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state. Saturday, February 10th, 1917 MODERN BOOT SHOP NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1917. 168 Main Street, New Britain, Coun. SHOES FOR EVERYBODY AT LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES At last New Britain is to have one of the most up-to-date shoe stores in the This wonderful shoe store will carry a complete line of high grade shoes for men, women and children, also hosiery, direct from manufacturer to wearer doing away with the middleman’s profit. Our opening sale will be an impressive one and we have spared no expense re- gardless of profit to make this sale the greatest ever known to the people of New Britain. ~ We are showing a few of our styles in this ad. but in order for you to be con- vinced of our great sale come and look us over. LET US GET ACQUAINTED THE MODERN BOOT SHO 168 MAIN STREET Next to Savings Bank SENATE ENDORSES BREAK WITH BERLIN \fete Is' 78 to 5 Alter Five Hours of Debate Washington, Feb. 8.—By a vote of 78:.to 5 the senate late yesterday for- mally indorsed the president’s action in severing diplomatic relations with | Germany. The vote was taken on a resolution introduced by Senator Stone, chairman of the committee on foreign relations. Two democrats, | Kirby of Arkansas and Vardaman of | Mississippi joined with three republi- cans, Gronna of North Dakota, La Fol- lette of Wisconsin and Works of Cali- fornia, in opposing the resolution. { In spite of the overwhelming en- dorsement given to the president on the ‘final and basic question when tho vote was reached. there were many divisions of sentiment, and Senator Stone’s request early in the day for consideration of his resolution pre- cipitated a stirring debate, which con- tinued for five hours. Three of the oughs, Colds, Bronchitis An Inexpensive Home-Made Rem- edy—Gives Surest, Quickest Rellef. OO0 Anyone who tries this pleasant tast- home-made coufzh . syrup, will quickly understand why it is used in more homes in the United States and Canada than any other cough remedy.: he way it takes hold of an obstina eough, giving immediate relief, will make ou regret that you never tried it be- fore. It is a truly dependable cough remedy that should be kept handy in ev&f,v home, to use at the first sign of a eonigh during the night or day time. Any druggist can supply you with 215 ounces of Pinex (50 cents worth). [Pour this into a pint bottle and fill the fbottle with plain granulated sugar eyrup. The total cost is about 54 cents jand you have a full pint of the most effective remedy you ever used. The quick, lasting relief you get from his excellent cough syrup will really purprise you. It promptly heals the nflamed membranes that line the throat nd ‘air_passages, stops the annoying roat tickle, loosens the phlegm, an oon your cough stops entirely. Splen- Hid _for bronchitis, croup, ~whooping ough and bronchial asthma. Pinex is a highly concentrated com- ound of Norway pine extract, combined ith guaiacol and is famous the world ver for its healing effect on the mem- in ranes. To avoid disappointment ask for “214 junces of Pinex” with full directions d don’t accept anything else. A guar- om of absolute satisfaction or money fomptly refunded goes with this prep- ion.” The Pinex Co., Wayne, senators who finally voted against the resolution, Kifby, Vardaman, and Works, vigorously attack the presi- dent’s course. Senator Kirby declared that to vote for the Stone resolution would be equivalent to voting for a preliminary declaration of war on Germany, while Senators Works and Vardaman aserted that Americans should waive their rights to travel in the submarine danger zone. Senator Works virtually attempted to justify the German course as forced by mili- tary necessity. Nineteen in Defense. These attacks brought speeches from nineteen senators warmly de- fending the president’s course. The movement for the adoption of the res- olution was left jointly by Senator Stone and Senator L.odge of Massa- chusetts, ranking republican member of the foreign relations committee, and in ordinary times one of the pres- i ident's bitterest critics. Senator Lodge took the ground that on such a ques- tion party lines should vanish and con- gress should stand squarely behind tha president. While this was obviously the prevail- ing sentiment in the chamber, several senators who voted for the resolution deprecated the action of Senator Stone in bringing it before the house, declaring that it was not proper for the senate to take action at this time, as the president did not need action by the senate to sustain him; that it served to emphasize differences of opinion which might better have been kept hidden; and that it tended to commit the senate in advance to a declaration of war should the presi- dent find it necessary to come before congress again in case of an overt act by Germany. Senator Stone, who is understood to have felt that the president shoull have waited for an overt act before breaking off relations, devoted his speech requesting the passage of the resolution almost entirely to showing ident was whol ithin | OLD SORES, ULCERS | AND ECZEMA VANISH f | Good, Old, Reliable Peterson’s Oint- ment a Favorite Remedy. “Had 51 ulcers on my legs. Doctors wanted to cut off leg. Peterson's | Ointment cured me.'—Willlam J. ' Nichols, 40 Wilder St., Rochester, Get a large box for 25 cents at any druggist, says Peterson, and money back if it isn’'t the best you ever used. Always keep Peterson’'s Ointment in the house. Fine for burns, scalds, bruises, sunburn, and ‘the surest remedy for itching eczema and piles the worid has ever known. “Peterson’s Ointment is the best for bleeding and itching piles I ever found."—Major Charles E. Whitney Vineyard Haven, Mass. “Peterson's Ointment has given great satisfaction for Salt Rheum. «—Mrs. J. L. Weiss, Cuylerville, N. Y. + All druggists sell it, recommend it. e his constitutional rights in acting did. Senator Stone wa ator Underwood if the res introduced because the administration wished it passed. Mr. Stone replied that he had brought it up without consultation with the president or any other executive official because he thought it “would be an advisable thing for the senate officially tc say that it approves the action of the president.” President Sought No Endorsement. “If the president desired in this emergency, action by sustain his course, enator Under- wood replied, “I would ‘give it unhes- itatingly and without criticism of any kind, but if it has not been the desire of the president, and if he has not {felt it is necessary to sustain his course by this resolution I think it has been very ill-advised and very ill- timed on the part of the senator from Missouri.” Senator Underwood, however, de- iclared that he would vote for the resolution, because he felt that a failure to do so might be misinterpre- ted abroad; that he did not wish his vote to be regarded as committing him in any way should the question of de- claring war come beforc the senate. He praised the president highly { having kept the nation out of war up to this time. Senators Jones and Townsend toolk the timeliness of the resolution, while i Senator Norris asserted that before the jresolution was indorsed the president should lay before the senate all the pertinent diplomatic correspondence with Germany leading up to the break, i He voted for the resolution, however. Among the strongest. supporters of the president was Senator Hustig of Wisconsin, whose constituency has a large German element, “I am from a state foreign-born inhabitant large extent,”” he said, ‘“and many of them are intensely interested in the issue of war or peace. I share their anxiety, and T would do nothing to bring about war with Germany or any other nation. Of course, we want peace; the only question. is how it can be preserved. The issue that is pre- | sented here this afternoon is not a new that containg to a very issue. It has long been before the country. The president has not changed. Germany and her allies are the ones who changed.” An American Issue. One of the noticeable elements of the debate was the insistence by many senators that the question be con- sidered purely as an American ue, without regard to the fortunes of either set of belligerents. Senator Borah declared that unless he was sure the president was insisting solel; on America’s rights as a neutral he would not support the resolution. Senator Stone urged that the nation keep from being carried away from the consideration of its own interests by the opinions of either sct of bel- ligerente. Great care was taken by the sup- the senate to ) a similar position on the question of | for | porters of the resolution to insist that {rczls(lns stated in his address delivered ’ ter part of wisdom if the president they were in no sense advocating hos- tilities, and that whole-hearted sup-, port of the president was the only | proper way to assure peace. Nearly every senator expressed the hope that war would be averted, while asserting that they backed the president standing firmly on American rights. Among the men who supported (hel president’s course on the floor were| Senators Stone, Lodge, Martine, Pi!t»! man, Sherman, Husting, McCumber, Thomas Hollis Myers and Hardwick. The Lineup. Torty-three democrats and thirty- five republicans voted for the resolu- tion. They were: t Democrats — Ashurst, Beckham, Bryan, Chamberlain, Chilton, Culber- son, Fletcher, Hardwick, Hitchcocl, Hollis Hughes, Husting, James, John- son of South Dakota, Lee, Lewis, Mar- | tin, Martine, Myers, Newlands, Over- man, Owen, Phelan, Pittman, Pom- erne, Bansdell, Reed, Robinson, Sauls- Shafroth, Sheppard, Shields, Simmons, Smith of Georgia, Smith of Maryland, Smith of South Carolina, Stone, Thomas, Thompson, Tillman, Underwood, Walsh and Willians—43. Republican—Borah, Brady, Bran- degee, Clapp, Clark, Colt, Cummins, Curtis, du Pont, Fall, Fernald, Gal- linger, Harding, Jones, Kenyon, Lip- pitt Oliver, Page, Penrose, Poindexter, Sherman, Smith of Michigan, Smoot, Sterling Sutherland Townsend, Wads- worth, Warren, Watson and Weeks.— 35. The Stone resolution follows: | Whereas, The president has, for the SAGE TEA KEEPS YOUR HAIR DARK It’'s - Grandmother’s recipéi to bring back color, youthfulness and lustre —Everybody is using it again Gray hair, however handsome, de- notes advancing age. We all know the advantages of a youthful appear- ance. Your hair is your charm. It makes or marks the face. When it fades, turns gray and looks streaked, just a few applications of Sage Tea and Sulphur enhances its appearance a hundred-fold. , Don't stay gray! Look young! Either prepare the recipe at home or get from any drug store a 50-cent bottle of “Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com- pound,” which is merely the old-time recipe improved by the addition of other ingredients. Thousands of folks recommend this ready-to-use prepara- tion, because it darkens the hair beau- tifully, besides no one can possibly tell, as it darkens so naturally and evenly. You moisten a sponge or soft brush with it, drawing this through the hair, | taking one small strand at a time. By morring the gray hair disappears: after another application or two, its natural color is restored and it be- comes thick, glossy and lustrous, and you appear years younger. Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com- pound is a delightful toilet requisite. It is not intended for the cure, miti- gation or prevention of disease. | government by session on diplomatic to the congress in February 3 1917, severed relations with the Imperial German the recall of the American ambassador at Berlin and handing his passports to the German ambassador at hington; and Whereas, Notwithstanding this severance of diplomat intercourse, the president has expressed his de: to avoid conflict with the Imperial German government; and Whereas, The president declared in his said address that, if in his judg- ment occasion should arise for further action in the premises on the part of the government of the United States, he would submit the matter to the and ask the authority of the to use such means as he might deem necessary for the protec- tion of American seamen and people in the prosecution of their peaceful | and legitimate errands on the high seas; therefore be it Resolved, That the senate approves the action taken by the president, as ddress delivered be- on of the congress, | point as above stated. Resents Foreign Influence, the referred Senator Stone, in asking for adoption of the resolution, first to a newspaper article telling of the enthusiastic reception of the news | of the president’s action in I.ondon, and warned the American people not to allow foreign influence to determine their coursc. “A great number of articles of like import,” he said, ‘““have been appear- ing from day to day in the American press. I cannot foretell what eventu- alities may result from the regrettable international entanglements in which we are now involved. Plainly we are facing a situation in which, unhappily, our diplomatic relations are sorely strained with respect to some of the| belligerent European nations, but I desire to impress my conviction and to express the hope that we shall not Jose our equilibrium and be swept off our feet, at least at the instance of any foreign power or under the in- fluence of a foreign propaganda put forth for the purpose of exciting us into war. “In a matter of this grave import ) T resent and regret any attempted foreign dictation, no matter from what source it emanates or in what form it comes. We should take our own course in our own way, insisting that foreign powers and foreign or semi- foreign people attend to their own business. At the same time I venture to express the hope that the officials and people of the United States will avoid any speech of a partisan character calculated to ex- cite passion in our bwn country. “I have presented this resolution because I think we should let the world know that we support the president of the United States when- ever acting within his constitutional power, he speaks authoritatively for the country. There are senators who il | power had postponed the severance of diplo- matic relations with Germany at least until Germany had committed some overt act offensive to this government and sufficiently aggravated to warrant a step so grave in possible conse- quences; but the president took a dif- ferent view, which with great ability he strongly supported in his address before theé joint session on the 3d in- stant, and as according to my view, he acted within his constitutional au- thority, I think it both wise and ad- visable for the senate to say officially 1hat it accepts and approves this ac- tion of the nation’s chief magistrate.” T.odge for President. “In my opinion,” Senator Lodge said, “the president did what was de- manded by the honor, the safety, and the future security of the United States. The constitution of the Unit- ed States has vested the president with the conduct of our foreign re- lations up to the point when war is the next step. Of his right under the constitution to dismiss a foreign rep- resentative I have no question. The which can alone receive must in the necessity of things be the pow- er which must dismis cise of his constitutional power with the high responsibility of and his | office resting upon him, the president has taken this action. It has placed us in controversy and created a strained situation with a foreign na- tion. “Under these circumstances, so far as I am concerned, party lines vanish, and any criticism of the past or the present is silenced for me. When my country is in, controversy with a foreign nation I can see for myself but one duty and that is to stand by and to support the recognized con- stitutional authority of the govern- ment in our dealings with foreign na- tions, “I see no place here at this moment for the discussion of an embargo on munitions of war. I think the pres- ident was quite right in refusing to impose such an embargo if he desired to preserve neutrality. It seems to me also quite out of place to attempt to apportion blame or praise among other nations. This is not the time nor the place for the expression of sympathies for one side or the other in this great war. There is only one question before us, and that is our relation with one of the great powers of the earth at this moment. “The president has taken grave ac LUNCH BOSS BISChU T» Sold by Your Grocer thought it would have been the bet- | In the exer-' | waste matter, | using Internal Baths. tion. I feel it to be my duty, as | ‘have said, to support him to the utf most of my power. He is the pres ident of my country, the president o the United States. And, Mr. Pres: ident, if, as we all pray, further dif: ficulties are to be avoided and we a3 to be saved from war, in my Dgo judgment there is one step more im4 portant than any other, if we are tdq preserve our peace under existing com: ditions, and that is to show to thi people of the country that we ai without divisions at this moment; thi we are thinking only of the Unite States and its representatives in all in- ternational questions. If we exhibl divisions we exhibit weakne! and weakness is the temptation to those intolerable aggressions which would} surely bring the war that we all seek honorably to avold. “My earnest hope that at this time persona] feelings, political feel- ings, political enmities will all be laid aside, that we may remember only that we are cltizens of a common country that we are all Americans, and that our first duty is to stand together in this controversy, which has unhappily arisen with other nas tion and the world know that when the president speaks, as he has spoken, he has the congress of the United States and the people of the ited States, no mattér what their race or’'origin, being him in the one simple character of American cit- izens."” BATHE INTERNALLY OVER 500,000 PEOPLE ARE NOW DOING SO. For many years physicians have agreed that the vast majority of human ills were caused by accumulated waste in the Lower Tntestine; that in our present way of living Nature could not remove all this waste without assistance, no regular we might be; and that the polson from this waste circulated through the blood pulled us away down below par and was responsible for many diseases of & serfous nature During this_time the “J. B. L. Cascade’ for Internal Bathing has, because of their recommendation and those of its users, been steadily growing in favor. Recently, however, the startling news which has been covering this country that great surgeons and specialists have been operating on the Lower Intestine for the most chronic and serlous diseases has caused Americans to become thoroughly awake to the importance of keeping this Lower Intestine fres; from all poisonoys and over 500,000 are now is If you try the “J.'B, L. 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