New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 23, 1916, Page 14

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{111 ING OF PREMIER POLITICAL CRIME Admits His Attack Was Not Personal Affair mier, Count kh, was y political, 2 refusal to wrl Stuer; was iler, his after his arrest. ) cccentric and super- sometimes known as of Austria.” He is pf. At first he re- 1 his motives, but after ked up he broke down and wred the premier’s political poli- had led him to do the deed. Adier's arrest was not accom- out the wounding of two eaped at him after he had on Count Steurgkh. He dis- d the two remaining chambers revolver at these men before an and German officers, with drawn sabres, overpowered him. The ‘otnded men, who were injured tly, are Baron Aehrenthal, broth- " of the late foreign minister, and the head waiter of the Hotel Meissl und Schadn, in which the shooting oc- curred. Count Stuergkh arrived at the ho- tel at 1:30 o'clock. With him at luncheon were Baron Aehrenthal, Count Toggenburg, governor of Tyrol; Herr Jacobson, a preminent Vienna musiclan, and an actor from the Court theater. At 2 o’clock a man unknown to the premier arrived and t0ok a seat three tables away. He ate luncheon and paid for the meal, but lingered at the table. Shortly after 8 o'clock he arose, advanced rapldly toward the premier, and fired three shots. The first missed. The two next struck the premier in the head. Without a word Count Steurgkh fell back lifeless in his «<chair. Baron Aehrenthal sprang toward ‘Adler. The head waiter ran up from behind the assassin and grasped the hiand that heid the revolver. Adler wresteqd his arm fres and fired two shots. Baron Achrenthal was wound- ed in -he foot. The waiter received enly a superficial wound. Calmest Man in Room. that the struggle was hope- Adler surrendered to the of- and ocialist, you please, gentlemen, I know perfectly well w I have done. I shall not re arrest.” In reply to a question as to the rea- S ald at first: “That ve to answer in court.”” half an hour later that he had been actuated by tives. s and high police and state officials reached the scene of the shooting within a few minutes, but found that the premler was life- le News of the assassination quickly and was received with nd sorrov n, who is 32 on of Dr. Victor y and a years old, is Adier, ocialist e coincident, before 1911 when ot at six times by the t, Vakusch. On asion the count was unin- Allezemeine Zeitung says Dr. me time past in opposition own party, the nocratic, of which he Is see- wife is a Russian of Mon- Adler Belie to Be Insane. 3 by wircless to Say- that the Aus- WONDERFUL TALE CF AN ACTRESS Struggled with Sickness and Dis- couragement; How Relieved. Dayville, K)llmgly, Conn.—*‘I shall glad to have every woman know what I know now, after using Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound. Although I am only 24 years old, I have suffered for the past eight years. Ihated the doctors, for a doctor told me to give up the stage where I was playing with my husband. \11 bearing down pains, my health led me, and T could not work on the d wasn’t able to tend my baby n_get around myself. T was hearted and discontented world, and only lived foi the my little girl. The doctor said t6 some quiet little town away city, and I might be able 1 well, so I went to Day- ber. At that time I was ot walk around, and m: pt house and T stayed in bed. anuary I read your adver- wspaper, and I sent for | m’s Vegetable Com- ing it, Within | 4 , and felt so good | 2 pleasurs to do my house- elt contented and happy, and »m the picture of health, and am ted to return to the stage. We ate my health as th, thing on earth tunity.” lowest” as little as ions. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, “I am a fierce partisan of the open shop.” Woodrow Wilson (1909.) “The class formed by the labor organizations and leaders is a formidable enemy to equality and betterment of oppor- Woodrow Wilson (1907.) “Labor unions drag the highest man to the level of the Woodrow Wilson (1905.) he may for his wages.” “The usual standard of the laborer in our day is to give Woodrow Wilson (1909.) These are the convictions of a Presidential was not in public life—when he was not running for he was not looking for votes. They are the expressions of a scholar, the economy, the writer of text-books and histories. Woodrow Wilson did not claim to become a friend in labor until he had need of labor’s friendship for his re-election. Independents, working for the election of Charles E. Hughes. trian cabinet held a session after the assassination of Premier Stuergkh, presided over by the senior member, Baron Georgi, Minister of National Defense. In accordance with prece- dent, all the ministers will offer their resignations, but it is not expected that they will be accepted by Em- peror Francis Joseph. The Minister of the Interior, Prince Hoheniohe-Schillingsfurst, who is on ve of absence, will return imme- diately to Vienna and will act as pre- mier for the present. The Minister of Finance, Dr. von Koerber, intended to depart for a trip of inspection in Bosnia, but has postponed his depar- ture. Among those mentloned as possible successors of Count Stuergkh are Prince Hohenlohe-Schillingsfurst, Ba- ron von Beck, former premier, and Dy. Koerber. “‘Berlin newspapers point out that the murderer of the premier was of unballanced mind,” says the Overseas News Agency. “His sister has been in n insane asylum for more than ten Frederick Adler advocated an- archistic theories and was a violent opponent of his own father, Dr. Vic- tor Adler, the recognized leader of Austro-Hungarian socialists. A few days ago the Arbeiter Zeitung of Vienna, the official newspaper of the Austro-Hungarian socialist party, published an editorial ~denouncing 'riedrich Adler’s agitation as obnox- ious to the socialist party and detri- mental to puble interest. This edi- torial was all the more significant be- cause the editor-in-chief of the Ar- heiter Zeitung is Dr. Victor Adler.” Riots Follow Assassination. London, Oct. 23.—A wireless dis- patch from Rome reports that there re riots in Vienna following sination of Count Stuergkh, which the police were powerless to quell. According to the Fremdenblatt of Vienna, says a Reuter dispatch, Ad- ler v ware of the significance of h t, hut that it was the result {of ure determination, and was carried out without the instigation of wccomplices or any assistance what- ever. Disintegration of Austria Seen. Oct. 23.—The assassination of the Austrian premier, Stuergkh, caused a deep impression here, although Count Stuergkh was | the head of the government which is s bitterest enemy. The news- Rome, Count | profound feeling, as it is thought that the tragedy may have an im- portant bearing on a continuation of the war. Drive Against Feudalism, Rome, Oct. 23.—Salvatore Barzilai, former minister without porfolio, in the Messaggero, characterizes the assassination of Premier Stuergkh as “rebellion of the militaristis and cler- ical organization of Austria.” The impression magde in Italy, he asserts, Is heightened by the fact that the premier’s assassin is well known here as a llterary man, particularly as a translator of Italian poetry. . Demands Session of Parliament. London, Oct. 23.—The house of deputles has been closed since March, 1914, and, in accordance with the constitution, ought to be re- elected next spring. There have been constant demands for the re-opening of the house which Premier Stuergkhn consistently restricted pleading that secrecy was imperative and that Austrian interpreter candidate when he office—When teacher of political Not the hasty ill-considered opinions of an under-graduate but the deliberate reasoning of a seasoned mind—of a university head. These are the views that Woodrow Wilson held when he was pre- paring thousands of young men for their administrative responsibili- ties, forming their judgment upon the relations between employer and cmployee fulfillmg his function of countless students who have since engaged in business for themselves, become executive heads in vast organizations or teachers in turn for another generation of future employers of labor. and advisor toward These are the opinions which he held when he did not expect to hold office, when ‘it did not advantage him to express any other opin- need to Because this course is typical of the man—because it is impossible to know what he really believes or how long he will continue lieve anything he claims to believe—because indecisive—we oppose his re-election. to be- he is inconsistent and national affairs had better be left to the crown ministers The papers here quote Engelbert Pernsitorfer, vice president of the lower house of the Austrian chamber, who recently declared: “Public opinion righteously de- mands the re-opening of parliament. The administration of public affairs | grows ever more difficult and the exclusion of the parliament and st from active decisions encour- ages the insupportable feeling that we | Austrians are no longer subjects of our own government, but had been handed over to the Hungarian pre- mier, Tis COMING WEDDINGS. O’Brien-Conroy and Heath-Keney Nuptials at St. Mary’s Church. Fred X. O’'Brien and Miss Mar- garet Conroy will be married at St. Mary's church Wednesday morning. Rev. John T. Winters will tle the nup- tial knot. The couple are both well known locally, the groom holding a pers comment e tragedy as a sn of disint Austria re- aphic advices, the news caused | i WESTERN UNION Day Letters and Night Letters bring prosperity to the men who employ them as a se]lmg impetus. The effectiveness of these live sales- men is shown in the dollars gained for cents expended. THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH (0. ol i MONDAY, OCTOBER 23, the | 1916. Wilson On Labor Hughes On Labor “There are some who regard organized labor as a source of strife and a menace of difficulty; I regard it as a fine op- portunity for the improving of the conditions of the working- »» man. Charles E. Hughes (1908.) “The mission of labor organizations is one of the finest that any organization of men could guard.” Charles E. Hughes (1908.) “He was the greatest friend of labor laws that ever occu- pied the governor’s chair. He signed fifty-six labor laws (one third of all passed in the state since 1777), among them many of the best ever enacted in this or any other state. the enactment of He urged labor laws in his messages to the legis- lature, even going so far as to demand a labor law at an extra session. Human rights has a steadfast and sympathetic up- holder in the new justice.” N. Y. Legislative Labor News (1910.) These are not new opinions from the Republican candidate not a recent estimate concerning him. Hughes recorded his stand on abor not when a candidate for office, but as a governor of New York soon to retire from political life to become a Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, where he expected to remain for the rest of his life. They were the convictions of C harles E. Hughes on the eve of joining the highest tribunal in America, a court of last resort—at a time and in a situation when no possible from any public expression. No estimate of his fitness to fil ness, fairness and justice can be stronger than the above from a review of his career as governor by the organ of advantage could accrue to him the office of President with firm- comment the New York State Federation of Labor. He has no need to talk—he has done. He said what he believed then—he believes what he said, now. Therefore we support Charles E Hughes. onsible position with the B. H. libbard company. The bride has | n employed at the Bowen Millin- company for several years. She is also a member of the choir at St. { Mary's church. | John James Heath and Miss Mar- her Keeney will be married at y's church Thursday morning. the candidacy and the convictions of This advertisement is paid for by the Hughes Alliance Reserve—an organization of Democrats, Progressives, Republicans and { Henry J. Cochran, Treas., 2 East 43rd Street, New York City | FOR SALE Large property on East Main Street, suitable for residential or business sites, H. N. LOCKWOOD, Real Estate and Insurance, ’Phone 606-3 ASK FOR nnd GET ’ HORLICK’S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK ‘ Cheap substitutes cost YOU u-cm City Hall JL—ANDREWS WEDDING. Benjamin Bidwell and Miss Julia H. ing by Rev. Baptist church. Miss Hattie drews, sister of the bride, was An- maid was bridesmaid. the cister of the groom, | George Bidwell, a brother of groom, was best man. John Charles Andrews and Donald A. Wooster were ushers. A reception fol- ceremony at the home of s parents on Burritt street. “CASCARETS” FOR YOUR BOWELS IF HEADACHY, SICK For biliousness, bad breath, colds, indigestion and constipation. Enjoy life! Idven your liver and bowels tonight and feel fine. Your tongue is coated! Look inside your watch cover and see! That's bad business. What have you been eating? What were you drinking? What kind of a lazy chalr did you take exercise in? Now don't think it doesn’t matter, because, it's your bowels that talk now every time you open your mouth. That doesn't help your popularity, nor your earning capacity. Besides, a per- son with bad bowels is in a bad way and a coated tongue or a bad breath are sure signs of bad bowels and poor digestion. Why don’t you get a 10-cent box of your liver and thirty feet of bowels the nicest, gentlest cleaning they ever experfenced. Take one or two Cas- carets tonight and wake up feeling fine and fit. All Headache, Dullness, Biliousness, Bad Breath, Sourness, Coid and Constipation gore —wake up with your head tongue clean, stomach sweet, and bowels active, step elastic complexion rosy. Cascarets work while liver you sleep— 1 never gripe or sicken. Cascarets act s> gently that you hardly realize you have taken a thorough cathartic. They don’t bother you all next day like salts, pills, oil or calomel—Cascarets Andrews were married Saturday even- | Dr. Earl B. Cross of the | of honor and Miss Lenabelle Bidwell, | and | Cascarets at any drug store and give | Stomach | clear, | and | being perfectly harmless is best chil- dren’s laxative. \\\\\\\\\\\ A\ \ Have you solved the (rimsonSiain Mystery? It holds life’s darkest secret, Ii reveals life's greaiest crime, Ii presents the most astonis story since the world began. - Right now the whole world is baffled by its fasc:naizng allure - But like all }Auman. mysteries it has its solution. — CAN You SOLVE IT?? Somebody is going to,and soon-*® Read the story by Albert Payson Ierhune.- ree— MAURICE COSTELLO 72;;312?‘32%‘: TheMasier Star and Charming == ETHEL G RANDIN g Direcied by T.HAYES HUNTER Produced by the ERBOGRAPH C0.- Presented by ConsorIDATED FirM CORPN wenll give away oy FREE 1 3 EREE VER 6 CYLINDER-1017 MODEL OE.Goebel, President Ludwig GBErb, Ireasurer 1482 Broadway, New York. Released, Zhrough METRO PICYURES CORPORATION IOURING CARS i Y NOW Your Favorite Theaire-

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