Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 12, 1914, Page 4

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A THE REAL QUESTION. b ol ‘és before the mediators. envoys whether they given full power by Huerta te in advance that it is incldent and the Tam- ent alone which will be con- L. It s the international inci- which they are concerned nal conflict Wil be left - nd 1t is, _ Naturally that this wil i AND THE FUTURE. involves a great within the very cir- which has been es- come it and maintain in the city of New| trial of Lieut, Beck- | which he is alleged to | in the Rosenthal murder 4 n of the countr has not been forgot- d interest through "a new trial for the had been found guilty It means a timony and a stren- th sides but how much can be put from ‘} to death. remains to be seen jaration of the case, g e e the prop- i3 et reform be establish- ¥ unde A con- d s never discour- fallure to enforce the alike, or through the #nd the punish- have served ntina, before elation that 0. full credit hold among nations of it of as the 8 real ice 85-3.| The honors which were pald to president has sejected two and competent men to t the country before the me- will be generally ac- bist even they ‘as well as look on from a distance the uphill task which the equally stupendous m and will be, the has always been, the elim- the dictator. - This was the | 2 of the administration Bot ceased o bo urged, aue today than ever for it is be op- annotinced, but the ' Huerta is today far less ago and fast crumbling, ins to be seen what in- mediators can bring to gver unlike him, it may be “he will listen to their e best way out of an in- of it is to be gained hich have been used a life hangs in the is true that corrup- the police depart- ‘employes of the city 1&?1- thereof. the ficial and whole- png. If it is an officer ) has been the leadsr though invisible, te to-secure the in order to cover ould be imposed. In tuted authority RA CRUZ DEAD. marines and satlors who lost thelr lives at Vera Cruz was only such a tribute as their acts and gacrifices de- served from the nation. Sad and. im- pressive were the exercises as car- ried out, but sadder still is the thought that such & taking of life was neces- sary even though their training and employment was for just such & pur- Ppose when occasion should requir Most proper and fitting was it that the head of the nation should express the admiration and sorrow of the country as thousands in the gathered assembly along the entire line of march did, and as millions have done and are still doing throughout the land. 1t is all a magnificent though solemn lesson in patriotism. It was in response to their country’s call that they went to the defense of its flag and honor and supported it with their lives, but it is to the everlasting credit of President Wilson that warlike steps were delayed as long as they ‘were and that today there are but sev- énteen heroic dead in the taking o Vera Cruz instead of the hundreds and thousands for whom the country might be mourning today had other counsel prevailed. Monday's exercises all represented the cost of war, the cost which can never be reckoned in dollars and cents but which should be avoided whenever | and wherever it can be done without loss of national honor snd respect. Such honors the country has for each and all who fall in battle, but may it be that Mexican conditions will be adjusted without further recourse to arms. CARE OF FEEBLEMINDED. Great s the cry following an as- sassination or an attempted assassina- tion for the proper care of the men- tally unbalanced or feeble minded. But strange to eay that is about as far as the suggestion gets. Everyone realizes the importance of it, but ac- tion is lacking. Provisions are made for those who by their actions indi- cate a sufficiently serious condition and for those who are imbeciles, but while those persons who are known to have uncontrollable passions and show from time to time indications of a dangerous nature are invariably known nothing szems to be done about them untll they have committed a crime for which they are mot respon- sible, In the state of New York there are 22,600 feebleminded persons outside of instjtutions. This means that they are getting no treatment for their possible improvement and the public no protec- tlon therefrom. In this connection the New York Tribune calls attention to the fact that “The feebleminded have furnished the last three assailants of prominent public men in this coun- try, the men who shot Colonel Roose- | velt and Mayor Gaynor and who tried | to shoot Mayor Mitchel. A wise pol- fey on the part of this state and| others toward deficiency could have | prevented these assaults, and it would | restrict the influence of heredity in keeping up deflciency in the future. Jt would lessen crime. It would save society more than it would cost. And | it would diminish the problem for the future.’ The situation fn New York and the need for attention in proportion de- serve the thought of each and every state. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. EDITORIAL NOTES. mention of Cornish, like The sounds time. b Hy the good old summer- It 1¢ a dublous outlook in Mexico Just now for the pen to become might- fer than the sword, A good many people will have to start all over again by the time the | clean-up week arrives. ton Sinclair has started for Colorado the regulars are going | to have more trouble on their hands. | The order of Huerta discontinuing the lighthouse service is in line with | his policy of keeping the comntry in | the dark. There are times when oil can smooth the troubled pathway, but it seems t: be causing the opposite result in and about Tampico. The mediators probably anticipate difficulties but they should pre- fer their task to walking a tight rope across. Niagara's gorge. After all the Chicago woman who on her death hed confessed to hav- ! ing started the big fire of 'T1 may have been the one who sold Mrs, O'Leary | the cow. . The man on the corner says: The fellow who never believes what the newspapers say probably bas made up his mind that Huerta is a pretty §ood fellow. No wonder much anxiety has bsen manifested over the missionaries in Mexico after the canniballstlc utter- ance and threat from the leader of the Zapatistas. Perhaps the greatest Interest just now is centered in what the Colonel will say when he learns that he has been placed in the class with Dr. Cook, by a British scientist. The coffin makers’ union of New York has decided not to strike be- cause of poor business. Probably they expect the public to rush to their as- sistance through stimulation of trade. The White House wedding being over it is Well for the nation to get its breath early in readiness for the third. As long as the Tecord is being broken it might as well be smashed. Now that a New Bedford woman has received a legacy of $11,000 from a stranger who was bfirleuded with a meal, a new argument for the help of the traveling fraternity has been provided. If this country under the present administration plans to buy its-bunt- was trying to You know,’ he sald to the man in New York, ‘Bow cl errors will creep into letters and get overlooked. T'm sorry 1 didn't read over that let- ter more carefully. Tll see that it doesn’t happen again!” “Well, 1 was trembling in my shoes, thinking it was some big mistake I'd made in writting a letter, but whe Mr. Gray hung up the receiver he smiled at me. “fMy!” he said. ‘That man has a bad disposition. I promised to meet nim in New York last night and I for- got it entirely. But I made him think it was only a typographical error in the date I gave him in my letter—so itll be all Tight for me to meet him next week.” And he never once thought FAMOUS TRIALS ¥ s ———. " TRIAL OF MARY, QUEEN OF 8COTS Mary Queen of Scots, having been dethroned by her own subjects and having fled to England for refuge, was imprisoned by Queen Elizabeth for many years. - All during this time, however, it was claimed that she had entered into plots and comspiracies against Eilzabeth, and many opinions ‘were brought up as to what was to be done with her. Some thought that no rigorous course should be pursued, as she was ill and would not live long, while others thought that she should forthwith be put to death. It was decided, however, to place ber on trial; but upon what statute the lords differed. Some thought she should be tried under the statute of Edward IIL, but others thought that the trial should be conducted under the new act of Elizabeth. After a long discussion of the matter, it was car- ried for the latter act, as being made ! for that very purpose. In the indictment the commission- ers_called her simply Mary, daughter of James V., king of Scots, and in part of the document named her as queen. | The first meeting of these commission- ers was held on Oct. 11, 1686, at Foth- eringhay castle. The following day { 8ir Walter Mildmay was dispatched to Mary with a letter from Queen Eliza- beth, to which Mary replied: “It grieves me much that the queen, my most dear sister, is suspicious of me; though I have given her full and faith: ful notice of several dangers that threatened her, yet has no credit been &lven to me, but I have been still con- demned and slighted, though I be so nearly allied to her in blood.” On Oct. 14 the queen was brought to_trial. In the courtroom after si- lence had been proclaimed the Lord <Chancellor Bromley spoke a few words : “The most serene Queen informed, not without Breat grief and trouble of mind, that you bave conspired the destruction of her person and kingdom of England and the subversion of our religion, has according to her station and duty, lest she might seem to neglect herself and ber people, and out of no manner of malice of heart, appointed these com- missioners to hear such things as shall | be objected against you, and how you can clear yourself of them and mani- fest your innocence to the world. Mary thereupon stood up and said: “I have come to England to solicit the assistance which had been promised me, and yet I have ever since been kept a prisoner. I am no subject of the queen's, but was myself a free queen, and therefore not obliged to up- pear before commissioners or any oth- er judge, but before God alons, the highest Judge.” {After this the queen of Scots an- nounced that she was ready to hear and answer any fact whatsoever com- mitted against the queen of England, Thereupon Sergt. Gawdy opened the statute paragraph by paragraph affirm- ing she had violated the same, and then making a deduction of Babing- ton's conspiracy and mentioning Bal- lard, Morgan and others concerned in it, he concluded: “That she knew of it, assented to it, promised her as- sistance and showed the ways and means of effecting it.” did not know Babington, had never re- ceived any letters from him, that she had never written to him, and that she never piotted the destruction of the Queen, and that to prove any such thing her own handwriting shouid be pro- | duced. For her own part, she had never heard a werd of it and that she did not know Ballard. Then it was urged acainst her that s to 1 «.iOn were in the DOsSeSETON wi the court, and tran- scripts of his lefters to her were read wherein the whole conspiracy was set | This undebatable forth. To this Mary replied that Bab- ington might write these letters but “let it be proved that I received them. I Babingten or anyboedy else does affiom it, 1 say directly they lie” Then “the lawyers proceeded to charge further that Mary was both privy to the conspiracy and alse that she had intentions to send her son in- to Spain and to transfer her title and claim in the kingdom of England to the Spaniards. To this Mary replied she had no kingdom to dispose of or convey and if she had were it not Jwful for her to bestow those\things which were hers at,her pleasure? The trial continued the following day, when more testimony was taken, after which an adjournment was made to the 2ith of October. On this day ‘er secretaries, Nawe and Curle, hav ing under oath afrmed and justified all and every letter to be true and real written by Mary, sentence was pro- pounsed. She wis beheaded on Feb. England about eighteen years and was 88 vears old when she was executed. Drinking Men and Women Thousands of men drink to excess. Thousands of women — wives and mothers of families—are also slaves to thé appetite for alcoholic liquors. The regular use of alcoholic liquors means Tuin to both men and women, and when they have drunk until self- control is lost, they need medical treatment — the Neal Drink Habit Treatment, which 1s a safe, sure, Vegetable ‘remedy that removes the craving and necessity for drink in three days, without the use of hypo- dermic injections. Three ays spent at the Neal Institute medns sobriety @nd o restoration of health and hap- piness. Call and get proof and ref- ences. or write or 'phone for book of “information. The Neal Institute, for flags in England it might as ‘8o the whole distance and make [ the saving worth while by having the pe 1302 Chapel St, New Haven, Ct.; tel. 5540 (day or night). DRUG HABIT SUCCESSFULLY TREATED, | i | | go_home Mr. Gray wan! i writls ! out? with emphasis on the T | like to——" | The Colonel may train them when he | colored boys to swing |in reply, “We left them in the aisle; To this the queen replied that she | they were too d—d hof £ i rand run—so what did do that he bad not told Billy to the afterncon . at the prinf therefore, Billy would have to run other errand before he left! And Billy didn’t dare say anything.’ “But what's your own specific, ticular trouble today that calls ”L.fi"i‘;' harrowing as] e bookkeeper. “‘Well”—the little stenographer smil- ed in spite of herself—“since you're S0 anxious to hear I'll skin the other of- fenses on my lst and proceed to the H i i 45 | gravest of the lot. - ere I've been sitting over my type- machine for hours creating a nice form- letter that will make our customers sit up and take notice. It ur knowledge to others. . P fm mot ashamed to acknowledge it is the best form letter that has been put_together in this office in a long le! “Well, what do you think? Mr. Gray, after examining it—and telling me to pubiicity specialist came in he handed it to the specialist, saying “What do you think of this letter I'm getting “Yes, why don't you punch his head?” sympathized the bookkeeper.— Chicago News. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR A Sufficient Number. Mr. Editor: The puppies that were aptly referred to by Judge Barnes on taking the chair at the republican city caucus changed their politics when they got their eyes open. ic pupples they were, as the , when 1f they bave Pprogres. sives, they ought to see by this time that 31 is a sufMicient number at a city caucus from which to select only 12 watchdogs over municipal affairs. Perhaps the next thing that we shall hear about the puppies will be that they are eloquently barking at the foot of & political tree for the foxes in it to come down and belong to their party. The puppies should all wear collars, if they become electors, to give them dlgnity, and, attached to the collars there should be a party tag, of course. comes back from Brazil. C. H. TALCOTT. . May 11, 1914, Norwich, Conn, Clarifiers. Mr. Editor: Some consistency, when you look at it, Bdgar H. Allen's clarify- ing remarks at the progressive caucus about _political bosses, with Gilbert L. Hewitt as their nominee for mayor, and Herbert Brarche's ideal, Theodore Roosevelt, our political emancipator. That is going some for clarifying. but T am glad they have one reverend with them. He wants to be careful or he Wwill' be in the same fix as the colored preacher from the uth was that ai- tended service of high church in New York. Being very much taken with what he saw, he made up his mind to adopt the ceremony in his own church at home, with the aid of the ladies who made the robes, and two little the censers. When all was ready for the opening ceremony he started down the aisle chanting the service, followed by the two Iittle fellows swinging the incense pot. About half wey down he cast his eyes around to see if everything was all right. He noticed the little fellows it s or And the Basis of Her Health and Vigor Lies in the Careful cosmetics, every woman would be a picture of loviness. But beauty deeper than that. It lies in health. In the majority of cases health, and the cause of sickness, can be _traced to the action of the bowels. sallow skin and the lusterless eyes are usually due to comstipation. So many things that women do habitually con- duce to this trouble. carefully, they eat indigestible foods because the foods are served daintily and they do not exercise enough. But ‘whatever the particular cause may be should be corrected. quirements, Fepsin, which thousands of women en- dorse highly, among them, Mrs. C. §. Vance, of 511 8. Ray St, New Castle, Pa. At times she had speils of indiges- tion so severs that she thought would die. stomach and bowels, and she attributes her excellent health today to this rem- edy. Syrup Pepsin, for thousands of mothers give it to bables and children. also admirably suited to the require- ments of elderly peopls, in fact to all who by reason of age or infirmity can- not stand harsh salts, cathartics, pills avoided, for at best their effect is only — Biklaniag Tody woiesiicurin o Spacial Sale of wll- st Fine Dress Hats. This includes our French Model Hats, Dress Hats that sold up to $20.00— NowTo $12.50 © What is Woman’s : Beauty but Health Regulation of the Bowels. If woman's beauty depended upon lies the basis of The headaches, the lassitude, the They do not eat is important that the condition MRS. C. S. VANCE for that day, while a genuifie remedy like Syrup Pepsin acts mildly but per- manently. It can be conveniently obtained at any drug store at fifty cents or one dollar a bottle. Results are always guaranteed or money will be refunded. You will find it gentle in action, pleas- ant In taste, and free from griping, and its tonic properties have a distinct val- ue to women. It is the most widely used laxative-tonic in America today and thousands of familles are now nev- er without it. Families wishing to try a free sam- ple bottle can obtain it postpaid by ad dressing Dr. W, B. Caldwell, 419 Wash- ington St., Monticello, IIi, - A postal card with your name and address on it will do. An ideal remedy for women, and one pecially suited to their delicate re- is Dr. Caldwell's Syrup she Syrup Pepsin regulated her All the family can use Dr. Caldwell's It is purgatives. These sheuld always be @id not have the incense pots, se he chanted, “Where, O where, are the in- cense pots?” The little fellows chanted A CLARIFIED POLITICIAN, Norwich, May 11, 1914, th EVERY DAY REFLECTONS a Unpayable Laben The laborer is WoTthy of his hire. centention is the watchword of the conservative labor | movement of our day. Under no oir- | | 'all wage: She had been a prisoner in |equailty of the strength consumed in cumstances shall the wage fall beiow | the nermal expenditure of energy, | which doing the work costs the labor- | er. This is the minimum wage which any wage earner under any circum- stances should receive. But the commercialization of labor itself—not without fts ills—easily passes over into the commercialzation of all values, of life itself. It must not | be forgotten that wages is only one side—the outside—of the relation of the worker to his work. After all, the inside is the main thing—so intimate, 20 personal, that here nothing, least of can come in between the worker and his work. If the soclety 18 in the end doomed that does not es- teem the laborer worthy of his hire, so 8lso is the laborer who seeks nothing but his hire. The natural law of cause and effect —in the matter in question of the or pr o awork to the productive output of the work—is common to man and nature. This natursl law is true alike of star and atom, and it is true of the tiniest | part of every machine. But man iz more than'a machine. He is & think- | ing, willing, feeling being. More then | @ machine, he introduces into his work values which cannot be appraised mc- cording to natural law—values, there- fore, which cannot count in wages and cannot be pald in wases. There is this some work which cannot be priced and therefore man's creative impulse, the | man’s joy in his work, robbed of which he is irreparably imjured. This some- thing is the Inner life, the fesling and conscience of the man himself, the; very beating of whose heart and pulss | is felt in the work itself and: gives; itself in the work itself and gives it- melf to the collective social spirit in and through the work. The town records at Middletown, Conn., where the White House bride of this week was born on October 16, 1839, show that her paremts named her Bllen. Now she is Bleanor, which ing in all true in many hom: ears n yweluvy change I OTHER VIEW POINTS I terialize. Dbeen upward.—Rockville Journal. ncome tax by lowering the exemption from $3,000 and $4,000 to $1,000. would bring an additional 7,500,000 tax- payers into the net, and cause a great diminution of war, if any there be—Waterbury Re- publican, tecause she was a woman of repre sentative New England parentage, tho surroundings, community where church was “about wicked to sing in. were in Boston, An_especially local icterese attached to her because her first husband, Frederick Allan Gower, whose fate has remained an unsolved mystery, was a resident of this city.— Providence Bulletin, The demoeratic premise to reduce e cost of living doesn't seem to ma- The downward trend thus r in President Wilson's term has Baseball needs the good weather and the good crowds of the first few weelk of each season to get a financial sta: 800d enough to pull it through tie bal- ance of the playing period, but the weather hereabouts up to date has not been encouraging.—Waterbury Re- { publican. | — In case of war with Mexico, it T is oposed to widen the operation of the This Naugatuck is no longer under So- clalist government. The administra- tion has become Repubiican. So have those of Winsted, Southington and Farmington, which held their electiond® the enthusiasm for Meonday. All of the straws point one New England always feit more than | way. They indicate a steady wind dinary interest in Madame Nordica, | blowing aw: from anything tanat could be constructed as an endorse- ment of readical Democratic polic:es. It is naturdl that the Republicsns in view of recent election happenings look forward to the fall congressional elections with confidence and that the Democrats shiver, when they think of the trouble about to overtake them.— Ansonia Sentinel oduct of typical New England early in the usual Yankee o only place it was not considered Her earlier suc- es, for which her preparation was to her own efforts and persistence, Gold Dust does what you can’t do for KOL.A, The Grace Cunard and Francis Ford SPECIAL SCENERY. A Night on Singing Specialty . and MAE T Ex Globe Rollers The Human Frog S ial The Price With Barbara Tennant the Wharf Colonial Theatre e — Tues. Only “THE LION AND THE MOUSE” Tues. Only 5000 Fest—Chas. Kisinels Mammoth Six Reel Achievement—6,000 Feet Special Big Cast, with especially Cofstructed Scenery, Famous Lubin Company. Bewilderingly Beautiful. Mat. 10c—Only Rival of “THIRD DEGREE”—Eve. 15¢ nd Photography by CIRCUS MENAGERIE HIPPODROME Z 13 X AND FAMOUS )] STAMPEDE WILD WEST r Main Street l!! 194 Wauregan Block e SCHOONER EMILY 1. WHITE now discharging at our dock 500,000 Feet Rough and Dressed Gulf Cypress Lumber : _ (The Wood Eternal) Everything for Inside and Outside Work Buying in large quantities for cash with water ship- ments enables us to sell at bottom prices. We shall be pleased to receive your inquiries. CHAPPELL CO.. Mid-Season Inventory Sale Ends Saturday, May 16th E Central Wharf Norwich, Ct. B [ ] STETSON & YOUNG Carpenters-and Builders Best work and materials at riga: dishes. It digs into the corners and cleanses and sterilizes. GOLD DUST cleans everything. Never be without it. 8¢ and larger packages. “Lo¢ the 0OLD DUST TWINS de your wark™ crices, by skillev !abor. relephone 60 wesl MAIN ST. MRS. GEO. P. STANTON 62 SHETUCKET STREET is showing a fine line of NEW MIL- LINERY for Spring and Summer. You are cordially invited to inspect same. NEWMARKET HOTEL, 716 Seswsl! xv\ ORDER IT NOW g Ropkins & Co's Light Linner S6c_per dosem. Koebler's Pllsner, 50c per dosem. Trommer's Svergreen, per % all paris of the Free delivery Office tel. &7 lty. H. JACKEL & CO.T-ivphcue 136-& John J. Donohue, M.D, PHYSICIAN and SURGEON = - Office 38 Shannon Building Hours—9-10 & m. 2-4 and 7-8 P.ome o asem, Residence' tel. §75-3

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