New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 10, 1916, Page 5

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NEW. BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 19is. | z'll Never Be ithout This Simple Laxative Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin Relizved Her Baby When Nothung Else Would. Little Max Pendergast is now four vears old, and a fine healthy boy. When but a tiny baby, in fact almost from birth, he suffered a great deal from constipation. His mother, Mrs. Carl W. Pendergast Red Key, Ind., heard of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, -~obtained a bottle of it from the drug store, and with it was able to quickly correct this condition. Mrs. Pendergast says Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin has saved them from calling the doctor many times, and that she will never be without a bot- tle of it in the house to use when needed. She found it equally effective as a laxative for herself and other members of the family. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is a combination of simple laxative herbs | with pepsin, pleasant to the taste, mild in action and positive in effect. It does not gripe or strain, and con- tainé no opiate or narcotic drug. It is the ideal family laxative, mild and pleasant for baby, yet-acting quickly pon the strongest constitution. To avoid imitations and ineffective substitutes be sure to ask for Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. See that a facsimile of Dr. Caldwell’s signature and his portrait appear on the yellow carton in which the bottle is packed. A trial bottle, free of charge, can be obtained by writing to Dr. W, B. Cald- well, 455 Washington St., Monticello, Iillinois. HAIR COMING OUT? | PRSP | Dandruff causes a feverish irrita- tion of the scalp, the hair comes out fast. To stop falling haid at once and ! rid the scalp of every particle of dan- druff, get a 25-cent bottle of Dander- | ine at any drug store, pour a little in | your hand and rub it into the scalp. After a few applications the hair stops | coming out and you can't find any dandruff. City Advertisement Building lines on Henry street. Clerk’s office, City of New Britain, Conn., Oct. 9, 1916. To whom it may concern: Notice is hereby given that the Board of Compensation and Assess- ment of the City of New Britain, has made the following appraisal of dam- ages and assessment of benefits, caused by the proposed adoption of building lines on Henry street, from Stanley street to Rocky Hill avenue, and fifteen (15) feet back from the ‘street lines, viz: North Side. Dam. Ben. Frank Sandquist .. $ 11.00 § 19.51 John L. Larenius and @ugusta Lov- enius, jointly .... k 21.65 Elizabeth Barker .. 5 8.88 €harles Rogers ... y 8.88 Charles E. Collins, trustee Henry Ekert Mary Ekert jointly Mary FEckert ...... Fred Neuman . Adolf Heim o Charles E. Collins, trusteelfs S apo Charles Macristy and Bertha Macristy, jointly o e Charles E. Collins, trustee James Prendegast Charles Nothnagel and Henry Noth- nagel inton Bulchune and E v a Bulchune, fomntly SoRaR 10.00 Charles Prainitis ... 5.00 Réuben W. Hadley . 15.00 George Smith ...... 5.00 Ernest W. Herwig .. 5.00 Henrietta Herwig 5.00 Fred Bollerer 5.00 Willlam Moorehead and Margaret » Moorehead, jointly Ernest A. Reiden- bach o Martin L. Frisk an Sophia Frisk, joint- Charles Splettstoezer iy 8.88 William L. Hatch and Charles J. White, jointly . .. 100.00 21.30 Andrew Westman and Helena West- man, jointly .... 100.00 Charles J. Hallberg . 5.60 Olaf R. Folk 5.00 Olof R. Folk ~ Minnie Folk August Woitowitz and Anna Woito- witz, jointly ... Frank Haltner Charles E. trustee Emilie Poppel Charles Poppel g 8.88 Charles E ¥ trustee o= b 00 8.88 William J. Geary .. 10.00 17.76 Peter Filosofi .... 4.25 7.54 Charles E. Collins, - trustee oo 2.48 4.40 Gustay H. Samlow 6.40 11.36 Daniel Gilmore .... 5.00 8.88 Waldemar Herrmann 10.00 17.76 JEmil Herrmann .... 5.00 8.88 E. D. Askerly ...... 10.00 17.76 August Kuappt ..... 5.00 8.88 Theodore Wilson . 10.00 17.76 Peter McKenna .... 10.00 17.76 FEstate of Ernestina John 5. Charles F. Anderson and Annie M. An- derson, jointly ... .00 .88 gharles F. - Anderson 6.00 8.88 Mary Talbott ...... 100.00 21.30 10.00 17.76 Total ........ ..$594.08 $594.08 And it finds no damages, or special benefits or betterments to any other person or party. Accepted, adopted, certified from record and published twice by order of the Common Council. Attest, HUGHES DELIVERS WARNING TO ALLIES Says He Would Not Tolerate In- terference With Business t!x‘ne in his fight for the presidency, since his speech of acceptance, Charles E. Hughes last night brought for- ward the sinking of the Lusitania by a German submarine as a campaign issue, pointing out that as a result of the sinking the “lives of American men, American women and American He followed this with the declaration that “we propose to protect Ameri- can lives on land and sea.” Coming at a time when German submarines were sinking ships off the coast of the United States, the statement stirred up much specula- tion. It was greeted with enth tic applause. It was obvious that it had served to emphasize in the minds of his auditors the fact that Germany shores of this country. Mr. Hughes, in a statement issued earlier in the day at Newark, had let it be known that he would not discuss the danger of complications because of the U-boat exploits, as he did not wish to embarrass the admin- events. He did not mention last right the newest phase of the inter- national relations between this coun- try and German: The nominee was in fine form, and was stirred to his best efforts by a Metropolitan Opera house to over- flowing. He made his reference to the Lusitania part of a comprehen- sive declaration of his belief as to what should be the attitude of the government of .this country in up- Lolding the rights of its citizens. United States. “I do not put life and property on added: Warning to Allies. “We do not propose to tolerate any improper interference with American property, with American mails, or with legitimate commercial inter- cising only American rights shall be put on any blacklist by any foreign nation.” Mr. Hughes did not mention Eng- meaning plain. Then came this dec- laration: “I repeat in Philadelphia what T trigues, no unstated purposes, no jcovert understandings or arrange- ments. We stand four-square to the alone, first, last and all the time.” The crowd, which earlier in the evening had started a long demon- of Roosevelt by President Riddell of No Need to Experiment With New Britain Evidence at Hand. There are many well-advertised, kidney remedies on the market today, ‘but none so well-recommended—none |so .New Britain recommended as Doan’s Kidney Pills. Read this New Britain case: Louis Michels, 417 Church street, New Britain, says: “I was bothered time, which were very annoying as I a great deal. I noticed this.pain when I was in bed also and I could hardly move around on account of it. I was my kidneys were affeced.. I saw Doan’s Kidney Pills advertised a great many years 2g0, o 1 began taking them. They are the best medicine I boxes cured me. ALFRED L. THOMPSON, 3 City Clerk. (N. B. Herald.) simply o for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s 1«\m Pills—the same that cured M Michels Foster-Milburn Co., Props,, Buffalo, N. Y. Philadelphia, Oct. 10.—For the first | children were ruthlessly destroyed.” | had carried its U-boat warfare to the ! istration in dealing with current ! great crowd, which filled the huge | With the Lusitania out of the way | he turned to the alleged wrongdoings | of England and other allied coun- | tries in their attitude toward the | the same footing,” he said, and later | & 5 | course. No American who is exer- | land or France, but he made his | sajd in Milwaukee: We have no in- | world, representing the United States | and its interests, and its interests | stration at the mention of the name | by dull pains in my back for some- | was always on my feet and wuffered | lame and sore mornings and thought | have ever found for this trouble. Two | Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't | the Union League club, who presid- ed, accorded Mr. Hughes the most enthusi applause of the night when he str out for the mainten- ance of American rights. Mr. Hughes made his declaration of Americanism an answer to the assertion of President Wilson that the republican party stood for a war policy. That assertion, he said, was simply an effort of the administra- tion to escape deserved condemna- tion. In addition, Mr. Hughes, for the first time, answered the charge that as a Justice of the United States Su- preme court he had personally dealt a blow at organized labor in the Dan- bury Hat case decision, a charge which has been frequently laid at his door during his campaign tours— tossed at him here and there in labor centers in insulting, derisive tones. This climax of the night came while Mr. Hughes was midway in his dec- protection of American lives, prop- erty, and commerce. A man in the gallery shouted: “How about the Danbury Hatters case?" There were hisses and shouts of “Put him out.” “Now, my friend,” said Mr. Hughes, “I will tell you all about that case as soon as I get through with this part of my statement.” When he came to answer it a few | minutes later there was another dis- turbance in the gallery, and cries of “Make him stand up,” were heard. “Oh, no, no, do not embarrass him said Mr. Hughes. Then with a firm voice and emphatic gestures the can- didate took up the case. Explains Danbury Decision. “The question related to the Dan- bury batters’ case,” he said, “‘a case decided by the supreme court of the | Unitea of which I was a mem- ber. The decision was an unanimous | one; and, as that statement implies, T { concurred in it. I did my duty as a ! judge, enforcing the laws of the land. i “Now what was this case? There | was a manufacturer who said that he suffered in his business through what | is known as a seccndary boycott; that | there was an association of working- men who, through their officer, had destroyed his business. He brought a suit in the federal court to recover | treble damages under tiie Sherman anti-trust act. “The first question presented was whether, on hiz own statement, he had made out a case. That went to the su- preme court of the United States long before I was a member of it, and the | court decided that, if what he stated was true, he had made out a case. Then it was for him to prove hi 4 He went back to a trial. The case was | tried before a judge anc a jury. The facts were submitted to the jury, and the jury found in his favor. “Then there was an appeal taken to the supreme court of the United | State At that time I was a membher of the court. The question on that appeal wzs not & question of fact. The | facts were determined by the j were within the province of the j | The question for the court was wheth- er the trial judge had erred in submit- \ ting the question to the jury. In sub- | stance, the question was whether | members of an association of that sort were responsible for the acts of their | officers, if upon the evidence they could be charged with knowledge of | these acts. “That is rather a simple proposition m the law of agency, that men are re- sponsible for those whom they em- ploy or dircet. The qucstion whether | the men knew, the question whether or not they had opportunities for in- | formation as to what was going on, so | that it was a case properly submitted to the jury, was a matter of considera- | tion. The court found there was e dence enough to go to the jury, and it was a question for the jury what the [ fact was, and therefore the judgment | was unanimously afirmed.” Friend of Justice, Friend of Labor. “That is all there is of it,”” Mr. |Hughes went on: “Now I stand here | to say that, whether as a judge, or, if clected, as dent, on any ques- tion coming before me I shall enforce the laws of the land. And it makes no difference whether the question is raised by labor or raised by capital. “If laws are not right the remedy is to change them. 'This is a free gov- ernment. It is the business of Judges to enforee the laws as tiey are. It is | the sine «idents to enforce the laws as they are. And, so far as I have anything to say further on the subject, I will say this to my friends the workingmen—for my record in New York 's well known. And organ- ed labor in their journals, when I left the governorship to go on the bench, paid me the compliment of saying that T was the best friend of labor laws that ever sat in the execu- | tive chair at Albany. If T were to sum up in a sentence, in a phrase, what I would like to say to the laboring men | of the country, it is this: That the best friend of labor is the friend of ania, Mr. Hughes repeated the dcclaration contoined in his speech of | acceptance, that had the American government left no doubt “that when we sald ‘strict accountability’ we meant precisely what we soid,” there would have been no destruction of American lives by the zinking of the Lusitania. Silent on Current U-Beat Raid. Here is the statement Mr. Hughes authorized earlier in the day “Mr. Hughes was asked today for his views with respect to the present submarine situation. He refused to discuss it. He said he was not in con- trol of Hfiicial agencles and was not in receipt of official information. He said further that he had no desire to em- barass the administration in dealing with any current matters as to which the administration had the whole re- sponsibility. i Mr. Hughes' attack on the adminis- tration’s foreign and Mexican policies was couched in more vigorous®terms | than any he has heretofore employved. Act after act by the administration in its dealings with Mexico was cited by | the nominee to uphoeld his contention | that the country had not been kept out 1\:: war, but that it had waged “:xul /2) AW AN WA AR AW laration about Americanism and the | AV AP AWAAWAW WA WAV W AW AW AWIWAWE AWAWAWAWAWAWAWE WA WAV AWAWAWAWAWAWA in a new Victor Record Santa Lucia (Neapolitan Folk Song) Enrico Caruso Victor Red Seal Record 88560. Twelve-inch, $3. \STER'S VOIC REG.USPAT.OFF. ©_2 .V“) The grandeur of Caruso; the romance of Italy The mighty Caruso gives the world this romantic melody of his native Naples with all the riches of his sublime voice, and all the passion of the artist who has lived the song he sings. To hear this record is to marvel at an art that conjures the balm of southern skies, the drift of lazy waters—all the spell of Italy as Caruso’s youth knew it. And to hear this record is to know why the greatest artists in the world make records for the Victrola exclusively. Victrola is more than the voice of the great artist. It is his genius. record or any other Victor music you wish to hear. Go to your nearest Victor dealer today and have him play for you the new Caruso He will also gladly demonstrate to you the various styles of the Victor and Victrola—$10 to $400. Victor Talking Machine Co., Camden, N. J. Important warning. Victor Records can be safely and satisfactorily played only with Victor Needles or Tungs-tone Stylus on Victors or Victrolas. Victor Records cannot be safely played on machines with jeweled or other reproducing points. New Victor Records demonstrated at all dealers on the 28th of each month Victrola “To insure Victor quality, always look for the famous trademark, “'His Master's Voice.” It is on every Victrola and every Victor Record. It is the identifying label on all genuine Victrolas and Victor Records. A NG AN VAU MAURAUMURUAUMURAURAUPAYRAY The v il a‘mmvm@mmvmmmmmmvmmmmmmvmmmvmmwmmmmmv ]| w-mm"! SO T T WA A A A AT AR AR A e F AP A AR URAUAAUEAEA AR AU IR [ €% peaking of the sinking of the | ypior prr. and died in th thus removed use the roads. “We have not been kept out Hughes repeated. “We intermittent peace intermittent war without We cannot sce now in what particular sort of mess we shall find things in March next. But this much If entrusted with r shall be able to have it un- there will be no med- matters which do not con- | cern us; that we shall not simply tall of the rights of other states, but shal] 5,000 people the bandstand in Military | Hle renewed his attaack on the Adam- hour law, and was liberally In beginning his speech Mr ignoble, personal war” against Huer- John Lind’s alleged authoriza- to state that “Huerta would be occupation of Vera Cruz, the sending of the punitive ex- pedition into Mexico, and the failure n troaps to utilize can railways were points upon Hughes touched. “Has America forgotten Carrizal?” “What was that? One “brave officer,’ the nominee ¢aid he had been informed with pneumonia, was compelled trave] four days in an army wagon over rough roads in intense suffering, camp tc which he was This followed the by Carranza authori- the American troops to and, further, that al, events, the lives and property of citizens will be protected.” In Newark andience of the candidate had forty-three Passing on to the issues of the campaign, he advocated a protec- tive tariff for the benefit of the work- ing men and said his record at Albany proved him to be a friend of labor. Then he took up the Adamson bill. He said he approved the principle of the eight-hour day, but the Adamson bill was not an eight hour bill but a wage increase bill. 1dea along speeches on Peace “stricken He developed this the subject and quoted: Senatar Underwood, democrat, to #ip- Lold his contention that the law not an eight hour law, Calls Bill a Subterfuge. “Now, why Is it,” he went on, * we are continually talked to about an efght hour day in connection without hour work day at all. that they know well that if they sponsi- Y ht name they expose the evil, which the thing through without any chance under a sub- ; ment of society had passed matter of an eight-hour day, and that is urged to support this bill if the judgment He spoke an eight-hour work day park. congress provide *fughes | ciety had passed upon this, referred ta the fact that as a boy hethey limit it to 20 per cent. of the attended the Newark employes, and those the highest paid? Why did they not give 100 per cent. the benefit of the judgment of society. Why cannot we have things dealt with candidly. Why do they except electric railroads? Are not these men entitled to a fair show? Why | do they except railroads less than 100 miles in length? Does the judg- ment of society stop there? The bill on its face shows that this sug- gestion of the judgment of society was a mere pretense.” A resolution said to have been adopted by the American Federation of Labor in November, 1914, and ap- port of the nominee's declaration that proved a year later, was cited in sup- labor had gone on record for the prin- ciples of regulation of wages and hours “through trades union activity and not by legislation.” Continuing, he said the Adamson act was “a decided blow at the prin- a|ciple of collectiveé bargaining, which labor has stood for, as opposed to the The reason is | principle of fixing hours and wages by legislation, If wages can be in- creased by legisiation, they can he decreased. If powers are going to override judgment and secure govern- mental action, before the justice of the case is known, that is a thing the juds- jthat can work both wa according to the powers that are powerful at a particular time, Surrender to Force. “If you increase the expenses of railroads you have got to increase it? | rates so they can be met. I am not i,OD!‘OFf‘r] to increase of rates, if rates ought *o be increased. I am not op- posed tp increases of wages because they increase rates. ~We have got ta do what is just, even if creased. rates are in “What I oppose is taking a delicate and difficult, intricate matter of this sort, and under duress, under pres sure, without anybody knowing whether it is good or bad, having surrender of executive power and} federal power in congress and rushd) ing a bill through putting a flat in crease on. That is not American] government, and 1 am 6pposed to it." THE NEW YORK, N HARTFORD RAILROAD New Haven, Conn TO THE STOCKHOLDERS HAYV COMP. October 3, 1916 is hereby given that the Annuall of the stockholders of Haven and Har rtford Company will be held in Harmonie 9 Elm Street, in the City Connecticut, on Wednesday of th October, 1916, at 12:00 o'clock noon, f following purposes 1. To consider and take ap; upon the Annual Statemc scribed therein or reported To authorize an issuc of $700,000 face value s gold debentures that if any mortga on the property this debentures will be cqually with any other indebtedn, tion, and also an agreemer and pay $100,000 of these year until all are paid, the p sule of sald debentures t construction of a new terminal passen station and appurtenance New Haven, Connecticut Bo v | may properly come before s For the purpose of thi for books of the Comy | from October 1111 o 1016, hoth days i ropriate a and all a at sald me not t the City of ctors for the business which By order of the B f Directors ARTHUR E. CLARK, Secretqey,

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