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BY CALVIN by Calvin Coslidge. Published The Horald teday publishes the peeches and addresses by Calvin an labor, Cap Polities, law Sovernment. The ¥ Massachuseits and Gorernor of stts. They were compiled with h i persenal copyright, ® * * The conduct of publie affairs 15 nol & game Respo e office does not go to the craft Govern ments are not founded upon an asso clation for publie plunder but an the co-aperation of men wherein cach is seeking to do his duty, * * There are among us a groat mass of people who have bheen rearcd for gen- erations under a government of | tyranny and oppression, 1t s in grained in their blood that there is| no other form of government, They are dis and ipclined to think our institutions partake of the same pature as these they have left hehind We know they are wrong. They must be shown they are wrong There Is & just government ure righteous laws, We | formula Ly which they ur e principle is hest state gmnmn Declaration of Independence te he “the consent of the governed It fe from that source our govern- | ment derives its fust powers and prommigntes s righteous laws, They are the will of the people, the sot tied conviction derived from orderly deliberation, that take on the sanctity areribed to the people’'s volee, Along with the binding obligation to resist tyranny goes the other admonition, that “ohedience to law ls liberty, such law and so'derived. These principles, which I have but lightly sketehed, are the foundation of American institutions, the source of American freedom and the faith of any party entitled to call itself American. It constitutes truly the rule of the people. It justifics and nctifies the authority of our laws d the obligation to support our government. It is democracy admin- {stered through representation. There are only two other choices, anarchy or despotism—Russia, pres- ent anc¢ past. For the most part lumnn cxistence has been under the one or the other of these. Both have failed to minister to the highest wel- fare of the people. Unless Ameri- can institutions can provide for that welfare the causc of humanity is hopeless. U'nless the blessings of prosperity, the rewards of industry, justice and liberty, the satisfaction of duty well done, can come under a rile of the people, they cannot come at all. We may as well abandon hope and, vielding to the demands of selfishness, each take what he can. ‘We had hoped these questions were gettied. But nothing is settled that evil and selfish men can find advan- | tage for themselves in overthrowing. W¢ must eternally smite the rock of public conscience if the waters of patriotism are to pour forth. We must ever be ready to point out the suggess of, our country as justifica- tion of our -determination to support it. No one There the | produced in the can deny that we are in the midst of an abounding pros- perity. No one can deny that this presperity is well distributed; espe- ally is this true of the wage-ecarner. Industrially, commercially, financial- 1y.% America has been a success. * * * . Wages and hours of labor were never so favorable. We have attained a standard of living among our peo- ple the like of which never before exisited on earth. Antellectually our progress com- pares with our prosperity. The op- portunity for education is not only large, but it is well used. The school is everywhere. Ignorance is a dis- grace. The turrets of college and university dot the land. Their stu- dent bodies were never so large.' Sci- ence and invention, literature and art flourish. - There is higher standard of justice in all the affairs of life than in the past. Our commercial transactions are on a higher plane. There is a Jmoral standard that runs through all the avenues of our life that has| Nfted it into a new position and gives to men a keener sense of honor in all things. There has come to be a new realization of the brotherhood of man, a new significance to re- ligion, * * * There can no material pros- perity without order. Stores and banks could not open, Factories eould not run, rallways could not operate. * * * Op order depends all intellectunl progréss. Without it all schools | close, libraries are empty, education stops. Disorder was the forerunner of the Dark Ages. Without order the moral progress of the people would be loat. With the schools would go the churches. There could be no assemblagas for worship, ne services even for the departed, plety would be swallowed up in viclousness. 1 have understated the cisorder. Man has not the tion, the ability to overstate it. are those who aim to bring exactly the resuit. * * * Naturally the question arises what shall we do to defend our birthright ! In the first place everybody nust EONSTII;ATIQN the Curse of Creation and 90 per cent of the start of every serious sickness—causing de- pression of spirits, Irritability, drowsiness, loss of appetite, cor- rect this trouble at once, and you will be as near proof sible Infection and dise be resualt of magin Th about were made while Ling » R | selves into Lake St. Clair Ship Canal . COOLIDGE ¥ arvangement with Johm F. Dille Ca) third of & series of extracts from Coelidge which refiest his opinions and Order, Peace, ,Business and he was President of the Senate the Commeanwealth of Massachu is permission and published under part in publiz take 4 more active de for nen n | affairs, 1t will net send, they must go. It is net enoush | n draw a check, Good government not be bought, it has te he given Office hias great opportunities for de- | but equal ehance for do- I"nless good citizens hold cffice had eitizens will, People see the office-holder rather than the gov- nt. Let the worth of the office- peak the worth of the gov- crnment, The voice of the people speaks by the veice of the individual ‘} Duty is not collective, it is personal. | et every inhabitant make known his | determination te support law and or- That duty fx suprame. MOTOR CRUISER BURNS, | THREE ON BOARD MISSING Hunt Is Made for A, M. Parker of | Detrolt, His Wite and O. A, | Gilligan, Their Guest. Detrolt, Oct, 6.—With the return ot | the relief ship Pal-o'-Mine late yes- terday afternoon, hope was abandoned for the safety of A. M. Parker, son of | the late B, W. Parker, former presi- dent of the Detroit Star Line; his wife, M@, Edna Beaubein Parker, and Charles A. Gilligan, head of a chain of grocery stores in Detroit and Grosse Pointe. The three, driven from the cabin of their launch, Pro- vider, by leaping flames, hurled them- der Wednesday night, after crying out to the crew of the freighter McNaughton to save them. Then, tossed by the storm across the flats, they drifted out into the open water of the lake and are be- lieved to have perished. One theory advanced is that the pilot of the Provider attempted to beach his- boat on Gull Island, which forms one side of the canal, after col- liding gwith the dike in the center of the channel. The wrecked timber of the dike, which separates the up and down bound canals, substantiates the theory of a collision. It is thought the force of the contact overturned a small stove in the cabin and set fire to the cruiser. ‘When the fire was at its height the McNaughton passed the scene in the other canal. The dike separated the freighter from thé burning boat, making a rescue impossible. Several airplanes were sent from Packard field early today to search the marshy banks of the lakes for bodies. JESUITS WILL CONDUCT MISSION AT ST. MARY'S Two Weeks' Services Will be in Charge of Rev. Fathers Walsh, McCarthy and Cotter A two weeks’ mission under the di- rection of the Jesuit priests will open tomorrow morning at the 10:30 o'clock mass at St. Mary's church, services for the first week being de- voted to the women of the parish and for the second week to the men. Rev. J, P. Walsh will be in charge assisted by Rev. Fathers McCarthy and Cotter, Father Walsh will preach the sermon at the opening of the wom- en's mission on Sunday evening at 7:30 o'clock. Services will be held every m"’enlng at'7:30 o'clock with instructions and a sermon. The mission masses in the morning, which will be in addition to the regular masses, will be at 5:30 and 8 o'clock. Instructions will be given at each of these masses, The woman's mission will close one week from Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock and the men's mission will be- gin in the evening at 8 o’clock. 9 Families to Move Out Rather Than Pay Rent New York, Oct. 6.—Nine famllies who lived rent free in a Bronx‘apart- ment house for three years today de- cided to move out rather than obey a court mandate ordering payment of $20,000 accumulated rental. Collec- tion of rents ceased in 1920, when the tenants declared a strike, hung out red flags and collection agents stayed away. The landlord, west on business returned recently, END RHEUMATISM WITH RED PEPPER When you are suffering with rheu- matism so you can hardly get around | just try Red Pepper Rub and you will have the quickest relief known Nothing has such concentrated, penetrating heat as red peppers. In- stant relief. Just as soon as you ap- ply Red Pepper Rub you feel the tingling heat. In three minutes it warms the sore spot through and through. Frees the blood cireulation hreaks up the congestion—and the old rheumatism torture s gone Rowles Red Pepper Rub, made from red peppers, costs little at any drug store. Get a jar at Once. Use it for lumbago, neuritis, backache, stiff neck, sore muscles, colds in chest. Al- nost instant relief awaits you. Re to get the gennine. with the Rowles on cach package re name SEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, To be an opera star was not enough for Florence Macbeth, She has formed her own company, and country. will shortly touy the | OCTOBER 6, 1988 REVENGE 15 SWEET " BUTIT GOMES HiGH John Maranchuk Pined $100 for| Destroying Mrs. Manelgo's Tres Because he had chopped down m' cut the hatk frem about 16 apple and peaeh trees in the orehard of Mms I Anthony Manelgo at 28 Me(lintoek | road, John Maranchuk of 37 MeCln tock road was fined $189 and costs by Judge William . Hungerford wh arralgned in police court this merning | on @ charge of maliclous Injury 1o trees private property, Prosecutor Joseph Woods presented the state's case while Atterney William Mangan represented the accused man. An appeal was taken with bonds fived at $250 Maranchuk was arrested on Seplem- ber 24 hy Policeman Patrick O'Mara on a complaint recelved at headquar [ters Mrs Manelgo testified this morning that at about § o'clock on the morning of September 24 she weys |out Into her garden to get some tomd- |toes when she saw Maranchuk at |work destroying some of her Altogether, she said, 16 trees had |either been chopped down or the bark {eut from th hy Maranchuk, She |#ald that he had threatoned for some | time to damage her trees as she ip- |peared against him when he was ar- "rul:nml in court early in the month iml a charge of vielating the liquor luw, | [ Mrs. Mancigo tostified that Maran- |ehuk told her that he would not do ntil after his case had been heard and even if he was fined $1000 he was going to damage her troes, | #he sald that her husband told the police that ho was making and selling | liquor becuuse the drunken men about ! anything | | This is the memeorial medal issued in commemoration of the late Presi- dent Harding. 1t was placed on saje in Philadelphia, Oet, 3 the eider contained more than three per cent aleahol Atterney Dunh wsked if cider, whieh was exposed (o the air, would net ferment to which the chemist replied in the affirmative Alorney Dunn further argued 1hat e Is nothing in any of the laws whieh says that eider shouid be tested as to its aleoholie tontents in the same manner as beer and other liguids are tested Grafina sald that he has bheen g business on Chureh street for 11 years and has been selling cider since he started in the groce: 5. He said that if & man cam® Into his place in a drunken condition he could not prevent it Judge Hungerfopd then continued se for ono week, ' Anthony Kryzinski was ordered pay his wife $10 a week for the s'g port of three ohildren with a bond fixed at $200, Ttoecco Devirsa, charged with breach of the peace, was fined $15 and costs, He was arrcsted last night following a complaint made to the police by Walter Kowalskl, who testified In court today that as he was padsing Devirsa’s house on lLaSalle street he was attacked by the man, whom he had never met before, HARD COAL OPERATORS 8. D. Warriner Says Consumers Wil unsound and a calamity, Warriner, cent wage negotiations with the Unit-| (uinaqs Led Mine Workers, told an audience nt the City club here, consumer, he predicted, would m'r-nl-iu-uw-l of several hundred. ually result in a discontinuance gard to the coal prices. that the operators had been unwilling | KA‘- to grant the recent wage increase that | lesandro's automgbile on Octol 2 had acceded, fecling that the price to the consumer was secondary to keep- ing the mines in operation, “There was no crith n of the op- crators at that time Warriner stated: *The governor made a propo- sition of a 10 per cent fncrease in an effort to keep the mines in operation. The operators had no desire to as- sume responsibility for a shutdown of the mines and ac FEARING PRICE. REVOLT Strike—Blames Pinchot Award Yor Increase, i T N Lloyd George Makes Bow Passing Through Albany By The 4 fated Vross, On 1 George's Special for the|Train ¢, N. Y., Oct. 6.—Lloyd | George his first appearance af- | ter leaving New York on his trip to a stop of several minutes of Lis special train here at noon. Step- | ping to the platform of his private car retings of a Oct. 6.—The high is “cconomically { ' Samuel D, Philadelphia, price of hard coal chief spokesman anthracite coal operators in the re- The high price of anthracite to the |he acknowledged the g of its| {Hartford Man Is Held For Death of Woman Middletown, Oct, 6.—Coroner L, A today held Hartford free use by the consumer and would react on the prosperity of the coal fleld and the country at large. Mr. Warriner replied to Governor| Pinchot's charge of extortion in re-[Smith after a hearing He stated | Crescendo D'Allesandro of ‘ml a charge of manslaughter, resulted in increased coal prices, bui|struck and fatally injured Mrs. Mary G. Grace as she was alighting from a street car in front of her home, THE BEST MILK SOLD IN THE CITY Is Moorland Farm Golden Guernsey Milk Dr. E. B. Hooper, President of the Hartford Tuberculosis Society says: “I will challenge any man to witness the post mortem examina- tion of a cow which has reacted to the tuberculin test made by an expert from the State or Federal Government and not find that milk from that cow is dangerous. Onr cows are tested regularly by the joint State and TFederal governments and no reactor has been found within 18 months, MOORLAND FARM TEL. 929-13, S I | ,wmmfik * ) @ VacuumElectric EASY WASHER Let us demonstrate an “EASY” in your home on your daintiest lingerie. Convince yourself that the principle of washing clothes by means of air pressare and suction cleanses quickly and thoroughly, A The “"EASY” method is simple to under lmd—!h! I’CVOlViflg vacuum Cupl move IIP and down sixty times per minute—on the down stroke force the soapy water through the mesh of the garments—on the up stroke they draw gt;l\re water back through the mesh. A through cleansing process. No rubbinj ging, jerking, or injury to the clothes. i o A first ent is the Easy Credit Temx;mlymhl’r:q’:‘.‘"dmm an "EASY” in your own home. You may pay the balance in monthly payments to suit your convenience. BARRY & BAMFORTH 19 MAIN STREET . ‘Jhe PHONE 2501 | muking too much nolse, |Hquor law, his house, which is next to hers, were She sald | she warned him that It he did not | MO8t popular sonk in the world is stop having the men come there she |"I4 10 b¢ “The Rorary. would tell the police. Graftina Case Continued Judge Hungerford continued the case of Charles Graffina of 58 Church | street, charged with violating the Attorney David L. Dunn appeared for the accused man, Io. | liceman Patrick O'Mara testified that he and Officer Stadler entered WARD OFF GRIPPE Get rid of that cold quickly before fev. erish conditions sed in and you have a bad case of grippe. « Leonardi's Cough Syrup (Oreosoted) quickly soothes and bheals raw throats, cuts the phlegm, protects the the ‘lunn. stops irritation and Lrln‘l relief. store last Saturday where they found | 1{@you have a tight cough, bad ocold, two hottles and two kegs of cider, | €TiPpe or bronchitis get a bottle of Leon. The cider appeared strong, the officer !;; :n.asw‘: Eyrtup ‘hlm.fi“d){"‘ :"d PR S fre, ok e serious trouble. Fine for whoop. N 3 & sample which |ing cough and croup. The safe, sure and was given to Mr. Davenport to an. pleasant remedy that you can depend Mr. Davenport testified that upon. Protect your jdren your self. At your druggists, VALVE-IN-HEAD DAUGHTER AND WIFE SEE MAN DIE UNDER TRAIN " — Garden City Man Is Throws Undes Wheels In Alighting Witk His Arws Full of Bundies New York, Oct. 6 = Gilbert H Shepard, 65, & whelesale lumber mer- chant with effices at | Madison & nue, was killed Yast evening abeut 6 o'clock when a Long Tsland railread vieetrie train suddenly started as he was about te get oFf at the Garden City, L, 1, station.| ¥e fell from the bottom step and was érushed beneath proceeded it was stopped. Mr. Shepard's wife was standing di- reetly behind him on the steps. His daughter, Mrs John A, Burehell, 116 Voss street, Garden City, had driven to meet her parents in hi temebile and Was seatéd scarcely a dosen feel away, Noores of commuters witnessed the aeeident. Bome hundles under his right arm caused Mr, Shepard to lose his bal. anece as the train started. Feor a mo- ment he clung to the guard rail but was twisted backward and fell, An investigation has been started Ly Coroner Souther, The train was delayed half an hour, Mr, Shepard had extensive lumber interests in Nova Scotia and Florida, Nesides his wife and daughter, he is survived by a son, Harvey W, Bhepard, TEACHING TRADE IN PRISON Useless To Ald the NMiterate, Says Of- A 'al at Sing Sing Moeting Ossining, Oct, 6,~Physical defects Iinterfere with the work of educating prisoners in Sing Sing, and lack of educagion hampers them in their pris- on work, educators were told today at the final session of the state-wide con- ference on New York state prison schools, 1 Dr, mos O. Squire, head prison physiclan, sald that the fallure of men to get along well in their studies in the prison schools is often due to physical defects, such as poor eyesight or other physical troubles, “It is almost uscless to attempt to teach illiterate men a%trade in prison.” declared John P. Joyce, superintend- ent of industries of Sing Sing. Dr. Hastings Hart of the Russell Sage Foundation, Levering Tyson, di- rector of home studies at Columbia university, and E. R. Cass, secretary of the prison association of New York, attended the sessions. of wheat difference There are 322 varieties vhich have a botanical from one another. MOTOR CARS 2 Motor Changes The Only 4-Cylinder Car In America Equipped With 4 Wheel Brake s Ride and Drive It And See The Difference Roadster .............. $1040 Touring ............... $1075 Coupe ................. $1530 Sedan ................. $1640 Above Prices Delivered to New Britain New Britain -Buick Co. 225 ARCH STREET "PHONE 2607