June 28, 1914, made i
him the heir apparent to the throne In j
the "Hawk's Castle" on the banks of
the River Aar.
Two hundred or more monarchs of
this historic house of Hapsburg ruled
for centuries the land of Magyar,
Slav and Teuton centuries of blood
shed, tyranny and aggression -and
I sleep their last sleep in the wonder
ful crypt of the Capauchln Church in
Vienna. Emperor Francis Joseph, the
aged predecessor of the youthful
Charles, seeing "the handwriting on
the wall," had hoped to unite the diss!
cordant elements, among his 50,000,000
subjects whose racial antagonisms
were .complicated by the absorption
; by Austria of the SeTblan provinces
of Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1918.
' It was the Archduke Francis
Ferdinand's determination to bring
about a triune empire made upof
Magyar, Slav and German states, it
is generally believed, that led to his
assassination in Sarajevo. Francis
Ferdinand feared the dual monarchy
might be ended upon the deatji of j
Francis Joseph by the Intervention of
Russia or Germany and sought thus
to forestall It.
tIiarlc Bom in 1887.
Charles I was born August 17, 1 887,
the son of the late Archduko Otto of
Saxony. He married he princess Zita
of the Bourbon house of Parma
(Italian) in 1911. When the Nunc
Dimlttis was sung for his dead grand
uncle, the Emperor Francis Joseph,
the only achievements or Uharies i
brought to public notice were that ho
was a keen sportsman, an excellent
shot and motorist. Frequently he was
i seen in the parks of Vienna wheeling
one of his young dukes in a baby
perambulator. When he acceded to
the throne on December 30, 1916,
Autria-Hungary, torn by four years
of the war, saw the first faint gleam
! of possible peace.
The course of the new ruler was
regulated largely from Berlin and for
the first six months of his reign
.Austria-Hungary was regarded as a
mere Germnn state. Hindenburg's
successes in Oallcia in 1916, In which
Charles shared as a commander In the
field, gave the young monarch a pres
tige which enabled him to hold the
Austrians to the Central owers until
the collapse of Bulgaria and Turkey
and the final crash.
Numerous peace overtures and
manoeuvres characterized the diplo
macy of the dual monarchy after
Francis Joseph's death, precipitated
doubtless by bread riots and other out
breaks throughout Austria, Unable
to maintain his pledge to the German
Emperor "to continue to the war to
the end" Charles made use of the
famous "Dear Sixtus" letter, an auto
graphed missive written In April, 1918,
DO NOT STOP
THE NEW SLOGAN
i jli i
Money Will Be Needed to
Our Boys for Some Time
G
WAR WORK CAMPAIGN
ten
1 Somebody Is Always
WrtElO You HAve
TRtet FOR A
Commits f cm t
IT HAS 8SM
pVJoRABt-V
rW3Ss6 VI Port
Pay You G&t
ANOTHER FAvoRAtJLS
LETTER FaOM Tr6
VUAR DEPT.
to Prince .Sixtus de Bourbon, for
transmission to the French govern
ment in which the monarch said
France's claim to Alsace-Lorraine was
"justified."
Although the letter was denounced
as a "forgery" in Vienna, the Foreign
Office claiming it had been written by
a French ecclesiastic who had been
acting as confessor to the Empress
Zita, subequent events proved Its
authenticity. It was the first revela
tion of the break between the German
Emperor and his vassal king. Pre
viously, Emperor Charles had indi
cated his desire for peace, however,
in speechws before the Ilelchsrat. In
December, 1917, he declared bis will
nn " i " '' . ii 1 1
AT
PAY
FAY
Care for
to Come
Tt
we uenemuslj
37
Si
Taking the Joy Out
Me 5
Just Got hS
WJHV OON'T YoO
V. ABl 3ET YOURS
GotNS, To
Get a
Commas Sioio
l MCAf?
Then
WAR
CAVS.O
Its!
ingness to 'conclude peace with the
Allies if they would guarantee the
integrity of Austria-Hungary.
Conditions in the dual monarchy
were rapidly growing worse. There
were many cabinet changes and as
sassinations. The Magyars, Czecho
Slavs and other nationalities were
clamoring for constitutional reforms
and autonomous government.
Emperor Has Much Trouble.
Thereafter Charles' lot was far from
being a happy one. He was reported
to have refused to nd Austrian
troops to the western battle front de
spite the German Emperor's impor
tunity. In every way he endeavored
to stem the tide of revolution which
' k!,!
GIVE
of Life - - -
AMD 5EvAC
MOrJTS Go
BV AMD You
CooO
OP C"T
- CU1.1.6TIM -
iUr5 accept Tew
COPYRIGHT
seemed to be rising. He promised all
kinds of reforms and as a sop to his
discontented subjects pardoned 24
prisoners awaiting trial at Sarajevo
for high treason.
On October, 1918, he announced
plans for the Federalization of
Autria-Hungary and in an address to
the Hungarian Diet frankly admitted
his throne was in "peril." A day or
two later Count Karolyi, leader of the
Hungarian republicans, announced the
success of a bloodless revolution in
Budapest and declared Hungary a
free and independent state. Still later
the German and other provinces de
clared their purpose to become auto
nomous entities and the House of the
frm
i
IE
"jyir,S-wiyi
- - - By Briggs
m i
-amw YouR oFpicb j
COLL6A6U6S
5?6nO a uot of :
"THE
KAI SER !M
1918. . NEW VORK TRIBUNE INC.
llapsburgs, once the leader of th
Holy Roman Empire, seemed to b
about to collapse like a house of cards.
WHXIAMS R13SIGNS AT BANK
Luther H. Williams, for the past 14
years a teller at the New Britain
Trust company, will leave that insti
tution Saturday to enter the purchas
ing department of the New Britain
Machine company, and will begin his
new work Monday. He was at one
tlmo assistant, ticket agent at tha lo.
cjl station of the "New Haven Road"
aud was employed there for nine
years, leaving there for the employ pf
the Trust company. He is a nativ of
Rofrkjr Hill.
1