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P CRISIS IN CABINET ~Dissolution and New FBlection Predicted by Press ‘Cokio, Jan, 23.—Japan is confront- ed with an internal political crisis. The opposition to the administration of Count Touchi has opened a vigor- .- Dus campaign on the ground that the Toachi non-partisan cabinet was formed in violation of the spirit the constitution. The, constitutional party, which has a ms&ority in the house of peers and is under the lead- ership of Viscount Kato, former min- Ister of foreign affairs, has hands with the nationalist groip in the lower house for war against the » premier. The battle will " out in the diet, which reconvenes to- Count Toacht and Viscount Mo- 2 minister, will deliver* ad- dresses in defense Of the admimistra- tion. The press expects the outcome of the crisis to be dissolution and a new election. In his address in the house of peers Premier Terauchi expressed satisfac- tion that Japan's relation with the treaty powers, other than the partici pants in the war, are “more and more ! cordial,”” He declared that Japan was working in unreserved union with the allies and said that Germany’'s peace proposal was rejected because it was not inspired by a sincere desire for peace. In view of the magnitude of the war the premier urged the nation | *'to stand united irrespective of class or politics and to adopt post bellum pol- fcles which would protect the prestige and lasting interests of the empire and remove all cause of danger to peace in the far east. ‘Will Cultivate China, The premier declared that the gov- ernment was paying particular atten- tion to its relations with China and would spare no' pains to cultivate neighborly relations. He said the Japancse administration was now en- deavoring to sweep away all clouds which hitherto had darkened the path of the nations and establish relations of mutual trust, confidence and help- fulness. «i “I need scarcely remind you,” con- tinued the premier, “‘that armament is an indispensable means of national preservation. Care should always be taken to keep our defense in an abso- lute condition of efficiency and strength, in due response to the situa- tion among the powers, our relations with other nations and in comparison to the wealth and resources of the country. To be prepared against sy emergencies is important. The spirit of the peoples is invigorated by nurs- ing the nationalistic idea and improv- ing the public health. Tt is equally important that the national resources be increased and commerce encour- aged.” Japan and America, 1n the course of a lengthy address in which he asserted that Germany's ambition for world hegemony was the true cause of the war, Viscount Motono dwelt particularly on the re- lations between the United States MORE RHEUMATISM THAN EVER BEFORE Clergymen, Lawyers, Brokers, Me- chanics and Merchants Stricken. Our old friend Rhermatiz is having his inning this year, and a few words ot caution from one who knows all sbout it may not be amiss. Wear rubbers in damp weeather; Leep your feet dry; drink plenty of lemonade, and avold strong alcoholic arinks. If rheumatism gets vou, or sciatica, end vou have sharp twinges, gnawing pain or swollen joints or muscles, you can get rid of all agony in just a few days by taking one-half teaspoonful of Rheuma once a day. All druggists know about Rheumsa; it’s harmless, yet powerful; cheap, yet gure, and a 60-cent bottle will last a long time. Ask Clark & Brainerd Co. or anw druggist, te ot ! Jjoined | be fought : and Japan. Japan, he said always has wished to maintain the most sincerely amicable relations with America. “If light cloud: he said, “have oc- casionally obscured, however, so little, the relations of the two coun- tries they were generally dissipated by the common good will of the two governments. Certainly there exisi questions on which our governments may not be in accord, that happens even between allied countries. How- ever, by examining even the thorniest questions frankly with determination to settle them in an amicable and conciliatory manner, the means reaching an understanding are surely found. This is the road which the two governments ‘alw: have fol- lowed to the great satisfaction of the two nations. toms of most genuine sympathy man- ifested for some time by the two countries.. Thus, proposals for com- mon action in the financial affairs of ! China have been made by American capitalists. | will follow with the liveliest interest the subsequent development and econ- omic rapproachment of the two na- tions.” FAVORS SUNDAY LAW Judge Henney Re-elected President of | in State Bar Association Believes Harmless Sabbath Pleasure. Hartford, Jan. 23.—The State Bar association, at its annual meeting hero vesterday, re-elected Judge William ¥. Henney of this city president, Don- ald T. Warner of Salisbury was elect- | ed vice president and James E Wheeler of New Haven secretary- treasurer. That a workable, reasonable and broad minded Sunday law would he an achievement greatly to the credit of the State Bar association of Con- nécticut was the statement of Judge | William F. Henney, president of the association, in his annual address ‘be- fore the members in the supreme court room. Judge Henney also call- ed attention to a number of other per- tinent matters and said the judges of the supreme courts should receive a substantial imcrease of salary. In addition to the president's ad- dress reports were heard from several committees, The annual banquet was held at 7 o’clock in the evening. FREEDOM OF SEAS. Code of Rules For Maritime Neutral- ity Drawn Up. Havana, Cuba., Jan. 23.—A code of rules of maritime neutrality which should govern the relations between belligerents and neutrals, prepared at the suggestion of Secretary of State Robert Lansing of the United States, | was submitted to the American Insti- | tute of Intdrnational Law in annual session here yeserday. The proposed regulations practical- | v provide for freedom of the seas in | time of war. Commercial blockades i would be forbidden and mails invio- {late; merchant ships without contra- band, whether of belligerent or ncu- -al registry, would be unmolested if ecd papers; right search at sea would be abolished. The | mandates would be enforced by a neuntral conference with authority to | | take “severe measures” against vio- | 1ators. The code was drafted by Dr. Ale- jandro Alvarez, secretary general of the institute, and who formerly was | Juriconsul to the Chilean foreign of- fice and counselor to the Chilean le- gations abroad. Tt will be referred to 1 the national soclety of international | law in each of the twentyone Amer- ican’ republics, and final action on it will be taken by the institute at its next annual meeting OFFICERS ARE RE-ELECTED. The Masonic Hall association held a meeting last evening, and re-elected the following officers: of | “I observe with great joy the sym- | The imperial government | T | throughout | way | nature far its own sake to an increas- ! he ellminated the positive delineation | of | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1017. MUSEUM INSTITUTE Landscape by Famous Artist in Local - Galleries | — 1 Al visiting the Talcott ! Art Toom of the Museum of Natural | History and Art of the New Hrih\lni ! Institute who have been to the larger galleries speak of the | Many | persons in delight Inness painting upon its walls. | who have seen a number of Inness' painting be on a par with any, and some have stated they | like the one here better than any of the others they have scen. Be that as | it may, the Inness painting at the local | i | works have ; the Institute declared the Museum to | museum is a beautiful example of the noted master's work and New Britain | veople can well take pride in its| | possession. Interest in George Inness' art has| | been considerably stimulated of late | by several substantial sales and two important exhibitions. In the New | York American of yesterday appears quite a lengthy article relating to ! | Inness and many of his paintings. It| | s by Charles H. Caflin and in part he | writes A | “The landscapes of the late Georgo | { Inness are at present enjoying a. boom. | In the language of ‘the Street’ his | stock is ‘away up.’ ! *The record price had been $24,600, paid at the sale of the Borden col- | lection by the. American Art Asso- | clation. Last December, however, Mr. ' Robert Handley - purchased ‘Tenafly Oaks’ from the Macbeth Gallcries for $30,000. | “About land Galleri fine example week ago sold for $40,000 the from the Yerkes collection ‘Sunset-Galden Glow.’ And now comes the announce-| ment that $45,000 has been paid by | Mr, Handley for ‘Autumn Woodlands,” {from the Ainslie Galleries. As the | news report puts it. ‘These prices es- | tablish Tnness in the class of the Ba | bizon painters as to commercial value, “It would be easy to be cynical about all this: to suggest that In- ‘has arrived’—in the character- American sense—commer- that now that the dealers are | playing battledore and shuttlecock with up-in-the-air prices his fame is | established. “But for the credit of his country- men, Inn fame was established be- | fore hiz death, in 1894, and Has been growing steadily ever since In the hearts and minds of an ever-increa ing people. “His art on its own merits has long | since taken a recognized position in the art 6f America, one that placed | him -in rank with the great artists of | Europe. To this fact I bore my | humble testimony fourteen vears ago. ‘In the record of American Art’ T| wrote, ‘three names stand out distinet- Iy as those of innovators: Whistler, T arge and George TInness. While Whistler's influence has been felt the whole art world, and ! La Farge (to quote from the Teport o¢ | the international jury of the exhibi- tion of 1889) ‘has created in all its de- tails an art unknown before’ (in the of window glass decoration), | Tnness was a pathfinder only within the domain of American art, and was led by instinct ' into ways already trodden by the great men other countries.’ “*But this does not make him less| an innovator. Nor does the fact that he was certainly ‘influenced by ‘the men of 1830, when he came to know their works. The point is. that throughout his life has evolution was from within 1 “T was alluding, it need hardly be | said, to Inness’ leadership in lifting | American landscape art from the| meticulously detailed work of the Hudson River school into line with the large, simple and intense synthesis of the Barbizon, and also in changing the motive of landscape painting from a pleasant summary of the appear- ances of a scene into an expression of the artist’s own reaction to the beauty | of nature. | “That reaction, in Inness’ own case, represented an evolution from love of the Hol- of ing consclousness of its appeal to the spiritual imagination, It corres- ponded with his growing interest in Swedenborgianism. “His love of nature made the dis- cipline of thorough study a delight. He mastered the forms of nature. Accordingly, in his later work he retained the sense of form, even when of it, because he desired to win the away from preaccupation with the appearances of the scene to a con- | sciousness of what he felt to he its| | spiritual content. “At the present eve moment students of Inness have two remarkable op- portuniti o the case may be, forming or corraborating an apprecia- tion of his art. One is an exhibition | at the Reinhardt Galleries of twenty- three examples, purchased from his son, George Inness, Jr..; the other, a display at the Ainslie Galleries, which have been consisténtly identified with his worlk.” There {s more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and for years it was sup- posed to be incurable. Doctors pre- scribed local remedies, and by constant- 1y failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Catarrh is a local disease, greatly influenced by con- stitutional conditions and therefore re- quires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney ., Toledo, Ohio, is a consti- tutfonal remedy, is taken internally and acts thru the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. One Hundred President—Joseph Vice president—H Secretary and trea well. Executive committec—H. W. Eddy, IW. W. Pease and H A Lane. R. Andrew: H. Wheeler | surer—F. S. Cad. Dollars reword is offered for any case that Hall's Catarrh Cure fails to cure. £end for circulars and testimonials. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by Druggists, T6c. Hall's Feeily Pllls for constipation. INNESS' WORK AT | The writer here splendid paintings hibitions, goes on description of the display at the in the aptness of Richard Muther's “haracterization of George Inness, in ‘History of Modern Painting,’ that 1l his pictures are tone-symphonic broadly painted, deeply harmonized and in perfect concord: and the hi l tory of art must hold him in honor as | one of the most delicate « ] sided landscapists of the century. When it is considered that in Museum of Natural History Ari af the New Britain Institute not only to be seen a splendid example of Inness’ work, but paintings by with o varous | two ex- | states: “Both the Ainslie exhibition and the one at Reinhardt galleries illustrate on Carlsen, iike, it Britain 1 allery. and conclusion such | | | IV FIFTEEN CENTS I CGARETTE ' REMEMBER — Turkish tobacco is the world’s most famous tobacco for cigarettes gt | Charles W. Hawihorne, the | Murphy, Colin Campbell Cooper, I can \ Sarta John Fran W, Gedney Bunce and t ized that 3 representative