New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 10, 1915, Page 4

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blity 010 Age Brings Happiness e Remedy Promotes h By Overcoming lency to Constipation. i | cing’ years impair the action ; ital organs. Old age should period of greatest happiness, d health is necessary. Con- should not be tolerated—it is e direct cause of ill health. che, belching, rowsiness after eating and [ymptoms of constipation can ily relieved by the use of axative compound sold in ar! nder the name of Dr, Cald- yrup Pepsin. Mr. J. H. Bris- 2 Geddes Ave, Ann Arbor, who is 83 years old. says “Dr- I's Syrup Pepsin is the best I ever used for constipation Iway 0 use when I feel the need of lever disappoints.” aldwell’'s Syrup Pepsin is a ative preparation, positive in s t, acting easily and naturally | griping or other pain or dis- For over a quarter of a cen- biliousness, | il have 2 bottle of it in the | MR. J. H. BRISTOL. 777 hold remedy in thousands of homes. Druggists everywhere sell it for fifty cents a bottle. A trial bottle of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin can be ob- tained, free of charge, by writing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 54 Washington has been the standard house- St., Monticello, Illinois. 5. WILL FACE COMPULSION IN ARMY, SAYS GARRISON e Form Will Have to Be Adopted if ontinental Army Plan Fails Declares Secretary in His Annual Report ington, Dec. 10.—Secretary bn declares in his annual report president, made public last that if the administration plan continental army fails, the States will face some form of Isory military service. vhat many men in official life terize as the most remarkable ever made by a secretary of r. Garrison passes quicklyover despread routine activities of Lr department and devotes prac- all his words to the subject of v preparedness, the need for he sums up by saying: long as right and wrong exist world there will be an inevi- conflict between them. The oers must be prepared to pi nd defend the right as against rong.” Unsparing in Argument. paring in his arguments in r to those who would have lcrease in the country’s military redness, Secretary Garrison de- that the American people must their responsibilities and meas- p to them and then goes on in lup the various arguments of the fition separately. ere are some who do not feal [to base their conduct upon a eration of facts or conclusion of n, because of their interpretation vine injunction,” he says. “They pt believe in resistance to physical ; and those whose consciences 0 convinced surrender life and at have cherish and love at the kt of the aggressor. This atti- concerns the individual, and him It ednnot be made the gen- rule of conduct under our form jgovernment without departing the basis upon which our go ent is founded. One is impelled to upon what proper considera- Have YOGUR § Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted by A. PINKUS EYESIGHT SPECIALIST. 30 Years’ Experience in » i, testing. Broken Duplicated. Eye tion there is based any distinction be- tween the right or nccessity or desir- ability of using mental force to repel error, moral force to repel evil, and physical force to repel wrong. 1t would scem, if reason were applied that in each instance the situation identical; and that if we should pr perly prepare our minds to he strons so that we can reject error, and our moral characters to be strong s we can reject evil, we should likewiso make our physical force strong in order that we may maintain the right as against those who would i: pose the wrong upon us. Charity of Vision. “There are others concerning whose clarity of vision we are not advised, and concerning whose soundness o? reason we are not informed, because the attitude which they take is ad- mittedly not based upon either vision or reason. They are those who pre- dict that war will never come to this country and assert that. therefore precautions with respect thereto are unwise and needless. Since wars have come upon nations from the earliest date of recorded history to this mo- ment, there is no basis of fact for such a position but an actual demonstra- tion of the mnon-existence of such basis. We were early warned that there would be wars and rumors of wars, and that nation would rise against nation and kingdom against kingdom and the end was not yet; an- that prediction has been fully veri- fied. There is no basis and no foun- dation to conclude that this great evil has been eliminated, and it there- fore must be treated as are all othor existing evils and must be prepared against. Surely, as between resting upon prediction or upon preparation, wisdom would not hesitate. “There are others among us are too intelligent and not to see the facts and to realize their significance, but who counsel in- action because they mistrust them- selves and the nation. Those to whom I now refer do not believe in the doctrine of non-resistance; they do not rest upon the prediction that an evid which has existed since the world began has ceased to exist and been abolished and should not there- fore be considered as one to be pre- pared agai they even point out our potentiality of force, but they counsel against any preparation there- who Satisfaction Guaranteed. ce, 306 Main St. ’Phone 570. of. They base their counsel upon the expressed fear that if we possess force, we will be induced to use it Get Ready for Christmas Nothing mcre suitabl our new SUITS, COATS, e or practicable than one of SKIRTS, DRESSES, WAISTS and PETTICOATS. These are made up very beautifully anc are very reasonable in price. ALL NECESSARY ALTERATIONS FREE ! Look over our Vests i $1.25 each. - J.RUBIN n Velvet and Woolens, 135 Main St., Barnes’ Block clear-sighted | when we should not. This position ignores the responsibilities which we o undertaken and which we must ntain at any self sacrifice. It is- s the fact that if nations which y force are likely to use it when | - should not, some nation which such force is likely to use it against us when it should not. Tt assumes that our nation may not be trusted with® force for fear it may t use it Eyes Blinded to Fact, “The eyes of many are blinded to | et and their minds closed to reason | by an abhorrence of what they term militarism,’ without any actual con- ception of just what this means or how it should affect the proper con- sideration of the subject. Those who really fear militarism, or more accu- wately stated, those who dread real | hould be the strongest. the preventive of mil- oy defeat rea- sonable preparcdn they leave the | country in a condition where the in- | itable result of defeat, humiliation ¢r acute apprehension will be hasty | and ill-advised provisions as to arma- ment far beyond anything which calm reason and wise provision would deem necessary. “There will be these who assert that { the proposed policy opposes the tradi- tons of the people and runs counter thereto. This is mere assertion; it is not the f A in thru the ey, The proposed policy actly in keeping with our tradi- tion “There will also be those who will cxpress regret that the policy hereto- fore pursued, of lack of proper mili- tary precautions, is to be departed from because it has been invaluable 2s an example to the rest of the world and we should not remedy the lack because we would then cease to be such an example. Tt should be ob- served first, in considering this point of view, that it entirely overlooks the { vital and imperative duty to ourselves which requires that we should protect and defend that which we cherish and hold dear. Furthermore, it overlooks the fact that although we have been just the example that they desire throughout the more than a century and a quarter of our existence, the results existing in the world today do not warrant the belief that our ex- ample had any beneficial effect. Decry Any Preparation. There arc some who deery taking ki precautions or making any prepa- rations of the military power of the nation because they say it will not prevent war but will provoke it. Men and nations must prepare to meet their responsibilities: if it is inadvisa- Ile to develop strength sufficient to repel wrong because such developed strength may be misused, human na- ture has indeed reached an impasse. Why should it be presumed that a just man or a just nation will cease to be just because it has the power to be unjust? We must either trust others or trust ourselves. Another stumbling block to some is the suggestion that no preparation should be made and no precaution should be taken because no one can foretell how much we may have to meett and what we will require to meet it. Here again the idea em- bodied in this suggestion would stay all human progre: There will be some who assert that the devastating effects and the horror produced by the war now being waged make it certain that war will be avoided for a long period of time after the close of the present war. They will argue that the exhaustion of resources and the recollection of the awful suffering will have the effect of deterring na- ticns from entering upon war. What sis is there or such belief? Certain- such basis cannot be found in his- r own or that of other na- Voice Usually Controls. “There Will be those who believe and assert that the time when war can be avoided by negotiation or ar- hitration or other like means.will be adanced if we refrain from adopting a proper military policy, but will be set back it we do so. Tt is difficult to comprehend on what b such a Telief can reasonably rest, and there- fore it is difficult to reason about it. 1t seems to rest upon the idea that if we are feeble and weak in action, we will be strong and persuasive in coun- cel; that by avowedly neglecting to prepare to protect our rights we will be the better able to secure their pro- tection by appeal, by arbitration, or, by argument. No one need have the slightest fear that our voice for peace- ful settlement of the quarrels of na- tions will receive any the less atten- tion because we stand for the rignt It Will Pay You to Telephone 884-2 for Your Meats and Groceries SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY Native Chickens 2Zc per 1b Roast Pork ......16c per Ib We also have a fresh sup- ply of Native Veal, Home Dressed Pork, High Grade Beef. A Great variety of Vegetables and - Groceries. Prices reasonable. H. BELKIN | 1th the fact [/ 401 WEST MAIN St. HRISTMAS CHECKS CASHED . HALLORAN'S Whether You Buy or Not—Bridg in Your Check CHRISTMAS G*™IFTS FOR MEN QN 'COOPER’S UNION SUITS $1.00, $1.50 and $2.00 GLASTONBURY UNDER- WEAR Medium and Heavyweight, $1.00 and $1.50. $1.00—PAJAMAS—$1.50 Good assortment of pat- terns. 50c—NIGHT ROBES—$1.00 Light and Heavyweight. COMBINATION SETS Suspenders and Garters. Garters and Arm Bands. Arm Bands and Gold Plate Pencil 25c¢, 50¢, 75¢, $1.00. SPECIAL SETS Collar Box, Tie, Cuff But- tons, Scarf Pins and Tie Holder, all included for 50c. and Belts, nicely bexed, 25¢, 50c, 75c¢,| Suspenders $1.00. GLOVES Silk Lined at Dents’ Dress Gloves HANDKERCHIEFS Plain er Initial. them both at 10c, and 50c. LION COLLARS A sensible thing to buy. All The best the new shapes. collar made 2 for 25c. 50c—Hockey Caps—50¢ Winter Caps, Fur Lined, 50c¢ and $1.00. $1.50—Fur Caps--$2.00 These will be scarce later on. $2.50—Silk Scarfs—$2.50 Pure Silk—Black, Gray, White,. An appropriate pres- ent. Raincoats Trousers «nd arc prepared to maintain any proper cost. On the contrary, the Voice of such a one is always listened {0 and usually controls. “If the determination arrived at by | those whose knowledge, skill, and perience makes their judgment prac- tically conclusive is accepted, we Hot Water for Sick Headaches Tells why everyone should drink hot water with phosphate in it before breakfast. — Headache of any kind, is caused by ! {j¢ auto-intoxication—which means self- poisoning. Liver and bowel called toxins, sucked into the blood, through the lymph ducts, excite the heart which pumps the blood so fast that it congests in the smaller ar- teries and veins of the head pro- ducing violent, throbbing pain and distress, called headache. ~ You be- come nervous, despondent, sick, fev- erish and miserable, your meals sour and almost nauseate you. Then you resort to acetanilide, aspirin or the bromides which temporarily relieve but do not rid the blood of these ir- ritating toxins. A glass of hot water with a tea- spoonful of limestone phosphate in it, drank before breakfast for awhile, will not only wash these poisons from your system and cure you of headache but will cleanse, purify ard freshen the entire alimentary canal Ask vour pharmacist for a quarter pound of limestone phosphate. It is inexpens| harmless as sugar, almost tasteless, except for a sourish twinge which is not unpleasant. It you aren’t feeling your best, tongue is coated or you wake up with bad taste, foul breath or have colds, indigestion, biliousness, constipation or sour, acid stomach, bhegin the phosphated hot water cure to rid your system of toxins and poisons. poisons | ! tem .. $1.50 We have 15¢, 25¢ it at| should have in this countr ! at least 500,000 men ready for instant | thing that is well worth whilc BATH ROBES AT $4.00, $4.25, $5.00, $5.50, $6.00, $6.50, $7.00 An unequa’led assor tment of the very n.west ideas in Bath Robes. ~ SMOKING JACKETS AT $4.00, $4.50, $5.00, $5.50 and $6.00 Beautiful shades in Blue, Gray, Brown. nicely trimmed. dies’ and Men. SWEATER COATS AT $2.50, $3.00, $3.50, $4.00, $5.00 and $6.00 With collar and with out—in Navy, Havana, Crimson, Gray, Green—-For La- present—Come hefore the EAGLE SILKCLOTH SHIRTS AT $2.00, $2.50 and $3.00 EACH If you look at one of these Shirts you will buy it. One of these Shirts in the new peach shade or white or blue will make a sensible and appropriate Christmas assortment is broken—they will prove ready sellers. An EAGLE SPORT in plain white—fancy m adras or percale, stiff or soft cuffs. best fitting shirt made. We defy competition on Eagle Shirts. EAGLE SHIRTS AT $1.00, $1.50 and $2.00 Eagle Shirts are the SHIRT will be appreciated by the young men. We have them now at $1.00 and $1 50. FLANNEL SHIRTS AT $1.00 and $1.50 You will admit that our $1.00 Flannei Shirt is the best on the market. We have them in olive and gray and blue. NOTA Always acceptable as a gift. Black and Tan. Ask those who wear notaseme. They will wear no other make. for Ladies also at 25¢, 50c and $1.00. TRAVELING BAGS $2.00, $2.50, $2.75, $3.00, $3.50, $4.00, $5.00, $6.00 and $7.00 The all leather bag is here. We have them ME HOSIERY, Nicely Boxed, 4 Pair Silk Lisle $1.00,.2 pairs Silk $ NECKWEAR 25¢, 50c, $1.00 We have without a doubt the finest Silk Knitted Four-in-Hand for 50c that can be purchased anywhere. Beautiful patterns, larg e assortment, popular price. We have also the celebrated Cheney Tie in all th e new colors. The large shape four-in-hand—See it be-fore you buy. JOS. M. HALLORAN (Incorporated) A force of response to a call in the event of war or the imminence of war. It is sure- iy not neces: to state the many 1easons why this force may not be supplied by a regular standing army of that number constantly under arms. There is no legal way that the national guard can, in time of peace, te governed, officered, or trained by the national government: and there is no legal way, excepting by volunteer- ing, that it can be made available to the nation in time of war to any zreater extent than specified in the constitution, which confessedly falis short of the necessary uses to which an army may have to be put in the cvent of a war with a foreign nation. National Force Necessary: “It becomes necessary, therefors to devise fome method of making available for the use of the nation in of war a national force in sup- plement of that part of the nation, to wit: the regular army, which is constantly under arms; a part of the army, in other words, to be raised and maintained by congress and gov- erned in all respects in accordance with its directions. When this sys- is divided and made operative, the nation would militarily be in this situation: It would have, the con- stitution provides, an army raised and . maintained by it, composed of a cer- tain number constantly under arms, | and a very much larger number def- and | if | initely identified in personnel, provid- cd with equipment and organization, possessed of some training and sub- ject to instant cail. The states would have the organized militia, developed with federal assistance to the highest practicable point of efficiency, avail- able for the purposes specified in the constitution, and so circumstanced that in the event of a war with a for- eign nation they could, by their own volition, immediately take their place with the other military force of the nation.” The report takes up in detail plan of military preparation already made public and endorsed by Presi- dent Wilson, and declares the Swiss and Australian systems are founded on governmental institutions and powers differing so radically from the Results are quick and it is claimed | those in the United States that any that those who continue to flush out the stomach, liver and bowels eve morning never have any headache or know a miserable moment. attempt to adapt either to American use would mean great delay, “Jnough has been said to demon- strate,” the secretary conclydes, “that Suits and 248 MAIN STREET | Overcoats- to get something done now ate under existing conditions. other course is to imagine a thing and accomplish nothing.” The vain best course is to recognize and oper- R Clothing On Credit Good Warm Winter Clothing for the Whole™ Family at Only ’ jll Week | Boston Clothing Store | 63 Church Street, New Britain, Conn. -

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