Produced by the University of Michigan Center for the History of Medicine and Michigan Publishing, University of Michigan Library

Influenza Encyclopedia

ï~~ hMfnittee 'rin -HoL * Measure. 22.-(1. N. S. this saftertiotn live prcofts:#; rue bill ash pa ated a 'scheme It ray be Ea of Itaxation. liar been cha nal lawyers )Ieas of Secret oo, the financ 1 the rate of ciked by. the c aps itiq most, t was tonf ror bill. The site committee, would yield would hay alternate aye )pted by the i hne h the house bill )me in excess nptlon (8 pe: )f 15 per cent a 30 per cent excess of 20 p )n. eta were drog se and 'the nex tax of 60 per a5 of 20 per 1. t, by a neat takes all exce it. 'he text one.stroke Cshm'ot 'fits scheme, of the amoun y) in excess ui profits cre tx.compu tec alts.', credit #eferre pecific exemj,ant equal to oration 9for t *1912 and 19 adopted a' th~e pay nt ifs, one third when the re the fifteenth dter fi ling the on the fifte W here. oxtoni for "the pays he '. Ae of a o ~ t X11 be c e' ranged, I Vifn ' ll b Kas. L)-The v &tbanaxation' heed by Wh~ere'ttatjned The alrac teras un tary of e cornexcess pmmitimpornted in system *trensslightly e been Stemn of ouse. 85 per on the of the rscent) * pf the tax on )er cent peed l c ~'h~'*Ist* a4j($iai. 40(1 the ti. ot nut~d 4a# erton that t", r 1e id. 'not,"stirrender either Al~aoe o rratie or.?ruissiaw 'Poland. Ut wilt be' r eembered:Itso that the portion 'of' the Gehnn chancellor's dpoh which implied tie' same refusal was carefully taken from,the version of the *speech Which Germanyr sept. abr~q d. Germany', conservative press oonirnent naturally has taken. that view, of the positilt, and liberal, papers are equally qmphatic. The Berliner Tageblatt speaks throughout' of the "guiding principles" and 'says the whole German concessibn 'consistr merely of an admission that the question of Alsace-Lorraine and Poland are now international questions. It protests against the appeal for freedom of Prussian Poles and says "only a completely defeated Germany could agree to sep to rieg, that were fornmri- F-lsh' are to be un'Ii'od in ' a uplitorm Polish ptte with ite own sea coast. -'This' intei'psetation is false. "I t would be I ntoleirable for Germany because, thinking only of the.Poles, and not at all of German$, It would ietuahty exclude the right of self determination of- the German nation and would crip. pie hopelessly ouri people. and their future."' It concludes by declaring that, Prussian Poles must be satisfied with reforms of the "Prussian Poliab policy." The whole trend of the German press shown that the German scheme is to persuadef the sllies into negotiations by the pretense of accepting their terms and then use the occasion by attempting to create dissension to Germany's advantage. Both designs are doomed to failure. t *suld 'ke' theiy 'e~ Te f:eeling -here If Washingtqn way that theore was no caseon. for any,undue hatq In the mtter, The rn~l~tetr ' _ situat~on,p o far as t~Ie allis un* (Couded e n Pege Tirteen, Volume sx FREEDOM SOU9HT rP FOR HUNGA,.RIANS Disturbances Am~ong Populace Guts Off Supplies for Vienna; Germans iHu!!grj. "CHIEF CULPRITS" SOUGHT BY HUNS Violent Campaigns Being Waged. by Provincial Socialists Againist Junkers and"War Lords'. LID IS TIGHTENED' AGAINSTTHE FLU Public Gatherings Will Not Be' Resumed for Two Weeks; I Preparintg Vaccine. i Geneva. Oct. 22.--(. N..5)--Dr. Welerle', the Iung~rian premier, hay arrilved at, Vienna to settle the quo"'tion of Ijungary's eeparatloh from Austria,' according to information from Vitenna today. Some Hungarian disturbances have stopped the exportation of woods to Vina ".The German population of 'Vlen,:i has been without bread tor severil days and the mayor of the city hv." appealed to limi'eror Charles to intervene.:t gradcent on London. Oct. '2.-(BY British Wire- Public gatherings w~ill not be. resumed cent of lees Press)-(l. N..)--Violent cam- for a conple of weeks. announced Dr. paigne against those who are called A. C. Seely, state health officer, today, mathe- "chief culprits" are being conducted in following a conference with 17r. George se prof- all German provincial 'Socialist news- Parrish, city he-alth officer, on the inof this papers. fluenza situation. combines The Volks Zeitung, organ of the FurtFrat attendance is he: ceforith to is house Nursmburg Socialists, says b e limited to the immediate family and follows: "The German people are searching pallbearers, as a result o~f a decision it of the for the guilty. Pan-Germans and reached by the health officer. of the Junkers are silent today. hut we do Av~n o h vnino pn dt and not forget that they were the great war A iene for theIprevnton o pa d under Inciters in Germany. that they remain ish h tt ift~e nza il oo b valalea the support of social and political re- thenstaeroa Ir orhelh.aordinyg to. ad to ire action, and that they are a danger to polns d arow iing wore detiobyhicr tion of future, healthy development of the Ocr- SeyI~ ars.tedtiso hc tentman empire..Pan-German policy has aro e opee the pre- gone bankrupt, but unfortunately it has Whil' reports from the state show'ed 13." led the German people -to. disaster. an in''ease in number of cases, no amend- "To the gallows wtth the guilty, who- deaths were reported. New cases are of taxes ever they be." as foil AWs. Iof the The 'Arbeiter Zeituag of Vienna urges Clad mas county, 8; C'oos county, iturn its German Socialists* to ferret out the 34; R(i eburg, 34: Grants Pass. 20: dayr of "chief culprits" and punish them with- 'slamat county, 21:; Lane county, 21' g rnturn out mercy. It says: Lion c'. unty, 8: Morrow county., u Mlons of '.When the German soldiers return Dallas, ~ Union county, I: The Dalle-s netofhome fronm the. trenches after four 7; Wheeler county, 10; McMinnville rx moet oaf yearsi of unparalleled suffering there Nw Â~ fvna ae otenme c h a r g e d. w i l l nef l u e n s a " e a s esr t oht heen u m b e r, me haivwl e mknne o h eol h f 139 i~re reported to the city health ~bared. aveled them to catastrophe. Thebueu timong'mal tow e, erman people will sweep away th bra i hs onn' al owere thdu~adgnrl aesitsyown Seven deaths have occurred at The duend.itgonerhsands.keit' onAuditoriuim hospital to date. The three beCO- hel~aocsche w sTagee~. Poet of Nu- last vietttn5 are: H. P. -Pox, 0le 'Knutson pled un- remburg, the 'first paper to "opnly ad- and Mar tha Iaka. A total of 1261 e msean- vocates the abdiciationi of the kaier, eases wit 'e recorded at The Auditorium.~ a40P ed now declares that the accession of the this more ng. Some of the patients have crown prince is entirely out of the already '*een discharged. Squestion. An urgent call for more nurss is Ayers Uome From PassTwo, ColumnH'u) retrne. Mnda nihtfrom San FIran. a xe- isc, werehe asbeen attending a Amtsterdam. Oct. 22--(1. t)1 - rr# ontaIofrec f od.ad m ttttratairs. neutl, Oomtmission)has aLgetty ne bere ll umeditely, pn t the tront to Investigatep. ry aM Berliy.. tle i London Paper% Approve' London, Oct. 22.--(U. I'. )-Universal approbatlion of President WIlson's reply to Austria IV reflected hi editorial conment in boileon newspape:94. I-lls altitude is generally praised es that of:L champion of opprease nsationatlilies. "It is a charter of liberty for the Jugo-Slav's anid a permanent bar to ('r many's eastern aspirations," said the' Mail1. ".The pressident's rcply iearfirrns Itie fritish attitude that thea sword cnuntot be sheathed until the rights of small rnlions have been made unassailable," 14 the opinion of the Tunes. "The E~xpress says: "It is at: affirm} - tion that the Austi'o-h-iungaria ii emnpire is out of date as far as geographical expression is concerned." "The reply is like a hammer blow and informs Austria she is too late to accept the 14 poInts." say's the ilgra ph. Ilhtngarlanis MyPem ot London, Qot' 22--A revolution in Fun ary is lmminent." telegraphs the Amsterdam eorreaponde:'t of the Dbaily Exprea#i. 'The Hungarian republicas are threatening to overthrow the throne and substitute a 'people's republic' uu.ddr Count Mieha,15' rolyii (long the Hunga-ritin opposition ")ider) if a gent1eral peace has yiet been) arranged withAn ltres days," Aiestt'Is to Send A iolber Noe Paris. Oct. 22.-(1:45 N m.)--The Ausstit'c-Hungarian 1 govi'n'flettason will.t001ly to, Pregidentt Wlieon'e note, mnaetmuch-aV he has not answered the questioti concerning, possible conditions for peace negotIAtions, declares ia spnloftlcialj dispatCh from Vlpima rncltied here today. *'__ I I Separsta PFe ae rcsrt verne VI tLonion,} GOct. 22. +-Thea:Cr f'~t pre"s today forecasts a eaavt# I taoe between $,ungary and tne e9t ' powete and America. " + 1 Â~ y '.? r t r wK t '1 j { F 11/20/2006 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS NEWSPAPER R M 0

Permissions: These pages are in the Public Domain and may be freely searched, displayed, and distributed. Please contact mpub-help@umich.edu for more information.

For more information, read Michigan Publishing's access and usage policy.

Published: Ann Arbor, Michigan: Michigan Publishing, University Library, University of Michigan.

Top of page Top of page

Original content created by the University of Michigan Center for the History of Medicine.
Document archive maintained by Michigan Publishing of the University of Michigan Library | Copyright statement.
For more information please contact mpub-help@umich.edu | Contact the Editors