New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 9, 1917, Page 14

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

LN FAIST0 STIR UP INDIANS. 'gad With Attempfing toj ment Trouble Since 1914 i ‘nn,‘lndifl. Feb. 9.—From a time pom the war right up to the pres- l moment Germany has' never Med attempts to stir the Indlan em- j to revolt, according to Sir Charles eland, director of criminal intel- hee in this country, who made this Pment to a correspondent of the E('lmed Press. Sir Charles charac- ed the plots as “clumay, belated, theoretical, and based on a misun- standing of Indian character,” and ared that the scheme falled chief- cause of “the sanity’ of the great En public which has withheld its ort.” fir Chatles #s reputed to know more ut thos¢/in whasky the secret service urally would be interested than any r man in India. For years he has le a study of that class which fa- |s the darkness of night for ity com- 5 apd its goings, and now as head {the secret service, the government .es upon him to check untoward Jz2- ‘rences in any section before they /e grown inlo & serious menace. Troable Not Setious. “There has been some trouble in iia,” sald Sir Charles, “but it has Fen very far short both of the pic- ‘e drawn in enemy publications and |the enemy's desire. The state of flla all through the war seems 10 Ve exposed & very big miscalculation the part of the Germans. “It would be interesting to examine 'w far this miscalculation was due a misunderstanding of normal In- affairs and how far to a misear- ge the war. My own impression is t Germany thought India would ed wery little extraneous promptirg Lfl assistance to rise against the Brit- if the latter were in serious em- prassment owing to a big continent- |'war, and that thereforo not very uch attention was pald by the Ger- an government to instigation in In- before the war. Where and how the German government get that lea? as it conveyed to them oy jeret unknown agents or by their snsular officers? It is difficult to iy for certain but I remember that jme years ago an Indian extremist sader used the following words to e “‘We shall certainly try to embar- ass you actively in India if you have [\war with a continental power or th Afghanistan. Our feelings are rm on that peint unless, indeed, self- ercst or some special reason dlc- . a passive attitude to some or all \f us. . But never again will you find uch positive assistance s we gave ou at the time of the Boer war.’ ! “My extremist friend went on to tell e that we were foolish to think we ould count on the Indian army. Atj Ihe time I thought my friend's atti- | fude was pathetic in its self-delusion and time hus shown that T was right. Spends Moncy Freely. | “After the war broke out the Ger- | an government showed a willing- | mess to spend money lavishly on Indi- lan trouble but there was no sign of |financing’ of troublesome scherues or lindividuals before the war. In 1913 and 1914 a German viewing the sit- uation in India with patriotic antl-} British eyes would have observed the | following phenomena: A rapproche- ment between a section of Indian Mo- hamedans and the Young-Turk party | in Furope: an anarchical revolution- | ary movement of extreme nationallsm | du the Bombay vresidency and some other places: an unrestrained ‘Ghadr’ .movement among indians in the Unit- | ed States and Canada, and a certain | amount of Moslem dissatisfaction in | [l the north of India and along the northwest frontier. I think it was be- yond ihe power of any German to, de- cide whether these, phenamena were the signs of a deep and widespread un- rest or merely local surfaze disturb- ances and 1 feel sure that in order to interpret them the Gernuins consulted exiled and partisan Indians who were | out of touch with India as a whole and who therofore magnified thei own views and feelings and those of ——————r———— BACK HURTS OR KIDNEYS BOTHER Uric Acid in meat Kidneys and irritates Bladder. Says clogs A Glass of Salts is Harmlcss way to flush Kidneys, says authority It you must have your meat every day, eat it, but flush your kidneys with salts occasionally, says a noted | | QUIT MEAT WHEN l | | I YOU'RE BILIOUS ! CLEAN LIVER AND BOWELS TONIGHT headachy, sick, or breath and, sowr omach, Wake up fecling finc! Best laxative for men. women - and children. Don’t’ stay ! have bad | ORK WHILE YOU SLE Enjoy life! bowel poison which is keeping your head dizzy, your tongue coated, breath offensive, and stomach sour. Don't stay billous, sick, hsadachy, constipated and full of cold. Why don’t you get a box of Cascarets from the drug store and cat one or two tonight and enjoy the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel cleansing vou exer experienced. You will wake up feel- ing fit and fine. Cascarets never gripe or sicken like salts, pills and calomel. They act so gently that you hardly realize you have taken a cathartic. Mothers should give cross, sick, billous or feverish children ‘a whole Cascaret any time—they aot thoroughly and are harmless. ———— ! their friends and associatec out of all reasonahle proportion. “For the first few months of the war the Germans waited for the In- ®lan storm to come of itself as they had been led to believe that it would come. To begin with our enemies based extravagant hopes on Turkey's intervention, but the Indizn Mohame- dans as a whole took this with extra- ordinary calm and resignation. Then came the ‘Ghadr’ invasion from the United States, Canada and the rar east, but that broke itself hopelessly on th: good sense and feeling of the Puniab public and on the resourceful admin- istration of that province. Work on Bengals. “Disappointed by these failures,of the Indign troubM to arrive automati- caliy, the Germans realized that they niust attempt direct assistance and turned their attention to the Bengal revolulonary party. Afer six months or so of the war the Germans had established a regular bureau of disaf- ] fected Indians in Germany itself, among whom were included some leading members of most of the dis- turbing movements already men- tioned. Under their advice grundiose schemes were evolved for the supply of arms, ammunition, money and even German soldiers and sailors to the revolutionaries in Bengal and to the disaffected Moslem fanatics in the north of India. ““The scherues all miscarried hope- lessly; remittances had a way of get- | ting intercepted by the wrong people; . dian public | support. | moment we of the secret service NEW RBRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, _1017. RHEUMATISM Physician Believes a Genuine Rem- edy for the Diseasc Has Been Found. Rheuma, the wonderful rheumatism remedy sold by Clark & Brainerd Co. and all druggists, gives quicker and more lasting relief than other reme- dies costing many times as much. Rheuma passes the deadly poison- ous secretions into the bowels and kidneys, from which they are quickly thrown off in a natural, healthy way. Read what a reputable physician says about Rheuma: “I have made a most ‘careful investigation of the { formula employed in the manufacture of Rheuma, and I heartily recom- mend it as a remeédy for all forms of rheumatism. I find Rheuma far i{n ad- vance of the methods generally em- ploye€d in the treatment of rheuma- tism, and altogether different in com- | position from the: remedies usually prescribed.”—Dr. Lyons. This should give any sufferer from rheumatism confidence to try Rheuma. Remove the liver and | ee——————————————————————————m——— ships on secret German errands-'kept knocking up against the Allled war- ships, and last, but pérhaps, not least not least, most of move in the plots were promptly reported to us all along hy our own agents. These plots are still continuing but there is little sting in them and I am afraid the Germans themselves do not believe in them very strongly. “I should like to be able to say that the frustration of the plots has been due to the Indian police and to the branch of that service under me but I gladly admit that it has been chief- ly due to the sanity of the great In- which has withheld its Plots and conspiracies are very severely handicapped when the public environment is apathetic or hostile to the conspirator. At' the are feeling very comfortable but profes- sionally we are disappointed with the German plots for India. We had hoped to learn a great deal from their sys- tem and methods but they seem to use to have been clumsy, belated, too theoretical and based on a misunder- standing of Indian character. At the same time I believe the British em- pire owes .a great debt to the Indian police in all its branches for its un- swerving loyalty and zeal during the great war.” CONNECTICUT FAR BEHIND AS FARMER This State Ranks 41st in Crop Agricultural Field ‘Washington, Feb, 9.—A regord was established last year in the value of | farm crops produced in the United States, notwithstanding that produc- tion of most of the crops fell far short of records. The high prices made the aggregate crop value $8,984,687,000 as announced by the department of ' agriculture. Value, of the crops by States and the rank of cach state fol lows: (Values, stated in millions, le., three ciphers omitted.) State Maine New Hampshire Vermont Massachusetts Rhode Island Connecticut New York New Jersey Pennsylvania Delaware .... Maryland Virginta West Virginia North Carolina South Carolina Georgla Florida Tennessee Alabama . Mississippl .. Louisiana ‘Texas Oklahoma Arkansas . Ohio Indiana Illinois . Michigan . ‘Wisconsin . Minnesota Towa .... Missouri North Dakota South Dakota 190,343 Nebraska .. 390,615 Kansas .. 314,463 Kentucky 219,821 Montana .. 121,055 ‘Wyoming 36,323 Colorado . 106.453 New Mexico 22,670 Arizona 22,626 Utah ... 43,486 Nevada 17,148 Idaho 76,186 ‘Washington 128,960 Oregon .. 106,474 California 271,668 CENTRAL MARKETS Rank 32 43 40 38 48 41 Value $ 89,287 26,714 42,782 50,621 5,408 42,192 293,329 8 79,326 35 299,408 7 17,847 46 87,001 84 215,886 21 87,262 338 274,435 11 192,468 22 384,924 5 60,495 37 220,888 19 168,469 217 190,674 182,845 684,851 228,723 250,611 281,228 286,384 478,102 238,748 264,699 269,874 516,658 260,049 167,644 Parisian Shoppers Change Their Methods of~ Buying Parls, Feb. 9.—Present conditions of life have not reduced the girth of the average Parisian, but they have be- gun to work upon susceptible temtu- ers and are changing the physiognomy of the central markets. Cooks who are boycotting the merchants of their quarter to buy at the central markets numbered hundreds a few months ago and now number thousands. “hey made the cars of the subway lines leading to the central markets look like greegrocers’ delivery wagons in the early hours until, out of deference to passengers who objected to the odor of Limburger cheese, garlic, adnd other foodstuffs in their raw state, the sub- way company provided speclal cars for them. | ‘“Eggs eight to ten sous a piece, but- ter seventy to seventy-five sous ARE POPULAR, Glass of Hot Water | Before Breakfast | a Splendid Habit Open sluices of the system each | morning and wash away the | polsonous, stagnant matter, —— ‘rnose of us who are accustomed to feel dull and heavy when we arise; splitting headache, stuffy from a cold foul tongue, nasty breath, acid stomach, lame back, can, Instead, both look and feel as fresh as a daisy always by washing the polsons and toxins from the body with phosphated | hot water each morning. ‘We should drink, before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a tea- spoonful of limestone phosphate in it to flush from the stomach, liver, kidneys and ten yards of bowels the rrevious day’s indigestible waste, sour bile and poisonous toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and puritying the entire alimentary tract before put- ting more food into the stomach. The action of limestone phosphate and hot water on an empty stomach | is wondertully invigorating. It cleang cut all the sour fermentations, gases, waste and acidity and gives one a splendid appetite for breakfast and 1 it is sald to be but a little while until | the roses begin to appear in the | cheeks. A quarter pound of limestone | phosphate will cost very little at the | drug store, but is sufficlent to make anyone who is bothered with billous- ness, constipation, stomach trouble or raeumatism a real enthusiast on the "subject of internal sanitation. Try it and you are assured that you will look better and feel better in every , way shortly. e ———————— pound! Ouf! La! la! What are we coming to?” explained a bareheadcd | woman as she deposited her market | basket on the floor.of one of these special “marketing” cars. “Look at that!” joined in the wo- man standing beside her, picking a brown parcel from her basket. “There !1s a roast—just about enough fur three, and do you know how much it cost me? It cost me sixty sous; I would like to know where all the money goes.” Such conversations are heard every morning in these new subway cars. They touch a point that no one has yet been able to clear up. The aver- | age retaller confesses to no ureater profit than is proportionate to his own increased expenses. The farmer and stock raiser insist that they are get- ting no more than their share. The farmer gets more for every- thing he sells than he did before the war; ‘twenty per cent. more on the average for mutton, twenty per cant. i more for wheat, twenty-five per cent. more for oats, twenty per cent. more for beef; but he points out that, in compensation for this incredse, he now has to pay farm hands twice the i wages that he paid before the war, while fertilizers which he uses in con- siderable quantities went from sixty francs to 130 francs per ton. Established 1886 GlobeClothingHouse This Store is thé Home of Hart, Schaffner & Marx CLOTHES 31st Annual Sale Continues on SUITS and OVERCOATS NEW SPRING NECKWEAR HAS ARRIVED 50c. to $1.50 Dbefore the war and it costs him no more to light his shop or to run it: in many cases his operating expeuses are | necessarily less because he is obliged to get along with less help. The best authorities figure that the retail gro- cer, butcher and greegrocer are mak- ing from twenty-five to forty per cent. more profit than before the war on most of the things they sell. The pro- ducer is making at least twenty per cent. more, the rest of the advance in prices being absorbed in higher trans- portation expenses and larger profits to intermediaries. The average housewife cunnot ga sufficiently into details to follow the money to its final destination, but sho knows that where she spent 100 francs before the war she now spends 175; if she could not send the cook to the central markets for part of her supplies, the increase would be much greater. MEXICO EXTENDS TIME. Mexico City, Feb. 9.-—Because of difficulties imposed by the European war the government has extended the time in which patents, trade marks and copyrights may be registered and protected in Mexico by citizens of The retailer has no such excuse. Rents are no higher than they were belligerent nations. These citizens may register patents, trade marks and | soreness and stiffness. copyrights produced after July 31, 1914, at any time within six months after the ending of the European war without suffering loss of protection. e ————————————— STOPS ANY COLD IN A FEW HOURS “Pape’s Cold Compound” Opens Clogged Nose and Head and Ends Grippe. Relief comes instantly. Ly A dose taken every two hours until ' three doses are taken will end grippe misery and break up a severe cold either in the head, chest, body or limbs. It promptly opens clogged-up nos- trils and air passages in the head, stops nasty discharge or nose run- ° ning, relieves sick headache, dullness, feverishness, sore throat, sneesing, « Don’t stay stuffed-up! , Quit blowing and snuffling, Ease your throbbing head! Nothing in the world gives such prompt relief as ‘‘Pape’'s Cold Compound, which costs only 25 cents at any drug store. It acts without assistance, tastes nice, causes no ¥m- conveniences. Be sure you get the genuine. i ‘ N | i | authority who tells us that meat forms i uric acid which almost paralyzes the Kkidneys in their efforts to expel it from the blood. They become sluggish and , then you suffer with a dull misery in the kidney region, pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue ! is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get sore and Irritated, obliging you to seek relief two or three times during the night. alize these i e the kidneys s urirous ounces of Jad S and flush off W e xet four s from any phar- macy he take a tablespoonful in a glass of water hefore breakfast for a fow days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has heen used for generations to flush and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine, so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in- _Jure, and makes a delightful efferves- _cent lithia wator dnak. sharp | ting acids, | ANNOUNCEMENT! TO THE PEOLPE OF NEW BRITAIN AND VICINITY: On or about February 17th we will open our new store at the address below. A real treat is in THIS IS TO BE YOUR STORE store for the people of this enterprising city, who have long waited for a first class Jewelry Shop. Our marvelous stock will surely appeal. We make it our business to go out into the markets and select the exceptional, rejecting everything commonplace. That's why, when you com: here, you are going to find the surperior jewelry. The wonderful values that will always be found in this new up-to-the-minute jewelry store, will always set a new mark in the jewelry business in this city. The policy of the REED JEWELRY CO. will be one embodying service, real values at prices The | new to you, and an ever ready desire to please our patrons. WATCH THE PAPERS FOR FUTURE ANNOUNCEMENTS 164 MAIN STREET, NEW BRITAIN (On the Square) THE REED JEWELRY CO.

Other pages from this issue: