New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 28, 1916, Page 5

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o st o e e e e oSS pESerED . NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1916. PRESIDENT REPLIES |~ -Vei-4oste 10 CAPITAL CRITICS - Cashicer Almost Strength, _ e Ty huy-u : iy Says Gossip in Cloak Rooms in Congress Has Little Influence | vears 1 was a school for three or many | that this is one more link in the won- i teacher, then | derful chain of evidence proving that | Vinol, our delicious cod liver and iron | tonic has no equal to create strength | i Chas Ogle, Monrovia, Md., | Deputy Clerk in Iorederick Fob, v a short | Md., and for the last three years I s heer e | have been Cashier of the First N sch & e st before the 4 s . S o Bank. My nerves got in such clusion of the Gridiron Club dinner | = Tl \nd with! poor here Saturday night President Wilson (% GO0 ¢0 ponoer o iscuss Hie MRtintfcaljicinea il x discussed the duty of I 1 [fcia e States in connection with the war inj o P b e Europe, and inferentially answered | T purchased bottle, and found it zome of his He made What "y, ctly what I needed. It has not was taken to be a reply to the element "o bgi0q my nerves, but built in Congress which attempted 14ty )\ % 60th mentally and physically, | week to force him to modify his atli- |, g [ yant recommend it to any- tude in dealing with Germany in mr;m“. suffering as I did.” | vears was e County, Washington, con- ‘ bad of food, T was physical and wreck an o critics armed ship issue by saving bluntly | " S5 5 R R L Sinel that he preferred to know what the | qretanding that your money will be people throughout the country were | ‘tinbon B Bl MO0 felp you, The thinking rather than what N | Clark Brainerd Co., Liker-Tlege- said in Congressional cloakrooms. He | o, Diustists, | N6 Boitain made what amounted to an answer | conp. to the allegations that his course in the German submarine issuc was actuated by political expediency, de- claring that America should keep ous of the war at the sacrifice of cvery- thing except humanity and justice. It was a peace speech with a ring in it. It was an intimate tall, not intended for publication One of the two rules of the Gridiron Club is that with the un- if was D Co., quiet firesides all over the country than what they are talking about in the cloakrooms of Congres I would a great deal rather know what the men on the trains and by the way- side and in the shops and on the farms are thinking about and yearning for than hear any of the vociferous proc- “reporters are never presemt” to|lomations of poliey which it is =0 record the speeches of guests, an in- | SV to hear, and =o easy to read by ducement to freedom of language of | PIKINg up any scrap of printed paper. which most of those who have ad- | There is only one way to hear these dressed this organization of Washing- | thin&s, and that is constantly to go ton newspaper correspondents have | PACK to the mountains of American ac- talenl nisantase The t president’s tion. Those fountains arc not to speech created such an impression, | f0Und in any recently however, that arrangements were Bolrces made for its publication. In giving Senator Harding was saving out copies of the speech to the press | NOW that we ought to try when we the White House attached to it this | are 100,000,000 strong to act in the note: same simplicity of principle that our “So many requests from those at- | forefathers acted in when we were tending the dinner that the president’s | #.000,000 strong. I heard somebody be just » sa GIRLS ! WOMEN ! TAKE CASCARETS IF CONSTIPATED Liven Your Liver and Bowels and Clear Your Complexion, They | Don't Stay Headachy, Bilious | With Breath Bad | ch Sour. nd gic sure! Take Cascarets and enjoy the nicest, gentlest liver and Fowel cleansing you cver experienced. Cascarets will liven your liver and ciean your thirty feet of bowels without griping. You will wake up fecling grand. Your head will be clear, breath right, tongue clean, stomach sweet, eyes bright, step clas- tic and complexion rosy—they're won- Gerful. Get a 10-cent box now at any drug store. Mothers can safely give a whole Cascaret to children any time when cross, feverish, bilious, tongue coated or constipated—they are harm- discovered | less. YALE PROFESSOR IS FOR PREPAREDNESS address be published have been re- —1 do not know the exact statis- ceived at the White House that hoth | tics—that the present population of | the president and the Gridiron Club [the United States is 103,000,000. 1f | have consented to its publication.’ there are 3,000,000 thinking the same | President Wilson was cheered wild- | things that that originai 3,000,000 | Iy when he concluded his remarks at | thought the 100,000,000 will be saved | the dinner; the club members and | fOr an illustrious future. They were | sheir guests were on their feet wav- | ready to stake everything for an idea, ing napkins and cheering. So pro- | 2nd that idea was not expediency, but | Jonged was the demonstration that |Jjustice. And the infinite difficulty of | twice the president felt constrained | Public affairs, gentlemen, is not to | to rise and bow his acknowledg- | discover the signs of the heavens and ments. The greatest outburst of ap- | the direction of the wind, but to proval in the course of the speech | Sduare the things you do by the not | came when the president'declared that , Simple but complicated standards .,(J “America ought to keep out of the [Justice. Justice has nothing to do war” at the sacrifice of everything | With expedicncy. Justice has nothing | except her sense of humanity and jus- | to do with any temporary stand tice upon which the history and char- | Whatever. . It is rooted and ground- mcter of the country were founded. ed in the fundamental instincts of hu- | ~ The president’s address follows: manit Principle, Not Expediency. “I have very little to vy tonight, | except to express my warm aprecia- tion of the invariable courtesy of this club, and of the reception You have so generously accorded me. I find that L am seldom tempted to say anything nowadays unless somebody starts something and tonight nobody has started anything. “Your talk, Mr. Toastmaster, has | been a great deal about candidacy for | the presidency. It is not a new feel- ing on my part, but one which T en- tertain with a greater intensity than | rd | is America keep out of this | She out of this war at the sacrifice of everything ex- | cept this single thing upon which her | character and history arc foundea, | her sense of humanity and justiec If she sacrifices that she has ceased to be America: she has ceased to tertain and love the traditions which have proud to be Americans; and when we go about | seeking safety at the expense of hu- | manity, then I for one will believe that I have alwavs been mistaken | in what T have conceived to be the | f&rmerly, that a man who seeks the | spirit of American history, | presidency of the United States for | “You never can tell your direction | enything that it will bring to him is | .y.ent by long measurements. You | an audacious fool. The responsibili- | ties of the office ought to sober a | CANNOt establish man even before be approaches it. | VoW have got to have three : One of the difficulties of the office | {0 know whether they ialent reldom appreciated, T dare say, Is that | With anvthing, and the longer your | 1t is very difficult to think while so | !Ine the more certain your measure- | many people are talking, and par. | Ments. There is only one way in | ticularly while so many people are | Which to determine how the future of | talking in a way that obscures coun. | the United States is going to be pro- | ML Brd fx il ot O Somi jected and that is by looking back and | “The point in national affairs, gen- | S€in& which way the lines ran which tlemen, never lies along the lines of led up to the present moment of pow- expediency. It always rests in the er and of opportunity. There is no field of principle. The United States | 40Ubt about that. was not founded upon any principle | of expediency: it was founded upon a profound principle of human lib- erty and of humanity, and whenever it bases its policy upon any other foundations than those it builds the sand and not upon solid roc “Tt seems to me that the most lightening thing a man can is suggested by something which the vice president said tonight. He com- plained that he found men, who, when their attention was called to the sf¥ns of Spring. did not see the blue heaven, did not see the movement of the free clouds. did not think of the great spaces of the quiet continent, but thought only of some immediate | and pressing piece of business, Tt | seems to me that if you do not think of the things that lie bevond and away from and disconnected from this [ scene in which we attempt to think and conclude, you will inevitably be led astray. Cloakroom Gossips. ought to war, ought to keep on- to made us a line by two posts | at least, | are “There is no question what the roll | The roll the names of their conduct There is no one clse the roster, there is no one else whose name we care to remember when we measure things upon a na- | tional scale. And I wish that when- ever an impulse of impatience comes | upon whenever an impulse to sct- tle a thing some short way tempts us, { we might close the down some old stories what | American idealists and statesmen did in the past and sound in the authen- tic voice of American tradition “Then we shall what of the because know by of honor in America | consists of have squared idenls of duty. is. of | honor | who men | by o | upon en- | do door and take of be certain the lines future are, we | shall we are steering the lines of the past | no temporary convenience, no tempor- ary expediency will lead us either be rash or to be cowardly. | Ilvf‘ just much ashamed to “T would a great deal rather know | as I would to be a coward what they are talking about around | self-respecting. Valor is cir e ————————————\] when it withholds all small implications and ments and waits for the great oppor- tunity when the sword will flash as i it carried the light of heaven upon its blade.’ would be rash Valor as to is mspect right to itself from entangie lor strikes only strike. Va is HAVE COLOR IN YOUR GHEEKS Be Better Looking—Take Olive Tablets Al The World of Kinds of Good Reading. of the heen of men in If your skin s yellow—complexion pallid—tongue coated — appetite poor— yOou have a bad tasie in your mouth—a lazy, no-good feeling—you should take Olive Tablets. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets— sub- stitute for calomel—were prepared by D@ Edwards after 17 years of study his patients. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets are a pur 1y vegetable compound mixed with olive | oil. You will know them by their olive color. If you want a clear, pink skin, bright eyes, no_pimples, a fecling of buovancy like ‘childhood days, you must get at the cause, Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets act on the development Ma many Sunday awzine has expressions praise from distinguished life every walk of It is a unigue production, cov- ering all phases of iitersture from the local human document to the cou- tributions of men whose names are known all over the world. “Williav: is still pursuing his daily duties in Wall street and Philo Grubb, that eminent “deteckative,” is still detect liver and bowels like calomel—yet have no | 15: With its Comic supplement and dangerous after effects, splendid Gravure section, its ‘Fun’ They start the bile and overcome con- | and bright Metropolitan section, to- #Higation. That's why millions of boxes | gether with t e t s a®sold annually at 10c and 53¢ per box. | Scoicr With the most complete ne Al druggists. section, the Sunday World should Take one or two nightly and note the | in every household. Order early from pleasing results. your newsdealer.—advt. . The Olive Tablet Company, Columbus, O« | Preparedness wa Astoria, | as | to | the subject | Scoffs at Ford, Meeti Manufac- turers and Gatherings of Women's Clubs in His Sunday Sermon. New Haven, Feb. 28 8 defended yesterday by Dean Charles R. Brown, of the Yale Divinity school, in a sermon to Yale students. Dean Brown defended the work of the Yale battery and other college organizations which arc prepared for possible hostilities “Peace can be obtained hy the proper method.” he said, “which is not Henry Ford's futile and unprac- ticable manner, nor congregation of manufacturers at the Waldc nor women’s club organi: pompous and impressive Tilitary a tions in masses.” Peace, according come only through educating mes hearts to the principles of peace, a longer and more arduous process, but one more prolific in the long run of results, Building navies as insurance he opposed, and cited of the countri navies bhein Italy and The policy ward Japan i We have failed to gentlemen, he tolerated more f the Pacific than we dured from her, and sibility of conflict between nations he added. RAY dent of 1889 to to his view, can T stances large war, Do ieecin Germa the U all he think the Japanese Japan has aggressions in could have en- there is no the of nite treat suid om pOs- two DI MOND DEAD. Pr Wesleyan I'rom 1908. 28.—~The Rev. Was Middletown, Feb. Dr. Bradford Raymond, president of Wesleyan university from 1889 until 1908, died at his home here yes day from hardening of the arteries, in his seventicth yeat. He had at- tended church in the morning and his death occurred a few hours after- ward. Dr. Raymond was born in Stam- ford and served in the Civil war, after which he studied at Hamline uni- versity, Minnesota; Lawrence uni- versity, Wisconsin; Boston university, and Northwestern university, from which he obtained his degree of D. D. Later Dr. Raymond obtained degrees from Yale and Lawrence univer: 3 He was president of Lawrence uni- versity for years before becoming president of Wesleyan university, from which place he resigned in 1908 to become professor of ethics and Biblical literature in the university 15-YEAR-OLD BRIDE IS HELD FOR MURDER or- We shall know that | Wife of Senator Culberson’s Nephew Admits Slayig Hotel Man to Avenge Tier Honor. Forth Katherinc years old, bride of nephew of United terson, of Texas, w released yeste day with her hushand, after they hud given 32,500 boil each to answer | charges of murder filed against them. { The police sajd Mrs, Harrison had { confessed that she shot und killed W. | . Warren, asserting that he huad wronged her before her marriage Warren's body found riddlcd | with bullets at the side of u country | road near here on December 22, 1915, | There were few clews to the identity of his slayer. Yesterday an : [ wis made in the case. er the po- {lice announced that Alrs. Harrison. 1o | Clear the suspected man, had adni ted in a signed statement that she wi responsible for Warren's death Mrs. Harison invited Warren into er automobile, introduced him to her | husband drove into the country, the | police statement said. At an isolated spot, according to the statement, she asked Warren to get out and see if a tire was flat. When he walked around the car, she shot him, accord- ing to the alleged confession. Worth, Vance Tex., I Harrison eb, 25.—Mrs. fifteen Charles Harriso States Senator Cul- was | intervention ia warm friend of Ielix Diaz s speaks \ | TO RE-ARREST SIEGEL peace | CANADA ACCUSED; MAY BE WITHDRAWN U. S. Consul ifi ieran(Jruz Named in Political Scandal Mexico, Teb. 2 indications that W. Canada at Vera the Guadala jara, There are strong of William sul the recall the American hé cc for by sovernment. Mr. has been consul for more than eighteen yea It is charged by the de facto gov- ernment that he has tried to force by supplying misleading ind false information to the United States. It is known Cruz, will constitutionalist Canada asked that Canada has nd heen the made that the advantage of this, consul medium government proof of the with the sup- has been taking the as the Carranza What alleged (o he complicity of Canada porters of Diaz was obtained by the capture of Mrs. Andrea Rodriguez, | who is said to have been in the pay of Canada (o secure information. Mrs. Rodriguez and her assistants, it is said, made verbal and written re- ports to Canada. When arrested M Rodriguez said she was acting under the direct instructions of Canada and had been instructed to gather all the information possible that could be used against the constitutionalists and that might be of value to the Felicis- tas, Canada’s strong personal friend- ship for Senor Dehesa, governor of the state of Vera Cruz under Presi- dent Porfirio Diaz, is well known in city. Eriction With § The activities of Canada against Carranza took on new strength upon the arrival of Special Agent John R silliman, who was sent by the United States government to be mnear Car- ranza. Friction developed between the two, Canada objecting to Silli- man’s being placed over his official head. Upon many occasions Canada charged that the governor of the state of Vera Cruz, Candido Aguilar, had mined the consulate with dyna- mite and that the consulate. would be blown up in order to kill him. His continued statements that the Car ranza officials had ordered his execu- tion were not taken seriously In view of the strained relations between the United States and tain of the Buropean powers the fact that the American vice consul at Vera Cruz is a German-—he hardly Iinglish-—has caused comment many of the Ameri- husiness to transact char TPelicistas, have used to attack e £ is lliman. ad cer- mong a great ans who have the consulate, AS HE QUITS PRISON | | | | | Former New York Banker Charged Under Remaining ments, District Attorney Says. Feb. 28.—District Attor- ney Swann will fgorward bench war- rants today to District Attorne: Wheeler of Monroe county for the ar- rest of Henry Siegel, who will be re- leased from the county penitentiary there on March 1. The warrants were signed by Judge Wadhams, in General Sessions and are based on the twelve remaining indictments against Siegel on file in *his county. District At- terney Swann requests that Siegel be held in $25,000 baii For many weeks committee of depositors of the hank have been begging the district attorney to bring Siegel to trial on some of the | remaining indictments. Inasmuch as Siegel obtained a change of venue on the indictment on which he wus tried in Monrce county, it atter of doubt whether the remaining indict- nents also were not automatically shifted to that county. P WHY CHILLY WEATHER BRINGS RHEUMATISM ; New York, the Siegel pores are closed and uric acid remains in Blood. | Says skin Rheumatism is no respecter of age, | If not the most | aftlictions it is | Those sub- | cat less possible. sex, color or rank dangerous of human one of the most painful. jeet to rehumatism should meat, unless as warmly as avoid any undue exposure and, above all, drink lots of pure water. Rheumatism used by which is generated in the absorbed into the blood. function of the kidneys acid from the blood and the urine; the of also a means freeing the blood of this impurity In damp and chilly, cold weather the skin pores ave closed the kidneys to do doubie {hey become weak and slug- fail to climinate this uric keeps accumulating and | circulating through the system, ! cventually settling in the joints and muscles causing stiffness, soreness and | pain called rheumatism. At the first twinge of rheumatism get from any pharmacy about four ounces of Jad Salts; put a tablespoon in a glass of water and drink he- fore brealkfast cach morning for a weelk. This is said to eliminate uric acid stimulating the kidneys to normal action, thus ridding the blood | of these impurities, | Jad Salts is inexpensive, harmles: and is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia and is used with excellent results by thousands of folk who are subpect to rheumatism. Here you have a pleas- ant, cffervescent lithia-water drink which overcomes uric acid and is beneficial to your kidneys well uric acid bowels and | It is the to filter this cast it out in the skin are | i cl pores of thus foreir work, gish and acid which by as | fu1 | publican. Quality Millinery We Vacate Our Present Showrooms The carpenters are now tearing out our fixture WE MUST MAKE ROOM Our entire stock has heen marked at prices so that you can purchase your earl hat at a WONDERFUL SAVING ’ S We show only Hats that are right up-to-the-minute in style and in quality in large assortment of shapes and colors. TRIMMED and UNTRIMMED Ready to Wear and Sport Hats OUR ASSORTMENT IS LARGER THAN MOST STORES LARGER CITIES AND OUR VALUES BETTER. ATTEND THIS SALE AND SAVE MONEY EASTERN MILLINERY GO. 183 MAIN STREET, NEW BRITAIN Millinery Headquarters ~ Hats Trimmed Free HOW IN THH o Up Stairs ¥XRL A. CARLEOI? - | VON HAESELER, AGED ON SAFETY BOARD | GENERAL, AIDS PRINCE | MONSTER TRIPLANES | BOUGHT BY BRITA Mayor Quigley Completes New Board Ten Machines Wil Travel Se# five Miles an Hour and Wil With Another Eleventh Hour Carry Eight Men Each. Appointment. Boston Ten triplanes will super-dreadnoughts of thi have been ordered by the British the > eb, 2§ Following his L cring whether a fore making an policy of first man would serve be- appointment, Mavor | Quigley late Saturday afternoon | named the third member of his new safety board. The appointee is Carl! A. Carlson, said to be an old factory | friend of His Honor. '~ Mr. Carlson lives at 31 Dwight street and is em- | in the scales department Frary & Clark. He is mar- has two children, both He is prominently identi- | Swedish Republican ! G. T., and 1 He Swed- | discor - | he ernment f{rom Curtiss for fighting “Flying,” a compg Zeppelins, according publication devoted aviation, The machines will_be larger # use, and their plafies tower high. With a spread of 138 to the wings and a body 68 feet I each machine will have little diffie: in supporting its full weight, i cquipped, of 21,000 pounds. With 4 weight its speed will be sevent miles an The machine, weight 12,000 cight men, two and a gasoline, oil' and a dead 3,000 pounds of hombs. With a lig] er load the triplane can make miles an hour and have a radius ployed at any now in Landers ind hters with the Norden Swedish vied Lodge, 1. O other organizations. also local correspondent of the ish paper, “Scandinavian.” Mr. Carlson’s appointment will mean the immediate retirement of Commissioner A. F. Maznell, who now that the crisis is passed, will | again devote himself exclusively (o | his clerkship duties. He will be in a position to give the board invaluable ! advice as he alone of the organization 50 mi Four 250-horsepower B has any real knowledge of the work- | . B tors will furnish pcwer for two # ings of the safety hoard. | : tor propellers and one pusher. Comments on the new appointment climbing power will be unusual, e are of varving character. Those ling it soon to reach 10,000 ESSSEy close to the mayvor feel that he has height of the night-raiding Zeppe} acted shrewdly in appointing Mr. Carl- There will be a .SGSFTSENE. son, as only last week the Swedish ! screw for use when the machifgiy Republican Club gave His Honor an the water. The ensined Wi unqualified endorsement and in grate- | starting and the maching Sy recognition the mayor has re- | heavily armoted. Each AN, turned the compliment by naming al carry & 3% inch rapid fiow U man representative the Scandi- | pedoes of & hew kinc. AL navian interests in the city It is ex- | i 9005 euch pleted the new hoard will get togeth- | er this week for formal B. G. Babcock appoirted will be chairman. Irank J will represent the democrats Carlson, the republic the is hour and motor, It will eal half tons weight hull pounds is “Grand Old Man of the Army” is the title frequently conferred German on Field Marshal Count von Haeseler, chief adviser of to the German crown | (i cost wttac) prince in the campaign and : | against Verdun He veteran tion. s ook, |hero of the Franco-Prussian war TSR which > s ed on Moran { 1$T0-1. in vhich he serv i M. | St ne Iah. | heroes, Prince | frontier territory cas ! familiar ground to Co | as he commander of Sixteenth | ters at MANY MOTORISTS HERE, According record in & hands of the police, there are 349 roj automobiles in th 100 con mercial cars and there arc ten motol cycles owned here Three of the are equipped with side cars. . is a organiz; last to the Germany's natic IFrederizk Charles. | Verdun | von Haescler | | of of ang ns. M, ; is | istered pleasure cock new chairman, is i ity Busifiosg tiven Sk formeriy the army Metz was corps, with head jnar- PETERSON HONORED AT Y. P. CONVENTION Local Man Elected Treasurer at Swed- I Convention of Bethany Church Societies In This City. The annual convention of the Swed- | ish Congregational Young ! societies of Bethany churche: Con- | necticut and Springfield, Mass., was held at the local church Saturday evening and yesterday. Practically all the churches in the society were rep- | resented by delegates. The tion opened Saturday evening, a business held G. IZ. Pihl, who was president the past vear presided. Officers the ensuing were elected as People’s conven when Rev. | during for | meeting was year lows WESTERN UNION 3 Sets the Miles at Naught A business campaign Naugatuck of Day Letters and s e A e Night Letters will ‘ quickly prove dis- tance an imaginary barrier and clock time only a comparison. THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO. President—Rev Palmgren Hartford Viee President Springfield Secretary——(arl por Vice Secretary John Nelson . Johnson, Bridge- —Rev. J. Sahlin, The next convention will he in Hartford' in February, 1917. Three | services were held yesterday, at which addresses were delivered by Rev. G. K. Pihl, Rev. John Nelson of Springfield, Rev I, Olson of Cambridge, Mass., Rev. G. W. Palm gren of Hartford and Rev. A. L. An- | derson of South Manchester. lections were rendered by Miss Thyherg of Springfleld and a quartet from Hartford held K. Olga male

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