New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 5, 1919, Page 10

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We have acmirable an Mr. Taft has set the picture for vou of what a failure of this great purpose would mean. \We have been hearing for all these weary months that this agony of war has lasted of of the Central made ot meant their con- did the lines central line Bremen 10 these | has 12y he in the empires, and the course that guests to take. of that map liec, that used to They to which attention united cmpire, sinister purpose € we have maps they Whe of call lay hat from through Mr. Taft but they mpire, whose to path of Turkish profes- own, lay the di- rect path that intended to tread And now what happened? The Austro-Hungarian empire has gone to pieces and the Turkish empire has disappeared, and the nations that fected that result—for it B result of liberation—are now sponsible as the trustees of the a sets of those great nations. You not only would have weak nations lying fn this path, but you would have nations in which that old poisonous seed of intrigue could be planted with the certainty that the crop would be abundant; and one of the things that the league of nations is intended to watch is the course of intrigue. In- trigue cannot stand publicity, and if the league of nations were nothing but a great debating socicty it would kil intrigue. It is one this covenant right of ev the league to thing that it yeace of the that thing is that may world which and discussion, body here present me that Germany e reg Y Ty 1lled then Austro-Hungarian tegrity Germany was bound spect, as her ally lay in the that line of conquest; the empire, whose inte she sed to make her ons onr through o sts lay in she has ef- great was re- agreements of the friendly nation a member of attention to any- thinks will disturb the world, no matter where occurring. There is no fouch the peace of is exempt from in- | and I think | will agre would never of the that it is call subject the with WANTED FOR MURDER DESCRIPTION Height—>5 feet 10 inches. Weight—191 pounds. e Blosed | nations that h know how desir o and the righteou whom pulse of the heart of the world. Amazed but some i And norax These the body they 1 know been they zeneral 1 at 1 a amazed quarters ce Tgnovance m of gentlemen Ise ¢ ave by blinded; Ve mankind. warning, the And fo 1 W rees threaten, tides that they ise not the they does. mind of men 1 been what been ant t in of they are in currents t t the a stat o is ju do closeted. influences but separated I of utte he v he amazed—not that such the re c o not 15t now. should the know £ 1 able The the main features, @« the B D8 ve long _heen under covenant of the leagle of nations Khat'| the® heel _of . the™ AfGstrian, that it is perhaps not necessary for 'me{ to |have long “cowered before the discuss in any particular way §hd | German, that have lor suffered contents of the document. I will segk |the indesccribable agonies of be- rather to give vou its setting. 1 do [ing soverned by the Turk have | hot know when T have heea more im} |called out to the world, generation pressed than by the conferences of tha)|after generation, for justice, for commission set up by the conference jliberation, for succor: and no cabinet bt peace to draw up a covenant for |¥n the world has heard them. Private the league of nations. The represen- | orginizations, pitving hearts, philan- 14 natlons sat around that |thropic men and women have poured board—not young men, not men in- |out their treasure in order to relieve experienced in the affairs of their own | these sufferings; but no nation has countries, not men inexperienced in | said to the nations responsible. “You the polities of the world and the in- |must stop: this thing is intolerable, Bpiring influence of every meeting wag 'and we will not permit it.” And the the concurrence of purpose on the | vision has been with the people. My bart of all those men to come to an | friends, I wish you would reflect upon hgreement and an cffective working | ¢his proposition: The vision as to mgreement with vegard to this leaguo | what is necessary for great reforms pf the civilized world. | has seldom come from the top in the There was a conviction in the | nations of the world. It has come whole impulse: there was coavietion | from the need and the aspiration and of more than one sort: there was thd . (e self-assertion of great bodies of Ponviction that this thing ought to Do | men who meant to be free. And I done. and there was also the convic- | i exilain some of the criticlsms tion that not a man there would Ven- | picn have been leveled against this ture to go home and suy that he had | AT (K0 " only by the sup- ot triediroicoliC ,“])n tion that the men who utter the Need to Watch Tntrigue. criticism have mnever felt the great of Opponents. alarmed. e in comprehensive world. what cery not know where do the o RS wou operate world zoing their do t no o majesty I they Know this of 2 fd - de The t ise and and do from thoughts ove not have that the of solemn threat: not great give notice run; whelming might, and those who stand in the the the he: he: fied for the entirely omic deeper They neve intrigue or dence war. must this,” are nations Jjealous way art art Do mon moti to of the of the world vourselves uneasiness is not nent populations & - let that underlies see that their worl of onomic something the Europe causes a n all are overwhelmed. is awake, and be satis- suppose st or very than e Now in due 2o~ much that. governments have been able to defend them against in a And beginning ha fostering ny therefore they fundamental me t ve oups prejudic o stood aggression, perceive a 1 against increasing binet c and the fundamental cause they to or each ¥ i ) to be " ause and that there | no force of fovesight or of pru- |t modern s stop here for that little other, the danger of war rather than concerting measures to prevent it: and that if there is right in the world, if there is justice in the world, there is no reason why nations should be divided in the support of justice They are therefore sayving if vou really believe that there is a right, if you really believe that wars ought to | 5o stopped. stop thinking about the rival interests of nations. and think about men and women and children thronghout the world tions are not made to afford distinction to their rulers by way of success in the ma- neuvers of politics: nations are meant, | if they are meant for anything, to make the men and women and chil- dren in them secure and happy and prosperous and no nation has the right to set up i special interests azainst the interests and benefits of mankind, least which benefit we of lo It w manikind it of all this great nation et up for the was set up to 4 B ey illustrate the highest ideals and to Iron grey mustache, curled achieve the highest aspirations of men upward. who wanted to be free; and the world WANTED FOR ATROCITI —the world of today—believes that D ¥ and counts on us, and would be AGAINST HUMANITY. | thrown back into the blackness of | despalr if we deserted it fellow-citizens, 16 sayv to little ecircles UPON APPREHENSION | of friends or fo larger bodi what seems to be the reil hope of the pec NOTIFY AUTHORITIES. | ples 6f Europe, and T tell 1 have heen ahle ou s6 b frar Luse WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5, 1919, | | | | | ffd nothing cxcept | home is where nothing has to be ex- ldangerous to us to|plained to him. Nothing has to D " It would be fatal |l explained ta me in America, least of help it. all the sentiment of (he Awmerican Bivwhat 1 will venture to | beople. T mean about great funda famous and the most | mental things like this. There I fion in the world we | many differences of jndsment as 1o Budden have become the | Policy—and perfectl Legtiiimat ptible. So. I did not|sometimes profound diffeveaces ot & told, as I have been told, | Judgment; but those are mnot differ- eople of the United States | €nces of purpose, those are not dif- pport this covenant 1 am | erences of ideals. And the adv f8rican and I knew they would. | Of not havingto have anythingexplain- B '=weet revonge it is upon the ied to you is that you recognize a They laughed af vs once, they | Wrong explanation when vou hear ht we did not mean our pro-| In a certain rather abandoned port fBre of principle. They thought | Of the frontier at one time it was said BNt April of 1917. Tt was hard- | they found a man who told the truth Feredible to them :hat we would | he was not found telling it but he more than send few men over | could tell it when he heard it. And g0 through the forms of helping, ' 1 think T am in that situation with Bd when they saw multitudes hast- | 'egard to some ot the criticisms [ BBing across 1he sea. and saw what have heard. They do not make any Whose muliitudes were cager fo do | impression on me, because [ know felien they ot to the other side, they | there is no medium that will teansmit B¥¥00q ot amaze and said: “The thing 'hem, that the sentiment of the s real, this nation o friend of | “ountry is proof against such narrow- ankind as it said it was.® The en. N°ss and such selfishness as that. T %husinsm. the hope. the trust, the ¢ommend these geatlemen to com eonfidence in the future bred by that , Munion with their fellow citizens. Ehange of view is indescribable. Take | Confident of the Future. an individual American and vou may often find him selfish. and confined What arve we to say, then, as to tl to his special interes b take the future? I think. my fellow citizens. American in the mass and be is will- { that we can look forward to it with ing to dic for an idca. The sweet | great confidence. 1 have heard cheer- QY CVenge. therefore, is this, that wo ing news since I came to this side of for, - Delieved in righteousness, and now we | the water about the progress that is Ples. | 2re Tendy to make the supreme sac- | being made in Paris toward the dis war, Tifice for i, the supreme sacrifice of cussion and Clarification throwing in our fortunes with the'a great many difficult ma fortuncs of men everywhere. Mr. ‘ters and 1 believe that settlements | Taft was speaking of Washinzton's will begin 1o be made rapidly from foo anq @ Utteraunce .m::m entangling alliances, this time on at those conferences. But # the United }flz‘]“:,r( h,‘]’“\“""\>‘1i:*]"""' me 10 say so, what I helieve—what I know as well o G S O 'L interpreta- as believe, is this: That the men en -t they wero 0 (1N s Thevial I vou read gaged in those conferences arc gath fie vealization of no MO said. --\~“‘xlu” of these gertle- ering heart as they go. not losing it fhey were not only e he thing that he that they are finding community of : Bt beot Camronies o d for was just what we are now purpose and community of ideal to an IEESin: over there mere. | 2POUL O SUDDIY: an arrangement extent that perhans they did nat ex- fRtment in their hearts | Which will disentangle all the al- peet; and that amidst all the inter BPPS borticular outlaw nation: | |AN¢eS ¥ the world. play of influence—because it in "that they were crossing those | Sees Al Alliances Disentangled. initely \"f‘mm_hnwri amids 1 the #hree thousand miles of sea in order Nothingl lentanslen notninel i '\‘*'fi‘_"*)"d\ of m"m'mty tiSKeRis aftons oW o imurope that \the WUnlfedt|inicshies o mant axcenil a soilish comt | nard i ent RRILH I NE 0 Witates, when it became necessary, | hination with somebody clse. Nothing ' nescoiven: thol tne anl o At las would go anywhere where the rights | entangles a nation, hampers it. hinds 1h-|:«l~‘|‘|‘n”.h” W ~"“n’\\M'””'m,“m of mankind were threatened. They | it, except to enter into a combina- {hat a wre, “"“"”\"‘ e nisho andy would not sit still in the trenches. ' tion with some other nation agains: be & tomperare sottioment oo Core They would not he restrained by the the other nations of the world, And vers heet weaoin of Al that 1o ayine prudence of experienced continental ' this great disentanglement of all al- {0 be ;A.lvn\:;\‘r.‘l‘n \1.-\VI.\‘m::‘nt ]‘vn“‘f”;v” commanders. They thought they bad liances is now to be accomplished by spirits of men will rehel against it come over there to do a particular | tnis covenant, becausc onec of the and the spirits of men are now in the thing, and they were going to do it | covenants is that no nation shall en- saddle, N i i and do it at once. And just as soon | ter into any relationship with another | When I was in Italy a little limping as that rush of spirit as well as rush ) nation inconsistent with the cove- | group of wounded Ttalian soldiers of body came contact with the | nants of the league of nations. Na- sought an interview with me. 1 could | lines of the enemy, they began to ! tions promise not to have iances. | not conjecture what it was they were | break, and they continued to break | Nations promise not to make com- | going o say to me, and until the end. They continued to | binations against each other. Va- | with the greatest simplic 11\‘.’\\11i| ' break, my fellow-citizens, not merely | tiéns agree that there shall be but | touching simplicity, they presented because of the physical force of those | one combination, and that is the com- | me with a petition in favor of the lusty youngsters, but because of the | Lination of all against the wrongdoer. | league of nations. Their wounded irre V(Ible fmrlmrr. orce of the arm- | And so I am going back to my task | limbs, their impaired vitalit were ies of the United States. Tt was that | on the other side with renewed vigor. | the only argument they brought with that they felt. Tt was that that 1 had not forgotten what the spirit | them. Tt was a simple request that [ awed them. T{ was that that made | of the American people is, but T have | lend all the influence that [ might | them feel, if these youngsters ever 0t hosen immensely refreshed by coming | happen to have to relieve future gen- a foothold, they could never be dis- in contact with it again. T did not | erations of the sacrifices that they lodged, and that therefore every foot know how good home felt until I [had been obliged to make. That ap- of ground that they won wWas Der- | got here. |m-ur has remained in my mind as 1 manently won for the liberty of man- | he only place u man can feel at ' have ridden along the reets in Eu- kind. i And do vou suppose that having felt that crusading spirit of these | youngsters, who went over there not to glorify America but to serve their fellow men, I am going to permit my- | effort to be worthy of them and of e their cause What I said at the opening T said with a deeper meaning | 18 the chief factor of wealth really Can gold buy evervthing? CAN gold than perhaps you have caught: I do | gold-—or its equivalent? supply the indispensable neces- mean not to come back until it's over | oo oial L Lop cold or its equic (s sities of the human being? Grts R okl S SR e T e S S much s equi- Can Gold buy love—happiness and until the nations of the world are as- valent make anyone happy? last af all health? sured of the permanency of peace. Gentlemen on this side of the water | would he very much profited by got- NOH! ting into communication with som eee gentlemen on the other side of the | ! water., We sometimes think, my fel. | What good could all the gold in this Fabulous sums in gold poured in front e e world bring to the man who iy of a dying miser, whose entire Elatesimeniior Liic M uroncanations | failing in health? life m‘.\ been devoted to one ideal ey I R e R G — 1o the hoarding of the glitter- .‘“‘;“.mm” “m»pl \\‘.. herally mean: | Nhat sood fcould all the gold in this ing metal—could not praduc they are a bit cynical, that they say | :W”; hons - RARl S liialiat Eoglconld isiichieaiaiCrocauy “This is a very practical world,” by (‘;l ”f.“f"f.,‘ Selol the laughter do for a man who is aware of the which you always mean that it is not | S i D fact that tuberculosis is acceler- an ideal world: that they do not be- | What good could all the gold in this , , AU2& his death? lieve that things can be settled upon | world do for a drowning person, Lt I8 said of a very rich and famous an ideal basix. Well, 1 never camc for one who is dying, for ono millionaire—that while suffering into intimate contact with them be- | who has lost his vouth prema- fochugisterndch o uL)e WD oglie Lo fore, but if they used to be that way, | turely—for the woman who has claimed—*All my millfonsito Ha- they are not that way now. They | lost her charms? “:’;1“:,'] ‘_‘_‘"”l‘ir”"" eat a cheese i sandwich.”—Of cour > did not'| have been subdued. if that was once | qie chief factor of wealth is Health!! put it = o Leinan tLeir temper, by the awful significance ‘ Without health na one can enjoy What good his n | of recent events and the awful im- Chr R e § Ei 2l Epotecan Saly millionsidofitor portance of what is to ensue: and | = thERpat culimin | there is not one of thzm with whom | | I have come in confact who does not | MEN WOMEN H feel that he cannot in conscience re- e S EALTHY furn to his people from Paris unl o has done his utmost to do some SUFt‘ ERERS~———READ' thing niore than attach his name to | 2 ! a treaty of peace. Ivery man in that | Your health is vour chief assct. Do Not @ bit harmful. This prepa- conference knows that the trealy of N0t underestimate its value, be- rition has been used by the most | peace in itself will be inoperative. | cause you have received it from eminent physicians for years as Alv, Taft has said. without this | Mot} Nature—and because it 1,ANCAT s R e constaii support and energy of & did not cost you anything. 4 ! | L it is @ blood purifier as well. Also Eroat orzanization such as is supplied | It you are healthy-—be sure that you T TRt o Wi i i by the league of nations, i do not negleet your stomach, and and helps it to perform its fuac- And men vihho when [ first went | that rour bowel movement is tions T.AXCARIN Iri s he over there were skeptical of the pos- | regular, LT U 7 i s b e SIDIlINE 0 Morming Ralleagua fofnat | VU BN ST e tions admitted that if we could but | itanciio e ”,.»m”r‘(‘. s 1 1 5 form it it would be an invalnable o2 R e SR SRS o s Teineetigiithivdas instrumentality through which to s St Rl SUNAL ¢ you arc healthy —send for it today L : tract undigested--the result is a : cure the operation of f(he varions 3 vYou can never tell when it iy CM SR o S e T i poor blood supply--without blood o R treaty comes hack, gentlemen on 1his | wyen - Dot e Remember—1Wealt] s el ol e e i o [RYgien epungbovislsinioyalirceulacly Bt e L e ‘\H‘,,“W"\er in it. but so many threads of the S% oaly When foyeen s (he Uite : : S e . WS tinal tract is clogged—and yvou LAXCARIN is soid only by fhe Lax- treaty tied fo the covenant that you | g S E car Prod e > g cannot dissect the covenant from the | ave subject to all kinds of mala- cecii g ool .. Tittsbursh (e ST GRS, e ST dics imaginable. Your system be- Pa. Dept. Price per box §1.00 gl ' comes filled with poisons. The 6 boxes 00. Will be sent upon vital stvucture. The structure of | 4 ; i : 16 sty climinations of these poisons is a receint remittance post paid peace will not be vital without the | Sl rl. e Berh aren anywhere league of nations, and no man s | A Tl e "]' NUFACTURER going to bring hack a cadaver with | ot sk R S G USRS NOTE—Laxcar- him. | oS not sleep well, wor- in is a0t a secret remedy, but o ledin Somatca ey ry, have not the smallest amqunt one which is well known and is of energy or ambition—the most prescribed and recommended by T must say that T Thave been | trivial matters irritate. physicians far a long number of puzzled by some of the criticisms— | Then it is your duty to help Mother AT T G e e not by the criticisms themselves: 1 Nature perform its work by us ng F this natie, it doesirot crias can understand them perfectly, even | the most renowned stomach the bowels or in any \;W fi""_“ when there was no foundation for cleanser and bowel regulator any unnecessary suffering. “"‘!”j them; but by the fact of the criticism. LAXCARIN the work gontly, and the megt 1 cannot imagine how these gentle- | LAXCARIN is made of pure herbs, satisfactory results are obi m“,\: enican Livoland Mot live in thelat Nothng secret about its formula. by those Who use it, | ek mophere of the world. I can- ! & | not imagine how they can live and not he in contact with the events Sold Exclusively By The of their times, and 1 particularly LAXCARIN PRODUCTS CO cannot imagine how they can b i 5 e \mericng and set up a doctrine of PRICE—S$1.00 Per Box; 6 Boxes. 85.00, cuveful selfishness, thought out to th Money Orders, Cash or Registered Lotters last deta I have heard no counsel Will Send €. O, D. Suywhere, in no their criticism. constructive 1 gonerosity Teard of ha s Dept No, K123 = i Pittsburgh, ropean capitals and heard cries of < ihe crowd, cries for the league of na- NEW BR'[A!N e _‘“ ! lips of people who, I ven- | of Mo . had a0 particular nation | not reads Vis to be done who were THIN Jenmie or oy oRose s pland tor o} saldbinaticathotino “.’\(x . "1(4nv‘ pination 6 e iR B e come out and hold floweps ould da supplies an ess al & ance £ Whp shouldl (s hotg pove. o el ad nsie s G e : Sirangors TIom ncross e aap ) LD it nemmelly oo ves | cells Only because they believed that we | the body Bitro-Phospha laces were the messengers of friendshis ane Lors, oot reates new strength aud of hope, and these flowers oo b nd energ ) Clark. & Brainerd: iri! New humble offerings of gzratitu, h g all good druggists under defi- friends from so great g ¢ Euarant ¢ results or ok should have brought them so hope. ———— It is inconceivable that we shouq | LLE"L and their moral power wis disappoint them, and we shall®hof. jing ooy r Justice for men of eve The day will come when men in Am God AL erica. will look back with swelling \H“”‘ ;““ w; the stre ,uvw and the hearts and rising pride 1hat thev the privijems wisely! God give us should have been privileged to make it withous wo gt 0\VINE that we did the sacrificc which it was necessary cause we wep & the cost ar b to make in order fo combine their of Jiberty and of s, iericans, lovers Ted says t - “Now thatt the war's over, what are you gomgt’co do, Bobby, aboud 0ST TOASTIFS Keep right on eatin’ em. I says. 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