New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 2, 1916, Page 3

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ANEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, MARCH 2, 1916. 7 *Ifl][]SEVELT[]UTA []F Skzl)/t;i ?ref;zratory Gun ?Idcing smm' ILLINOIS PRlMARIES| Aided Germans in Verdun Attacks m-aum & Boston | GOODS | Republicans at Chicago | & , ‘ et L e = 3 Are Making Their Ap-|, v,k s erommers | 020 0 >0 - Twice-Told Tales of Colonel Theodore Roosevelt, who be- | - pearance HERE e st e s g e oo sl | New Dress Cottons I | they would be able to place his name | Two very atractive items are i o L e : ' . 3 o e primars b e s | S e e ‘ Latest Arrivals at Our Popular Dept. states as a candidate for the repub- | % R 3 . # % 7 : o SILK STRIPE MADRAS ilwan nomination as president, and | ot s S W i i i v st We told you recently about many of our new dress cottons. | thus make him a prominent figure in | - ; e - . Others have arrived of which you will want to know. 32 inch i . es wide a pre-convention campalgn, received | IMPORTED WOVEN VOILES (from France) at 45c yard. in a variety of colorings |a decided shock yesterday when it | N el e . L . : PO - New check effects with exquisite combinations of color in dotted at 35¢ a yard. | became known that a letter had been | Tl o % ooy N g Lo : effects. sent to the secretary of state at % 73 # L Foa i 2 And very, very fine : i for rich appearance. 42 inches. 75c a yard. r 'S | Springfield, I1l, by John W. McGrath, £y o, ; i B i o o and notable | the colonel's secretary, announcing : ; ; : : : i that Roosevelt's name must not ap- 2 oK g 3 stripes. 36 inch 29¢ a yard. in plain and cluster strip=s : e ; o : : . L hoiNG i a e bt B 5 2 = st P33, | pear on the primary ballo there. | 2 : % g 5 : B i Rose printed SILK ORGANDIES, unusual, with strong claims 36 inches wide. | Mr. McGrath had been authorized to 2 : p ¥ % 6 ; Py % 2 g ide. 50c a yard = | act in such matters before the colonel | | : . ? i G ¥ ? o ; tofadniration A3 finch el cer s at 58¢ a yard. iled on his sea journey. * Politicians working for a reunion ; | of forces against Wilson, who have ! | % ¥ . & Spa s : | s the Roosevelt movement, and Lave ' g b o5 kg - FANCIES feared a bitter pre-convention squab- | s i : . ¢ : g s T i ble. especially after the indorsement : » . e 4 » P - ke S : : , : ; : . ' 3 3 ! i ac .r are all manner of cotton dress goods Mercerized Stripes, 27 inches | of the colonel in Massachusetts by ex- | ’ . N 0 e et e e o ik vers i HT < Congressman Gardner (republican) i i ; . : % i .y sHnants IENEL Al e at show moeky 52 ? ; ? UGIN. S. 8 engths that show many inex: wide and othe read in the action now o G 5 " y ()r.l(,x:\_lj\l, x.1\)liAuIic‘1;L\("s. plendi g | tak 3 o 9 s i . ¢ P S Gk - : G pensive pos: s, at 15¢ a yard. I"' Ken by colonst Hoosevell Rnotgan) o e 5 . s ; - * e Make your selection early Tuesday morning. TISSUES. With graduated satin stripes effort to eliminate himself finally from ! the nomination, but a determined ef | fort to prevent as far as it lay in his power, factional fights in the repub- LET US SHOW THEM TO | tican party over the election of dei | gates, YOU They pointed out that the colonel | could scarcely hope to win enougzh | g 4 > ' A B i i » S ‘ | delegates to the republican conven- | ;&* 4 % P s s i fars B 3 ® tion in such factional fights to obtain s P w5 e ek 2 : the nomination, and that a bitter i = o 5 » contest for delegates could only serve | . s [ to disrupt the republican ranks and CERMANS PLRC/;I.G HEAVY GFUN'& OB - TT e e : e -A . ~ 2 LOR ATTACK O VEROUN Musical Instruments Are very-dainty leave a situation at Chicago, on June 7, when the republican and progres- | sive national conventions meet, which ! would have the effect of continuing on the long battle frontier. = Railroad ; activity in order to hinder as much as lines were built for the shifting of | possible spying by the enemy’s fliers. our New Fasy Term Payment. : n troversy of 1912 when Roosevelt, out | troops and the rapid and effective | The picture shows the placing of We have g full stock of records and machines in our demons l'in the open, fought for the nomina- movement of artillery. For several | heavy German artil (seen in the strating room. Come in and hear tHis great re-creation of music on tion against ex-President Taft. strengthened their lines at this point, | days before the opening of the at- background) in the rolling country these machines. No needles tc change, diamond point lasts fors as indeed they did at every other point | tack German air men augmented their | before the forts defending Verdun. ever. Play Victor and Columbia records with a true tone. Let us put on one of these musical wonders into your home on the breach brought about by the con- | For months before the onslaught against Verdun the German generals Chicago Must Be the Test. | | “The test must come at Chicago - — — - - = = - ST said one of these men, “and a fac- ' H. S. MARINE CORPS | tional fight over the naming of dele- | 7 Ro0sevelt will be accepted despite that has come over the green island Atlanta Ga., March 2—The students | goteq ot this time could only mean | SUCh efforts as may be de by the since the rule of democracy d [ L] Qf one of the ‘high sohoplsiIni tnis ol GRS SOREE OB MR, o b Ticanold. suaral Tanders) wiho ave been substituted for that of : b city signified willingness to take UD | of forces which might prove dis- SO Ditterly obposed to Roosevelt be- { lism. Try Us for Service. Open Monday and Saturday Nigh Military, training voluntarily, at 2 |agtrous to the efforts to agree upon C3use of the break in 191 Third—The Trish in Ire t CHESTNUT JU AROUND THE CORNER: preparedness discussion recently, and | ; candigate whom republicans and It was predicted vesterday that the IRI H [; NVENTI not contract breake Ever since | ipformed, Governor B. N. Harris, of | rogressives may support. If Colonel . More radical followers of Roosevelt, YConnell's day they have fought for | exBAASSORMINEEMNILEY I AP ST : Georgia, who spoke at the meeting, | Roosevelt's close advisers, and they V1O are seeking to get his name cn home rule, (first as “Repeal of the - that it was their desire to train as re- | are mot the oncs responsibie for thess (he Drimary ballots while he is oat == Union,”) Now that it is granted | 7 ey Y € serves for the United States Marine | petitions, hope to obtain his nomina- ©f the country, will accept this last | them, they are keeping their part of “So he wrote o us. We weres Corps. If the school authorities | tion. they kmow the best chinee js letter as final and turn their efforts to- D]‘flf[s[flfln ()I Call Exp()sed, P]‘O- the contract. They have sent 142,000 | glad to hear from him and the m sanction the movement, the Atlanta |when the delegates assemble at Chi- Ward forwarding his candidacy of their sons, voluntarily and with- ing followed. Marine. High school.will -be the first | cago and the question of American- WOrking more quietly within the re- paganda Game IS Clfll]]lefl out “force, starvation, or deceit,” to “Father will make his home in the United States. The United | jsm and the nation’'s welfare is Publican ranks the front, and are adding to that | mother and me at my home, N@ Marine Corps has no reserv brought forward as the issue of which — N force at the rate of 1,000 a week | Was nfi((ln] .\\'nnv)u-, Father ‘m and, in time of war, could have the | all must agree. 3 0 Fourth—That Irish in Ireland will happy, but he wishes to avoid ng E tance of only one company of | “They know also that the very EXILES EXPOSED TO | New York, March The execu- | not soon forget the fate of Belgium ! { paper notoriety.” commitice of the American |nor their centuries-old friendship for marine militia from Massachusetts. thing that can be done by those - - B = The students are delighted at the|who really have a reunion of forces | TURKISH BRIGANDS societies which include the New |that distracted country and France, : _ een it Some ot our tong-aisance | LEIt TWenty-Three Years Ago and prospect of training for “soldiers and sart, is to start back-biting and —_— York Municipal council of the United |y 1o oo Bl s ilors too.” { wrangling and bitter contests \\'nh‘ Ivish league of America, with thirty- | 1'05l! Im‘:)mh on this sxd-;, of the At- Five Out of Six Are in 1 3 ing fnath Tl " ¢ i o o B 5 s antis *hoose t i ¥ & = T {the colonel seeking the nomination | Thousands of Wounded Lying eight branches in the metropolitan | “BUC ¢ 0 ignore them Lost HIS Mmd RO GOTHAM'S NEW MILLIONATRH ‘ i i There were addresses rebuking the oper il i district; the Ancient Order of Hiber- y 2 : Tu BELIEVE PM" | e i e PR R, DRSS Streets and Dead Ave Piled in Mans, Board of Erin, whieh is in | SUemPL of Trish extremists to malk i & New York, March 2.—Five of | foll amnd the necolnt hore of & ldtir P 5 ey Pt the American public believe that all sy cionality MU : A Vaee Wi direct affiliation with the Hibernians caligoublicabelio iy et e o IYork's six méwED 3 from the Illinois secretary of state : 3 in Ireland, the president of which is ‘lf"iq’(;::: \'\‘,'m(;;',:e;};a_l‘f’f O CRmroRd, SGnn Gt g announcing that a number of the| New York, March Dr. Samuel | Joseph Devlin, M. P., and many oth- [ A TE0CEN TIR0PS © S nieenel | W osttofestabiionm yeeltiin s ferowine ship interests in private ba ::i“l:m?:];clfy::,e‘;)dsnl:r)riie (':x:etl;ae”;:‘irail!"\-' Dutton, secretary of the Americ: er Irish benevolent societies, held a |10 3"} o Patrick ‘,,1;,"1 Rl Tanes They are Henry P. Dall f ) et et the sorublioantnomination:|| Committeestor¥atmeninnfand sy mesting at the Waldort yesterday - | ypipicter fo Chile; Dr, Jolu G. Covle; |3 and William H. Porter of J. P. 8 was prescribed and used with marvel- = b¢ i s overal Gep. | fSTR0ON to protest against the pro- |n . giqent of the Ireland Publishing Frederick C. Prange said this to his | oon & (o.; Jacob H- Schiff of K ous results by Dr. Levi Minard in his The reply was emphatic and un- elief, has received from several Ger-|{ ;5504 convention which has been an- side e 4 I: gan L L i D, 5 : wife and to his children, Aletta and y s Speyre of 5 i i equivocal. The colonel would under | man nurses, who are i Retare Al : + | company, and Dennis J. Hanlon, No- ol 5 h! b e Loeb & Co.; James Speyre of Sps private pra‘ctlce, uf;r SOI;{E, strained, 1 a s, o are in the Armen-{nounced as a conference of the men | o0 Fpll oty o e B it | Charles. When he said it he had a & Co.. and Willlam onion ol lame muscles, sf neck, : no consideration give his consent (o | .= o . ER 2 5 g SRt st ) . < RO : me t € lumbago, B O fiae muat e |an section of Murkey, lstte con- | and women of !\‘c ikt of Hibernians, Board of Erin. £00d business here and played an ac- | .. & 10mon & Co. sciatica, rheumatic pains, backache, o & s S America, and which will be held tive part in local politics. stiff joints, tired, aching, burning, itch- taken off lmmedia { s o | Hotel Astor on aturday E He said it twenty-three vears ago. ! A Even more significant of the at- | the outrages committed by the Turks| gunday i o P Roven 1 : ] thg feet, and sprains. It gives instant & ; : ! Sunday in commemoration of Robe i e o o healing rolief: is creamy, antiseptic, titude the colonel has taken was in-|on. Dr. Dutton said fthat, while he|Emmet's birthday. : months following his departure, vain- free from injurious drugs and 1stain- lf";"mfl“““ that similar letters would | could not male public the names of | Joseph P. Brennan, president of ly awaited letters from him It ws less to flesh and clothing. Surely try sent to the secretary of state in | the nurses, he was in a position per-|the County Westmeath Men's asso- 5 S Ao Sdaaedl] this wonderful liniment and see how . any other SM“:" “"l:h*‘ "‘]’““ll y if :‘:’ | sonally to vouch for their trustworthi- | ciation, presided. John J. O'Connell "‘; L(‘f:’gi‘:“"\re‘]tr“;h:t :;:ez:;e;:‘]ie‘g‘::(‘;“} or. land the sp[\;r\r:}h ;)\1; .1’);? “]%‘:[ ot quickly it brings soothing relief. It movement to get the colonel in tho | pes © 7 |or the Limerick Men's association, of thelr circle One of thers. Baward | Puny is John D. Rookteller, whg never disappoints. Get a bottle today ' race openly was prosecuted. s | There are several gommunications. | Chairman of the committee on reso- gf thelr circle One of them, Bdward | 1" trort_even to reduces tAu s oy drieeist course will be followed in Massachu- | One of these says in part: " lutions, reported that nis committee thoughts to otner things and was|ment of $5,000,000 tentatively, il S il — | setts, where the movement has been | «Just now I am coming back from | had drawn up a resolution to be is- eiedin R e against him last fall, | started word is received by the |, ride on horseback through ———— | sued to the American people, and % S 3 Many of the most intense body pains aires became so because of parts are of local origin and can be quickly relieved and overcome by a single ap- plication of Minard’s liniment, which When I get settled 1'll send for Each of these men is on the assessment rolls as taxable $1,000,000 of personal property. sixth of the new names to aph s year is George Fhret, the b | forming reports from other sources of Daughter Weds; Son a Den AFRAID OF WORK. | colonel’s secretary, that his name is | plain where thousands of exiles are|that a statement had been prepared. FI‘GHG]] Sa or Describes Slflll h_ | to Dbe placed on the ballot. Jiven | jying on fields and streets without any | The statement.denounced the motives DD Miss Aletta waited two years and | ] a ru nc I |s | though laws are changed to make it | ghelter, exposed to the power of any | which prompted the ‘‘call” for the then became the wife of Henry ]J Strong Man Takes Poison in Pre | unnecessary for the candidate SO | kind of brigands. I found men and | conference of the Irish men and EG tv d Flick, a photographer. Charles, his [ named to give his consent the colonel | \omen badly wounded, their bodies|women of the United States to be a . | will strive in every way to hold his | cut open and with broken skulls or in | held in the Astor on Emmet's birth- ing quest for information, and studied | waterbury, March 2.—After A“d mhe!’ mstmss" '“-"-Da | followers in the republican ranks in | ; terrible condition through stabs with | day. 1t stated that the conference barie. Mareh 2 (Delaved) e | GERUStTY so assiduously that he 15| iaking of a hearty meal lnst night | check. | a knife. Fortunately I was provided | had not the sanction of the United aris, March 2-—(Delayed)—"We | now one of Stamford's leading Prac- | pian stein, aged 30 years, went to a 2 Iy The letter to the secretary of state ; with clothes, so T could change their | Irish league of America; that not a | were in front fine trench on the | titioners. tena. | room and swallowed the contents an ung fimsns 1ig inplllinclescamne a great relief 10 | ploody things and then bring them to | member of the Irish parliamentary | sjope of Cote Du Poivre,” said a Meantwhile. the search had extend- | (®0% TU0 TN o ieon and " i many political leaders, republicans | the next inn, where they were nursed. | party or the name of an officer or | o\ qeq sapper who has returned to | @4 to Denver. Minneapolis and other|q ;3 ge Stein was. ansiel m Lmonme jand progre working for a re- “Many of them were so exhausted |leader of the United Irish league of . s g western points. s was fruitless Although a powerfully built man, ' | union, who have been endeavoring to | from the enormous loss of blood that | America appeared in the lists of & hospital The captain sent me| " mne family decided that he was[i ONSl o 0 o ersion toimutic il Nearly one thousand prominent | 40 €Verything in their power to pre-|ipy died in the meantime.” these sponsoring the meeting pub- | forward to a small shelter in the | dead. i A is believed the fear that he mi people in one city alone have publicly | I".Z’.i;f“.;'?;fil"&&'l il.‘fi',‘\.33;-”.2'\...”:(.'\"’4}I | Still another report says in part: | lished several days ago by a M\\; open, where the electric contact had A few d;l,\‘-)re?;x:‘l?.:n:j r}];:.o‘ |!.’.;:lnc:1h: eventually be obliged to labor for testified in signed statement that WDLCR MIERt cause andiher rumpus of | “The camp in ——— itself is the sad- | York Irish newspaper. The statement |\ " 1o coq nicn leq to a mine | lCHter from Pranse acking that She g ;. ustenance drove him to hisH Linonine cured them of coughs, colds, | - MCAR0 aiong f s of that dur- gest thing I have ever seen. Right at | says that tire 'draftsman of the “call : ) ¢ pardon his delay in - Andf Y dical examiner’s verdioh bronehitis and other forms of winter | 115 the convention days of 1912. TheY | the entrance a heap of bodies lay un- | committed an error and exposed the | field. I crawled through it along a | yesterday Mrs, Prange and Mre. Flick complaints that threatened their very | olleve that Roosevell has his eve on | buried 1 counted thirty-five, in an- | entire propaganda game “by his vio- | narrow tunnel without mishap. met Prange, who is sixty-eight, by i . o 5 i op | the nomination and that he would a other place twenty-two, right close by | lent attack on American neutralit T TR e g £l appointment in the Grand Central e e — = gxistence. Other thousands in other | . 01 ")) came to him at Ch ; 3 2 atta reen 5 Through a slit T looked out on the | abDoOmtment 1 FEE GILRE e en . st ¢ e > ad, el % 2 2 - | were the tents of those people who|and his transparent attempt to in- 3 fostn O% 7% | terminal, Ne ork. > tr il o el ety T ‘:‘: cago, and he was asked to take the |ere very ill. In one single day the | timidate the Washington. govern- [ Pattlefield, as through the opening it} yeturned to Stamford. GRANDMA NEVER LE ("'mnh:: ;':l:”"'im. PN fi‘vc ! lead in the fight on the issue of Amer- | hurial commission buried as many as | ment.” a theater curtain. 1 saw the Ger- Mrs, Flick told her father's story. HER HAIR GET GR it ot 1t Elnd Ihown tolsa: | canisnyiwiniion lose: 'l“" the mi- | 580 persons. Resolutions - Adopted. mans after long waiting march for-| “Father,” she said, “rlrxf(_c;l about i et vaen Landichviche i the | oo e ciitbem friouldira (henfhiaye The following Is the resolution | ward n good order. They thought|from town to town, undecided on| . o p.. jocks youthful, dark, gig Dlood, it restores circulation and | 135u¢ come during the convention d T T e e from their observation that the bom- | where he would settle. A short time D e hios tin comia W Siathcs iholciicaiol naiabrancs lof .2 loksce Wb Pxenubioan bardment had sufficiently devastated | after he left us he fell of a horse Sage and Sulphur, eponly disupled Zow . : [Hsn face, in amenc, Jho trenches, but they were unable to | while traversing a mountain pass throat and Jungs in rich, new vitality- = % ¥ Ll G R iled by any foreign power angd solely |our trenches, ) > na W s v G % o s e f e o il | NOSE CLOGGED FROM %6 that our men had held fitm and | Concussion of the brain resnlted, anc prgr= LA When you dar by removing the swellings and irrita- | Most of these leaders believe that suicide. Believe Colonel Favors Hughes. 5% the purposelGf. Setting (thE irace e : i A COLD OR CATARRH ¢ 00 ("0t the people of the Umitca | were making fresh trenches and us- when he was about to resumo ac. | Whow Yo% CRIEL YU ICC 8 tions that cause the disturbances. It | RRoosevelt nnot obtain the republi- | § States, declare as follows: ing shell crater: s tivity, “,'S.umO” no lm?,.] F retaine: becae lt's done ‘=d rathrai is a truly wonderful remedy and is | can nomination so soon after the split % Apply Cream in Nostrils To First—That the Irish in America, “The Germans were 200 yards from | some of the events w‘f x\:- ife. e repiring . dnlsnadil pure and wholesale, being an emul- | of 1912, and his action in doin H Open Up Air Passages. whether they have yet reached the my post \\l\cnvnnr 11'!10,\ and m;w‘hmh Searches in Family Cemetery, though at home is mussy and trouli sion of Flax-Seed Oil, Irish _Moss, | they see it, what he can to provent | Ee.e.eeees. s NSy ship or not, believe in guns opened fire. They were taken “Iighteen vears ago he established | (oo o*" 1050 cents you can buyt Iyptus and other famous reme- | factional differences over himself as ) o Ameri i last and all the time, | by surprise and crouched down. When | piggelf at Los Angeles, where fie be~| J o "0 ciore the ready-to-use 16 dies, all combined in one, and known | a candidate has convinced them that | Instant relief—no waiting. Your |;naq helieve in the strict enforcement |the order was p d_along their [ came interested in mining. He became Ted “W e Sage ana sdl [ he will support another union can- | clogged nostrils open right up; the air | of American rights and Americon [line to advance they began o sing!yealthy. About a month ago he decid- | v % Py o ™ Siet dampen didate, such as Justice Hughes, if it | Passages of vour head clear and you ipeutrality as to all the contestants i | ‘The Watch On The Rhine’ and|eq to return to the neighborhood of nbe or boft bitush with 1t sl is demonstrated at the Chicago con- | can breathe freely. No more haw the European war. 2 ! dashed forward. My heart beat | his old home to learn if we were alive, | SPOn8 pos . . vention that there is a real call for | ing, snuffing, blowing, headache, dry- | Second—That the Irish in America ' madly. They were over the mine at | Instead of writing to us, he went to the man, and that he (Roosevelt) can- | ness. No struggling for breath believe that the Irish in Ireland are [last. T touched the button. An in- | Hackensack, N. J., where his mother | not bring about a coalition and get | night; your cold or cartarrh disap- | better judges of their rights, their ! fernal fountain seemed to shoot up |and other of his relatives are buried. the republicans in line. pears. | policies, and their duties than any |in the midst of the mass of men in S want el ihs cemeterv=tolna The progressive leaders—or the Get a small bottle of EI Cream | number of praiseworthy and well- | gray with a majestic Whirl of smoke | family plot—ana looked over the most important ones at least—have | Balin from your druggist now. Apply | meaning men of their race in Amer I saw men go up bodily, as if from .u(unn-.\. expecting to find that my| been with the colonel in his desire to | a little of this fragrant, antiseptic, |ica, or any number of professional |the crater of a volcano e Ther Svasldcan Sesing! that iy keep out of an open fight in the re- | healing cream in your nostrils. It pen- | irishmen in America, or any number | «Phe attack was stopped. I Bt et s HatiTecordeaitnenc i . A publican ranks, They feel that the | etrates through every air passage of | of the descendants of exiled Irishm wled back .to my trench I had | he came to New York, visited his| Gray, faded hair, though roi @ = = = — == | Roosevelt sentiment will be strong | the head, sootines the inflamed or |in America, whose only idea (;nl\l\u | barely emerged from the tunnel when | hrother-in-law, Willlam Huyler, and ”-H'tl‘v ’*" a *‘“\’""":h'l[": 8¢ o H“(l”*:;*“ Q among the delegates to the republican | swollen mucous membrane and re- | Irish questions is the legacy of hale ! | felt a burning semsation in my | from Mr Huvler learned that the |all desire a ¥ i and a : : A. B. JOHNSON- D.D.S. convention “.I,Shm» they ;m} elected | lief comes instantly inherited from the days of oppres- houlder and fainted. When T ro- | members of his family were not dead, | appearance, get bus: t once Wi DENTIST officially as Roosevelt delegates or It's just fine. Don’t stay stuffed-up |sion, and who are ignorant of, ©r | coyered consciousness I found myself | and that 1 have a nineteen-year-oid [ Wyeth's e and Sulphur and 1o National Bank Bldg. Open Evenings. | not, and that the offer of a coalition | with a cold or nasty cartarrh. | shut their minds to the happy €hango fin an ambulance.” daughter, years younger. the world over as this through your hair, taking @ small strand at a time. By mor all gray hair disappears, and, @ another application or two, your hd becomes beautifully darkened, glo and luxuriant. You will also disco dandruff is gone and hair has stopp falling. All druggists—25c, 50¢, $1. 4y

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