New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 1, 1919, Page 5

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t, hit wien limes as -4and 1ot on sentimentality. “n the ~sthe papers joked. BEHIND THE LINES OVER HERE Being The Revelations 8 Service Man (Copyright 1919, by the World-Wide News Service, Inc.) rized by the Attorney of the United General (Continued) Do Karl Muck was evident!y thoroug russianized any of report dero | nec he regardless of its | arily false! select- indi- the following letter, eral in similar vein, our father to \'. BE.'s nave been watched by | than ever since the Goricar (you have perhaps Yead of in the newspapers) has pointed me out in Washington a ingleader in the plot to blow up mu- ractories, ete. It is, of course, able, cheap lie, but neverthe- the whole mob are day and | on my trail and I have to be | areful on your account. | of the scoundrel V. German Believed both puzzles me. | detact traitor ives more him On account (@ 1ok whom him) der k acquaintance | had betrayed sitting on a pow- is a Muck we are “KARL.” Another letter, indicating the con- tempt of Dr. Muck for the United States officials, addressed to a girl, reads “Today just a few words. vou think of the newest ew York? Madame band arrested. The offi idiots or lunatics, that, any brain or men with What do | plot affair in adski's hus- | als here i nien thout a sick -brain. SICGARLY the letters in the posses- government indicate any better the wholesale contempt which Dr. Muck had for America than one 'ritten from Cleveland, O., dated Jan: 1917 ‘Your this You None of sion of ti leiter of Monday morning carly from Pittsbu may believe me that the affalr of the Lusitania is nowhere more re- gretted than in Germany. only on the ground of arri Of course, common sense he Russians slaughtered dren, from the age the most brutal slashed them to piec with sabers and thrown them alive into bur | and have violated and mutil- | 000 women and c dren and | have murdered hundreds. Have any of | 1 | | in Kast Prussia ! thout 1,800 chil- of 1 to 6 yea fashion, having have the humanitarian. American gentle- men protested at that? Oh, no, Rus- a buys war material here. merchant is always hum fights against the Huns for tion. “And England has been trying for two and one-half years to starve death ),000,000 million women and children. Has any of the humanec | Amiericans ever protested at that? Oh | no, England pays well—very well, in- deed. { “I can tell you that in the last two | ears Germany fairly broken way from her chief failing in the last century—sentimentality—and the | few dozen women and children who | unforturately went down on the Lus- ' itania cannot, of course, play any part feelings of the German people against the horrible fate of the many thousands of German women and children in East Prussia, and against the daily fight for life of hundreds of | thousands of children whom England | wants to e a prev to hunger, and ! it is to be regretted that the Lusitania affair, no doubt, was tragical because it gives perfidious England such ex- cellent material for agitation. “Why, the Lusitania had to be sunk —that will be later clearly explained. Jverything which could happen to safeguard the fate of the passengers was done on Germany's part. Three days before the departure of the ship' therc appeared the official warning of the German embas: that nobody should travel on English ships. Ail The captain of the Lusitania publicly cxplained that his chip was perfectly safe, with its dou- ble bottoms, etc., and that he could be hit with a few dozen torpedoes | without sinking. “Furthermore, the ship was so fast, and could maneuver so well, that a would be altogether out of ques- tion. Although. the submarine: had already been 14 hours within shooting yange, the captain. waited with bis torpedoes until the Lusitania was juite near the coast, only so that the rescuing boats could quickly and eas- reach the shore. “Also, experience The good ne and } civilizs to iy i has shown that which had only a fifth of the tonnage of the Lusitania could stay \float at least a full hour, so that verybody could be rescued. The col- ision of the torpedo, and then in ten ip vantshed: and why was loaded to the material—powder, ships | deck | dy- | i i Because ‘it with explosive guaranteed weight reduction miethod; pleasant. Bri slenderness, better | and happines Get a small box 0il of korein at the druggist’s. Follow lirections. You are allowed to eat sweets, no starvation or strenuous exercising life becomes worth living ~ with mind, improved figure, buoyant D cheerfulness and optimism. Get thin stay so. alth nud ASK FOR and GET Horllck’ | States.) | i N i | blow | scoundrel) ’\TE\Y/ BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1916, iry in London denied hi “This I and he e ed that he taking of court of ing explanation could only give his detailed report of in the \v»m)rlvh cireu catastrophe in i s hefor testimony before the cot all the lared that af priblc lo some quake-like broke the \merican enough of London dec witne unat of mously shot hitrdly torpe the later, followad whic That was ¢l but that stuff, sion of members of seconds W mstances the cret meeting, nd only admiralty ‘No. the British blood sin. or th children—to ke explosion ship in two. munition, this miscrable [ G hink rman of starving nobody of a U. S. Secret e him of a Lusitania had be destroyed, J‘(I(‘HI((IU the gers; that t whe: have in Germany, fault but Amer: and can 2 atrocity. The hip nd on Ger happened to the passen- impossible, no- regrets arisen more than but it was not Germany's the It of England <, on account of the E American scoundrels. to everything all rescuing of hit at once and the which torpedo shells, ete the ipart.” American namite, exploded ship tore These n were does, women and chil- not destroyed by Germun ut by American munition America a strong law that which carries passengers can 1 with powder, cartridges or rial. This law was § ‘rupulously heeded on Germany’s side that, for example. us happened to me when I was coming to Americu for the first time in 1906, the harbovr official in Bremen confiscated a of cartridges for my hunting there were about 50 cartridges. ““The confiscation was made with ! 1 reference to the American and here, because England pays ery well—tor munitions, the imply did not exist. Hundreds hips departed, and in the cargo | s enough explosive material to vhole cities to atoms, and even in the cabins of the passengers. “In the case of the Lusitania, 'he collector of the port of New Yorik (his name is Malone, I think—the ad made our false clear- Inv1gormes New Hair Growth Efter BALDRES HAIR GROWN ON MR. BRITTAIN'S BALD HEAD IN"‘IIANS’ MY‘WTEA OU:: HA hox rifle; ¢alu No trace of baldness Indians’ Secr e‘t of u'umr Growih ance papers. “I will have (o tell you about by word of mouth, and in the moment the rascally aptain took on | board 200 cases of tr trotoluol, onc of the most frightful and dangerous of explosive materials (trinitrotoluo! is the newest and safest of all explo- s. It can only be detonated by under certain | that Dr. Muc reg alse), which explodes If at the least carele: handli and were a case of this exploded one half of New York would be blown io the air in dust. “It wmever occurred then ese humanc Americans baiters that Captain Turner \ T gave that lml soon appe red. al last state of m: b Hikeex dor cpressing m Kotalko, and 1 Many men Haw Y@L May G‘J‘ow YQEJR Hai that Bair voots ravely dio oven wh di to any of | and Hun- who com- the 42l By Busy Drussisis = l EVSNR TR ) Vitality to the ecalp manded the Lusitania, before PROVE‘; ]H)R Yo .wa.L?t‘ MUSTARD PLASTERS! | et it e Mok o JOHN HART BRiTTA}PJ Musterole Works Without the Blister—Easier, Quicker ‘There’s no sense in mixing a mess of mustard, flour and water when you can easily relieve pain, soreness or stiff- ness withalittle clean, white Musterole. Musterole is made of pure oil o mustard and other helpful ingredients, combined in the form of the present white ointment. 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