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8 NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 14. 1916. EW BRITAINHERALD | ALD PUBLISHING COMPANY, Proprietors, d daily (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m., it Herald Bullding, 67 Church St. ed at the Post Office at New XSritala Second Class Mail Matter. ered Dy carrier to any part of the city or 15 Cents a Week, 65 Cents a Month. priptions for paper to be sent by mall, ayable in advance, 60 Cents a Month, 7.00 & Year. only profitabla advertising mcdium In he oity. Circulation books and press oom always open to advertisers. fiierald will be found on sale at Hota- ng's New Stand, 42nd St. and Broad- ay, New York City; Board Walk, at- hatic City, and Hartford Depot. TELEPHONE CALLS. ess Office . 3 rial Rooms NOTHING LIKE IT former Justice Hughes should be led over President Wilson, which P is good reason to believe in view e already corralled hyphenated there will be unlimited joy g republican newspaper editors, so much because of a Hughes ry as for the opportunity to take pnd in distributing G. O. P. brnage, the easy money of the gov- ent. But, and here is the rub, ilson should triumph over the fhile Supreme Court man, as 18 also reason for believing, the same republican editors need go out of business for the grief of it all. It is not an easy 0 lose after building high hopes, hese men have Justice Hughes d and tagged for delivery at the e douse. While President Wil- - marching in the Flag Day fle in ‘Washington today it might good idea to have Mr. Hughes over to the Executive Mansion elect his suite of rooms. There ing like preparedness. LONG MAY IT WAVE pre was a time when it could be lly said, and not so long ago, e Stars and Stripes, with the tion of the French and British had flown' in more battles and vaved in more victorious engage- on land and sea than any other in the world, that there was European standard for which men had fought and died. The art of that assertion is not true The war in Europe has i a far different interpretation d Glory,—in this sense: There the trail of blood behind that s other .flags, but there is ever pbme devotion and allegiance of se that marked its career up to ter the Spanish War, the last ement over which it flowed. On Jag day, the period set aside by vernor of Connecticut as a time all men in thig Commonwealth ponder well: ©n the eternal ness. o.tu»}.émerlcan ideals and ip -before ‘the altar of national on,, it is well to think on what pmerican flag means, what it kents. are.a nation made up of men many nations. ‘We are a social composed of many races and B all united in one under the and Stripes. In honoring the jican flag today we are called tness the undivided allegiance must be professed and adhered each and every person who has lome other land to live in this, pme of free people. Other flags, loves must give way before Old if America is to mean anything se who come here. There can be ded devotion between this na- nd some other place across the It has been only in the past two that men have been called upon pntly to subscribe to the senti- that America is for the Ameri- and this because some few jae have proven themselves dis- 4o :the land that lends a pro- g arm to all who seek its for- Bécause of the many bitter- p that have been brought for- in these times of be- of the many suspicions that have leveled at those who have not ome out openly pelves, ‘there has ave injustice. Yet, stress, and declared been danger in the end, Eht thinking men must conclude | here is but one course to pur- hen patriotism.is called to br, Either it_js America or it e other power that must claim evotion of men here. There can b serving two masters. If it is 1d Glory that commands respect it is some other banner. And h is the case; no one will ques- he motives of the men who claim Or another flag. What Is asked t there be but-one love, Ameri- d0 not want their brothers look- pt the Stars ang jing of andther flag. new-comers on Stripes and They do not to these shores ng allegiance to America until down in their hearts these peo- ow that the old ties have heen bn off, that Europe. and Asia, have been thrust aside for a) Otherwise, thg gateés are al open, andimen bhin/so back s to those American citizens who lived long and énjoyed the pros- nd #“i‘lfl ‘nation for some flmej past that the great bulk of our citl- zenship turns today for inspiration. Before the mean animosities and bit- ter rancor crept into our social life, lands and further' their ends, before the racial j stirred up by the abroad i turned loose upon American soil, lived here as peaceful other owmn war we citizens un- osies. It is time then that we re- turned to the same blissful state. Those who are not solely American They are but a few blatant indivuals roar- ing and shouting. They shall not pre- vail against that vast assemblage of Americans who stand shoulder to shoulder, men of many nations, ready to ever uphold the dignity of the flag of their country, the Stars and Stripes of the United States. The princi- ples of America shall not die so long as there are brave men and true who still look with love and devotion upon the worthy deeds performed valiant men from 1776 to 1908 and later, who still hold to the one flag, the great flag, the only flag, the Red, ‘White and Blue. are in the supreme minority. NO MILITARISM Standing on the banks of the his- torfc Hudson, facing the graduating class of the United States Military Wilson yesterday afternoon gave these young gentlemen some excellent ad- vice as to their conduct in the future. He placed clearly before them the patriotic duties that fall in the sphere of men connected with the military organizations of the United States, of two great units of defense, the Army and the Navy. The President drew a sharp line of differentiation between the terms military and militarism. In the Unpited States the latter term has fallen into disrepute. It is the one check-mate that will hold “prepared- ness” in its place, will keep the move- ment from gaining such headway it might override everything else, while at the same time it allows the idea to spread until we set up sufficient power of defense. Our army and our navy were never builded for aggre: sion. The officers in both of these or- ganizations were not drafted from a special class, but were taken, and are taken, from the great of the American people, from all parts of the nation, from all conditions, The poor boy has as much chance to reach the top-most position in the army, or in the navy, as has the son of the wealthiest man in the United States, providing the poor boy possesses the initiative for study and progress along this chosen line. in the latest report from the Navy Department which shows that twen- ty-three enlisted men have passed the qualifying examination for ad- Annapolis, the Naval Under the law which bulk mission to Academy. listed sailors are allowed to take the course at Annapolis, providing they pass the examinations. Because there ulated number Secretary Daniels hu\" appealed to Congress asking for thority to appoint all the succe: candidates. It is hoped this w granted. When men are allowed to go from plain ordinary seamanship to 1- stul | 1 be | commanding officers the democracy of the American military organiza- tions need never be questioned. So ly and mentally and morally fit, has a chance to gain admission to ‘West Point or Annapolis, so long will militarism be a bygaboo in the United States. There can never be built up here a system such as those known in other countries hold office in the military organiza- down upon their civilian In this country there is no there never any long as we adhere to the funda- tions look brothers. chosen class, will be s0 mental principals of Americanism and do mot surrender our right of free government to some ar These are the things safeguarded. ropean power. that must be New to While York at a dock in Kermit waiting for his son leave a ship from the Colonel Roosevelt placed over his heart complained suffering Later he stated he was ill with a severe cold. But the pain in his heart could not have been any more severe than the pang caused organ of that today Canal his and pain. in the same once- clined to accept the Progressive nomination. FACTS AND FANCIES. Whereupon he doubtiess drew in a hurry—and probably shook as well —New York Evening Sun. the United re- The Forty-nine factories in States ‘making needles and pins port a vast inc in business. brought here by those small bands of men hired to flaunt the praises of antipities were familiar with petty hatreds and jeal- | | DY | honado your shanks: | cal. { other Academy at West Point, President | those who must perforce lead thei | Austro-Germans | snatched Tlis is exemplified | makes it possible for men to go up | from the ranks every year fifteen en- | are eight more this year than the stip- | | as one, { word i where men who | America. | question. | of Mexico, yet Zone, | hand | of | stalwart animal known as the Moose. | And the cold must have been caused | Ly the frost he received when he de- | old question where all the pins go is‘ answered now. They are used in the marking of war maps—Brooklyn Eagle. A few more North Sea battles and Unk Sam’s navy will rank higher in the strength column—Gloversville Herald. Li Yuan Hung has been chosen president of China. No delegates, no convention, no bull dragon, no plat- form—or anything. Civilization in China advances slowly.—Brooklyn Standard-Union. The rubber bathing suit, forbidden by the stern censors of Atlantic City, must have at least solved the prob- lem of how to go into the water with- out getting wet.—Philadelphia Led- ger. custodians of What a pity the | those German steamships at Hoboken haven’t yet heard that the Kaiser is “Admiral of the Atlantic!”"—New York Herald. American soda fountains in TLon- don? Certainly. Shakespeare clearly refers to the soda fountain man, with his carbonic acid gas, in “Lear:” Draw, you rogue ,or I'll so car- draw, you ras- Whether they ever get the vote or not, those school girls in Washington who heard Justice Hughes' address | at their commencement exercises the to take | night can hardly fail a more lively interest in natiorfal pol- itics hereafter than they would have otherwise—Syracuse Herald. German capital is organizing = to monopolize dyestuffs and coal tar products in general. Some such mat- ters may have to be considered in negotiation for a peace which will conserve the rights and interests of all nations.—Washington Star. The new Russian offensive rivets the attention because it is an ambi- tious attempt to break through the castern front from Lutzk to the Bu- kowina with an immense army well supplied, acording to report, with ar- tillery, an arm in which the Russians were comparatively weak when the under Mackensen overwhelmed routed and almost de- stroyed them in the February-June offensive last year. Speculation about the result would be presumptuous. The Russians have set themselves a tremendous task.—New York Sun. Unagrald. (Pittsburgh Gazette-Times.) Her name was Miss Blanche Unangst, a name having an awkward and unmusical sound to ears attuned to the English language, but on the scroll of fame on high, where it will be enrolled with loving care by the recording angel, it will look very well indeed, for beside it will be inscribed: “Greater love has no one than this, that one lay down his life for his friends.” Miss Unangst is the school- teacher of Deforest, Ohio, who a child from beneath the Wwheels of a fast-flying trolley car and hurled it to a place of safety, then herself was crushed to death. Not on all the embattled fields of Europe, where prodigies of valor and splendid deeds of self-sacrifice are of almost daily occurrence, has there been any thing to eclipse the unselfish heroi m of this young woman. The child was not of her own family, but it was enough that it was helpless and in peril of its life. Without an instant's pause she answered the call of hu manity, although she must have seen the certainty of her own fate. The child was picked up uninjured. Tts rescuer was dead when the crew of the car reached her. It was a magnificent ded and it may well be believed that a bright spot will be reserved on the deathless scroll for her strange-sounding name, and that there, where all tongues are it will be known German and that the stands for “‘un- afraid.” The Mexican ;l:;k. (New York Times.) The Mexican plank in the republi- long as every American boy, physical- | ¢an platform is full of sound and fury, | signifying nothing. 3 | structive quality. either | It has no con- It condemns the president’s policy fiercely, that policy has been of so great fiuence in strengthening Pan-Amer can relations and another clause in the platform favors closer commer- cial and social relations with all Latin But it contains no hint of a better polic; If the republicans had come out openly for intervention on the one hand, or for absolute non- interference with Mexican affairs on the other, they would at least have made a clear issue of the Mexican Bnt they denounce inter- Mexico’s internal affairs in- ference in | while declaring that we, the people of tocratic Eu- | the United State: | maintain should promote and peace in that country. The whole clause or plank is made up of direct contradictions. Wa learn from it that the republiccans would have done nothing to offend the suscepti- bilities of the would not have per- desperadoes and who are so inhabitants, mitted the bandits, conscienceless agitators, prominent among these tc operate in that country: would not have permitted upon American residents and would have protected the interests of all foreign investors in Mexico, yet would not have interfered in Mexican in- ternal affairs. They would not have recognized Carranza, but would have acted “promptly;” they would have restored and maintained peace. How? By recognizing the bloodthirsty usur- per, Huerta, perhaps. The Mexican plank is the rottenest one in the republican platform. It is utterly futile. Its sole purpose is to cast a slur.on the democratic ad- ministration, which has doubtless blundered occasionally in its treat- ment of this vexatious and bewilder- ing question in the last three years, partly because the previous republi- can administration blundered in Mexican relations, but on the whole has treated it so carefully as to win the approval of a large majority. of outrages 000,000 inhabitants | that they | | e; althougn | @1 evergreen tre I | | Germany. ! put the American people and to satisfy the other Latin-American countries that we have no intent to aggrandize ourselves at their expense. War and the Market. (Waterbury American.) Wall street seems to think that the war news helped yesterday to strengthen the market. For example, the British and the Frencch bonds in all but the biggest lots sold for 96,- while large sales, such as lots of 287- 000 and 232,000, sold for 95 3-4. The market's point of view seemed to be that Germany’s capture of a second fort at Verdun, after more than three months of fighting, was more than offset by the victorious sweep of Russia against Austria. Also that Berlin’s admission of its great losses in the North Sea fight, modifying rad- ically its first claim of a victory, was a confession that the German gov- ernment had minimized its losses at the start off in order to placate the people who are restive; seeing little if any hope of ultimate victory for It would be, of course, most unwise to exaggerate any such interpretation as this which Wall street seems to upon the latest occurrences in Also Wall Street's view of ane day is often reversed by its view of the succeeding da; But Wall Street is not moved by sentiment in its speculations. It dealing in dollars, and hence attempts at least to size up cur- lieves to be the real facts and not according to what it may expect or may hope. There is then some sig- nificance in the practical view which Wall street takes of the ebb and flow of the conflict between the great Eu- ropean powers. the war. is June Day . McKinsey ih the Balti- more Sun.) As lovely as a June day, and that is something, dear, Beyond the golden loveliness that cir- cleth the year; As lovely as your fair heart, That’s fair as all Junes flown, With something even June lacks—— The sweetness that's its own! (By Folger As lovely as a June day—and that's to be, my fair, | As lovely as the am’ranth that crowns your sunny hair; As lovely as your light laugh, As fairy as you lay That rings, howe’er the year rolls, As elfin as the May! As lovely as a June day—and that's a match to make, 0 sweetheart of the morning, for the heart of loving’s sake: As lovely as your song, dear, As tender as your thought, That all the Junes of time, love, On silver looms have wrought! Youth. (Bulletin of the American Steel Association.) Youth is not a time of life; it is a state of mind. It is not a matter of ripe cheeks, red lips and supple knees; it is a temper of the will. a quality of the imagination, a vigor of the emotions. It is the freshness of the deep springs of life. Youth means a temperamental pre- dominance of courage over timidity, of the appetite for advanture over the love of ease. This often exits in a man of fifty more than in a boy of twenty. Nobody grows old by merely living a number of years. People grow old only by desering their ideals. Years wrinkle the skin; but to give up enthusiasm wrinkles the soul. Worry, doubt, self-distrust, fear and despair—these are the long, long years that bow heart and turn the greening spirit back to dust. Whether s ¢ or sixteen, there is in every hygnan being’s heart the lure of wonder, the sweet amazement at the stars and at starlike things and thoughts, the undaunted challenge of events, the unfailing, childlike appe- tite for what next, and the joy of the game of living. You are as young as your faith, as old as your doubt; as young as your self-confidence, as old as your fear; as young as your hope, as old as your despair. In the central place of your heart is its name is Love. So long as it flourishes vou are voung. When it dies you are old. In Iron and | the central place of your heart is a Wireless station. So long as it re- ceives messages of beauty, hope, cheer, grandeur, courage and power from God and from your fellowmen, so long are vou young.—Adapted from an ex- change; author unknown. Pageantry and Patriotism. (Boston Herald) In this Shakespearian time Boston has pageants scriously in its mind, and the American Pageant association, by its discussions in this city, has done much to mulate interest in a form of art which we have too long neg- lected. The pageant would be well worth while if it did no more than stir the feelings and quicken the ima ination. Its educational value con- siderable, anq it serves to revive his- torical achievements which the world cannot willingly let die. Great events that have a personal appeal lend themselves well to outdoor represen- tation. Give your hero a spectacular setting suited to his time, transfigure him with allurements of form, color and music, and you imprint his image in the popular memory more indelibly than can be achieved by any potency of oral teaching or of boo We have already revived in this wa the romance of new-world discovery, with Columbus as its pioneer; we have seen the achievement which dowered the planet with the art of printing thus magnified and beautified to make an American holiday. Only the other day, in one of our Eastern cities, it was found possible in a series of scenes to tell the whole story of hu- man industry, from its beginnings in the cave man, whose tools were of stone, to its culmination in the magic of the steam engine and the dynamo. The pageant lends itself well to recall- Oh, say can you see, by the dawn' ‘What so proudly we hailed ‘Whose broad stripes and bright s O’er the ramparts we watch Oh, say, does that star-spangled O’er the land of the free and the On the shore dimly seen through O’er the land of the free and th A home and a country should lea Blest with vict-ry and peace, m: Then conquer we must, when our And this be our motto: “In God And the star-spangled banner in The Star-Spangled Banner And the rockets’ red glare, the bombs bursting in air, Gave proof through the night that our flag was still there. Chorus: Where the foe's haughty host in dread silence reposes, What is that which the breeze, o’er the towering steep, As it fitfully blows, half conceals, half discloses. Now it catches the gleam of the morning’s first beam, In full glory reflected, now shines on the stream. 'Tis the star spangled banner: oh long may it wave And where is that band who so vauntingly swore, That the havoc of war and the battle’s confusion, Their blood has washed out their foul footsteps’ pollution. No refuge could save the hireling and slave From the terror of flight or the gloom of the grave: And the star-spangled banner in triumph doth wave O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave. Oh, thus be it ever when freeman shall stand Between their loved home and wild war’s desolation; Praise the power that hath made and preserved us a nation! | | ent to supply your summer O’er the land of the free and the home of hte brave. ’s early light, at the twilight's last gleaming. tars, through the perilous fight, ed, were so gallantly streaming. banner yet wave home of the brave? ! the mists of the deep, e home of the brave. ve us no more? ay the heav’'n-rescued land cause it is just, is our trust!” triumph shall wave What Rubber Means To a Modern Army . Washington, D. C., June 14.—The | tremendously important part which rubber is taking in the present war in Europe the United States’ punitive expeditions in Mexi- co makes the following bulletin, issued by the National Geographic society from its Washington headquarters, of significant interest: g “The fact that practically commissary supplies and am: required by American troops the Rio Grande are being transport- ed in motor trucks, and the news that an automobile train of 18,000 cars was employed to rush reinforcemen and munitions to Verdun during the first hours of the German drive against that great French fortress suggest a modification of one of the axioms of | the great phrase-maker and military genius, Napoleon. The modern army marches on rubber instead of ‘on its stomach’. “The product of the rubber trees of | the troplics is as vitally a contraband | of war as gunpowder, steel, copper, | dynamite or pitric acid, for the iron- | shod warhorse of former days has evolved into the padded-wheel motor | car, motor truck and motor cycle of 1916. “It is difficult to realize that rub- ber’s role in modern civilization and warfare has heen played only during | the last six decades, following that happy accident when Charles Good- vear, a Connecticut inventor, dropped a mixture of sulphur and rubber on a hot stove and discovered the long- sought principle of vulcanization which prevents the gum from becom- ing brittle in cold weather and sticky when warm. “It was during Columbus’ second visit to the new world that his sail- ors observed the natives of Haiti playing with a ball of gum which pos- sessed extraordinary qualities of resil- iency. Many years later when it was discovered that this gum could be used to rub out pencil marks it was given the name of ‘Indian rubber.’ “Rubber was introduced into the United States in 1800, which, by an odd coincidence, was the year of Charles Goodyear’s birth. Half a century later a Boston navigator brought from Brazil a number of pairs of boots which had been coated with | the coagulated milk of the rubber trees. Their popularity was imme- diate, on account of their imper- and equally in improved on this early raincoat byI dissolving rubber in naptha and spreading a thin layer of the solution between two pieces of cloth. From the double thickness he made waterproofs | that won world-wide popularity. “The harvesting of rubber consti- tutes a chapter in human experience which for adventure, romance, suffer- ing and daring rivals that of the pur- suft of almost any other commodity prized by man, the lure of gold alone excepted. Under the direction and spur of the white explorer and trad- er, the native rubber gatherers plunge through the fetid, snake-infested jungles of the Amazon, the Orinoco, and the Congo, making incisions an inch and a half long, three-eights of an inch wide and a half inch deep in the bark of /the tropical trees which sometimes attain a height of sixty feet and a circumference of eight feet. Beneath these ‘wounds’ the na- tive attaches small cups to catch the rubber-milk, which is not the sap of the tree. The average Para rubber tree yields two ounces of milk a day. By coagulation in the smoke of a wood and palm nut fire this milk vields one-third its weight of the prized rubber, the normal annual pro- duction of a tree being ten pounds of | rubber, and the flow continues fairly constant for a number of years. “While the most approved method of reducing the milk to rubber in South America is by coagulation in | smoke, natives of Africa frequently re- | sort to the practice of covering their bodies with the flmd as it is taken from the tree, and after there has been sufficlent evaporation the rubber residue is scraped off and molded into cubes. In the Fiji Islands the rubber workers use their mouths as ‘retorts’ or ‘separators’, the rubber pellets as | they form being taken in the fingers | and molded into balls. One of the by-products of rubber harvesting and one which promises extensive development, since planta- tions of these trees have been success- ful in Sumatra, Ceylon and the Straits i Settlements, is the rubber seed, which vields almost half its weight of an oil closely resembling linseed oil, and adapted to the same uses. “There are many varieties of rub- ber producing trees, vines and shrubs, the most valuable species being that which yields the standard ‘par’ and which grows over an area of a million square miles in Brazil alone. “The world production of rubber during the year preceding the Euro- viousness to water. But more than | two centuries previously a Madrid | writer had chronicled the fact that Spaniards in the new world made a practice of waxing their canvas cloaks with the rubber julce to keep out the | rain. Our common noun ‘mackintosh’ | is a tribute to the canniness of a Scotchman, Charles Mackintosh, who pean war was 151,000 tons, of which Brazil produced 40,000 tons, her near- est competitor, the Dutch East Indies, elding 8,000 tons. The United States in that year imported more than twice as much of the raw product as Great Britain, which stood second as a buyer. Four our 57,000 tons $90,- 000,000 was paid.” ing the past. As wonder worker it clothes with life and movement the literary shapes which the masters of old put into their dramas, their stories and their poems. Why should it not tell of more recent happenings and of things less remote? RELATIVE OF LOCAL WOMAN HUGHES’ WIFE Presidential Nomince Was Started on Carecr by Second Cousin of Mrs. James Shepard. Of particular interest to Mr. and Mrs. James Shepard of 139 Lake street is the nomination of Charles E. Hughes for the presidency. Mr. Hughes' father-in-law, the late Wal- ter S. Carter, a famous New York lawyer, was a cousin of Mrs. Shepard's father and often visited at her home in this city. Justice Hughes was born in Pleas- ant Valley, Connecticut His wife was formerly Miss Antoniette Smith Car- ter. Her father moved to New York where he established a large practice, particularly among the foreigners, and he rapidly forged to the fore as a jurist. He took many young men into his office to study law and it is safe to state that no American lawyer | ever started more men who later be- came famous before the bar on their legal career than he. Justice Hughes entered Lawyer Carter’s office as an office boy and student. As he developed and studied he, himself, became a great jurist but it is due to Lawyer Carter's careful training that Justice Hughes de- veloped into the great man that he is today. Later Justice Hughes married his early instructor’s daughter. Thus it is evident that a man who frequently visited in this city and was | | related to one of the city’s best known of the older residents was largely in- | strumental in shaping the career of the man who republicans believe will be the next chief executive of the United States. ST. MARY’S HONOR PUPILS. The final examinations of the pupils in the graduating classes at St. Mary’s parochial school show the following te be leaders in their respective classes Girls, Grade 8 A, Catherine Anne Bottecelli, first; Mary Agnes MeclInerney, second; Grade 8 B, Marie McNamara, first; Mary Lucey, sec- ond; boys, Grade 8 A, Anthony Al- bert Rotoskey, first; Edward Joseph Tagan, sccond; Grade 8 B, George John Lazorick, first; David Clement Mahoney, second. The winners will be awarded special prizes for their McMILLAN’S NEW BRITAIN’S BUSY BIG STORE. “ADWAYR RELIABLK" Special June Offering of Snow White - Undermusling Many unusual values in Dalnt Undermuslins, Hand Embroidered, Lace and Hamburg trimmed, made of the finest materials, our selection | is larger now than at any other time. for Graduation Gifts, No time like the pres: needs. Dainty ' pieces June Brides. CORSET COVERS 490, 98¢ 5S¢, | £1.49 each. GOWNS—75¢, each. SKIRTS—49c, each ENVELOPE OHEMISE—75¢, 98¢ $1.49 to $1.98 each. COMBINATIONS—98c, $1.49, $1.98 to $2.98 each. DRAWERS—25¢, 39¢, 49c each. o HAND EMBROIDERED GOWNS Splendid Values 98c, $1.25, $1.49, $1.98 each. P 98c, $1.49, $1.9% 75¢c, 980 to $2.98 CREPE GOWNS, 98¢ each. FLESH COLOR BATISTE GOWNS AND CHEMISE 98¢ to $1.98 each, - SILK COVERS AND CAMISOLES 98c and $1.49 each. SILK CREPE DE CHINE. Envelope Chemise— (Flesh Color) $2.98, $3.50, $3.98 each, Gowns— (White and Flesh) $3.50, $3.98, $4.50 cach, g ADVANCE NOTIOE, On Saturday, July 1st, 1916 PRICES FOR ALL Nemo Corsefs’ 'That are now sold at $3.00 will be ADVANCED to $3.50, This increase is compelled by the scarcity and higher cost of nearly all corset materfals. We have a good stack of these models, and shall con- tinue to sell them at $3.00 Until July 1st. The same cause may compel an increase in prices of $4.00 and $5.00 Nemo Corsets in the near future. BE PREPAREL Buy Nemo Corsets Now! PATRICIAN Silk Vests $1,48, $1.69, $1.98 to $2.98 each (White and Pink.). Hand em- broidered lace trimmed, hemmed an:d bodice tops: PINK SILK LISLE VESTS 75c Values at 59¢ each. WHITE HOSIERY FOR GRADUA- TION. Silke Yisles, Boot Silks, Fibre Silics, sc, 85¢, 50c pair, McCALLUM SILK HOSE $1.00, $1.15, $1.50 to $2.00 pair, D. McMILLAN - 199-201-203 MAIN STREET. DOUGHERTY- Pretty Wedding at St. Mary’s Church This Morning. KERRIGA Danlel Joseph Dougherty and Miss , Mary Claire Kerrigan were united in marriage at 9 o'clock this morning in St. Mary’s church, Rev. John E, Fay tying the nuptial knot. Attending the couple were Miss Marcella Kerrigan, ister of the bridesmaid, and Patrick Gaffney as best man. . The bride was attired in a gown of crepe de meteor under-Georgette crepe and the bridesmaid vellow crepe de chine gown. Following the ceremony a reception was held at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kerri- gan of 18 Franklin street at which numerous friends of the couple were in attendance. The couple received. many handsome wedding gifts. After a wedding tour through New = York and New Jersey they will make thelr home on Talcott street. bride, as wore a Basil Riley, Willilam Francis Egan and Bottecelli, Sullivan, students in St. Bernard's serminary ag. Rochester, N. Y., are spending a brief vacation at Niagara Falls, N. Y. They Daniel high standing at the exercises to be hed at St, Mary's church, June 25, | will arrive at their homes in this ecity, shortly, for the summer,