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RIS EW, BRITAIN ILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1916 Saleof Manufacturer’sSamples OST IMPORTANT PURCHASE of Leather Goods we have made onths comes to sale tomorrow. It is the road sample pieces in twelve of an~ important anufacturer, and with few exceptions all the articles are perfect. Excellence of Finish and fine Workmanship are keynotes of the offering. In many instances there is but one piece of a kind, so that early selection is hdvised if one would enjoy the full advantages of the opportunity. SAMPLE TRUNKS Some Shop Soiled $6.50 Brass Trimmed ks ......0.... $4.49 7.00 Double Bottom $4.98 Trunks . . 25 Extra Strong Trunks T SN S5 75 p12.00 Cloth Lined, 2 tray Frunks ...... $8.00 $20.00 LIKLY Trunks $15.00 p25.00 Wardrobe Trunks ........... $18.50 SAMPLE STEANER TRUNKS ALL SIZES $6.00 Extra Deep Tray Hpunks ... ..0. ... $3.98 $7.50 Heavy Trimmed EanlsT U $9.00 Bass Wood Box ks ... 0L 12.00 Fibre Covered Trunks ............ $8.98 $15.00 Theatrical k Lrunks............ $10.50 $4.75 $ .98 Soiled Bags .... SAMPLE BAGS Slightly Soiled 45 $1.50 Straw Light weight .49 $2.00 Keratol Brown $1.25 $3.50 Walrus Grain . .$2.25 $4.50 Brown and Black $6.00 Leather Lined $4.75 $10.00 Bench Made ... $5.98 $3.50 Heavy Leather $2.49 $4.75 Selected Stock $3.50 $7.00 Cowhide ...... $4.98 $18.00 Henry Likly aehnks . .c..... Others up to $25.00. .. .$12.00 $8.50 Brown or Russett $10.00 Bellows .. $6.98 We will letter and deliver Free of all charges, ary Trunk, Bag or Suit Case fthat is on sale. Mail orders promptly and carefully filled. No C. O. D. sent. ail orders must be accompanied by money order. LOOK FOR All UARANTEE TRUNK CO. 334 ASYLUM ST., HARTFORD, CONN. (Next to Newton-Robertson Co.) Others up to $20.00. | -\s-'. SAMPLE SUIT CASES Only 150 Cases $1.50 Straw Suit Cases .89¢ $2.00 Light Weight .. $1.24 ilson and Marshall | Choice of Democrats et That Carried Party to Victory in 1912 Will Lead Once More, Convention Decides Early This Morning. June 16.—President renominated by the pcratic convention by acclama- at 11:52 (12:52) New York time, morning. ce President Marshall minated by acclamation at 11:55 Louis, on was was also bminating speeches were to have the night on, but before getting to work jam J. Bryan hn at the opening of was invited to ad- s the convention as an honored kt. He was greeted: with great usiasm. The compliment can- d in the invitation gained weight the fact that no other man out- the convention had been either ked or permitted to address it. dge John W. Wescott of New ey, who placed the president in hination at Baltimore four vears performed the same service for this time. The program called seconding speeches from every e, territory and colonial posses- , and, following Mr. Wescott's ch, the long and impressive array to begin. was at 10:14 p. m, that nomina- s for president were called for. ma yielded to New Jersey, and ge Wescott nominated Woodrow s Applause greeted his re- the policy toward Mexico. crowd was attentive and quiet. feiced approval of America’s main- i ational law. Some he crowd, however, werb eager for nomination Name him, name him s, from the gallerie Judge bscott hurried his speeeh a little, made such good time that he got b the peroration of his speech at 42 o’clock. is speech follows ' Prophecy is fulfilled. The eternal ftles of righteousness have pre- led. Undismayed by the calamities war, unmoved by vituperation and n declamation, holding to the pure came ar of truth, the schoolmaster is statesman, the statesman financier, the financier emancipator, the emancipa- tor pacificator, the pacificator the moral leader of democracy. “The nation is at work.. The na- tion is at peace. The nation is ac- complishing the destiny of democracy. Four years ago the nation was not at work. With resources boundless, with a hundred million people eager to achieve and do, commerce lan- guished, industries halted, men were idle. The country struggled in the toils of an inadequate financial sys- tem. Credit was at the mercy of pir- acy. The small business man was bound hand and foot. Panic hung like a storm cloud over the business world. “Now bursting granaries, teeming factories, crowded railways and over- laden ships distribute wealth and comfort to uncounted millions the world over. Production outruns the means of distribution. The parallel of American prosperity is not found in industrial history; nor is it causeless. It did not descend, like a merciful ac- cident, from heaven. It is not due to the devastations of a revised tariff, It is not the result of destructive legisla- tion. It cannot be attributed to the manufacture of war materials, consti- tuting a bare five per centum of the volume of national business. War is destruction not production. War cur- tails international trade. War de- presses industrial energy. When the European cataclysm struck the world, moratoria fell like blight upon many of the neutral nations, but not upon the United States. Emancipator of Commercial Slave, “There stands the astounding phe- nomenon of American prosperity. What is its explanation? The Euclid of financial theory worked to a dem- onstration, measures for the country’s relief. He promptly put into effect the legislative expression of a great program. He did not talk. He did things. He dynamited the monetary dams and let credit flow to the remot- est corners of the land, its spray dash- ing even upon foreign shores. He re- I leased the nation’s resources and set the energies of all men free to ex- ploit them. He destroyed commerc ial slavery. He struck off its shackles, The prosperity of the nation is the product of statesmanship and financial | genius. American credit is now lim- ited only by its own honesty and ca- pacity. The cause being undisturbed, the effects must remain. The school- master is statesman, the statesman is financier, the financier is emancipa- ter. With Lincoln, the emancipator of the chattel slave, he will live forever as the emancipator of the commercial slave. “The nation is at peace in a world at war. America is confronted with appalling realities. It is not the part of wisdom to play with phatoms, deal in riddles, or seek to entertain the na- tional imagination with the legerde- main of language. To bulld words mountain high as the throne of vanity and ambition should not be an Amer- ican pastime. An attempt to catch the presidency by phrases is the work of folly. The function of a2 sound- ing brass and tinkling cymbal fs not sermane to the tragic conditions of the world. When the fate of millions is at stake, it is not the part of any man to stack the cards. With civili- zation in peril, the sphinx becomes an anachronism. With the whole world tense and anxious, patriotic advice abuse and defamation. Speculation wilts in the blaze of truth. Abusive phraseology shrivels before the relent- less fact. Honesty is the command- ing quality of a free and patriotic American. Mexico. “What are ‘the realities that face us? In Mexico exist the potentialities of civilization. In her wealth, her history, her schools, her religion, her needs, her very suffering and patriot- ism lie the indestructible seeds of progress. To have conquered Mexico would have seated death at the Am- erican fireside. It would have de- stroyed our prosperity and added hun- dreds of millions of taxation to the burdens of the nation. It would have planted distrust and hatred of the United States in every South Ameri- can republic. It would have forfeited the respect of the world. It would have substituted the tenets of imper- falism for the principles of Ameri- canism. Tt would have prostituted the bravery and patriotism of American _—— A.B. JOHNSON, D. D. S. DENTIST National Bank Bldg. Open Evenings. arms to the greed and avarice of con- | cessionaries. It would have robbed the United States of the grandeur of her m n amongst the nations of the earth. It would have made might right and repudiated the doctrines of Christianity. It would have ignored the fundamental conceptions of mor: progress and denied the right of fif- teen millions of people to govern themselves. Ambition and greed were prepared to sacrifice America and all | that America stands for, in order to acquire the wealth of Mexico. The diplomacy of ‘watchful waiting’ avert- ed these calamities and preserved in their original purity the principles of American freedom and justice. | “‘Watchful waiting’ repudiated the bru- | canism’? | war | the moral | ishable Americanism i | is bi, and suggestion are of more value than | g enough to tal dictum of science that the weak must go down before the strong. Help Mexico lest over her bloody grave are sown the dragon’s teeth of our own destruction. “War with any European nation would have set the world aflame and stopped the march of progress for a century. Would anyone have had it so in order to affirm a ‘virile Ameri- Is a ‘virile Americanism’ bloodshed, destruction, the horrors of and its uncertainties? The sub- stance of civilization is the arts, the sciences, literature, philosophy, indus- try, the domestic virtues, freedom, re- ligion and peace. But this is the sub- stance of American nationalism. This is the virility of Americanism. It knows no mational boundaries. It | yet lives in the trenches and broken homes of Europe and pervades its very thrones. Therefore, America lives in the trenches and broken homes of Europe and its thrones. The stupend- ous conflagration is consuming the er- rors of statesmen and dynasties; it is not consuming the substance of civ- ilization. Civilization is a unity, War with Europe would have cut asunder forces that bind the na- tions and left an age of darkness, anarchy and despair. Standing on the immutable foundations of such Ameri- canism, the schoolmaster and states- man, with consummate skill, a skill that commands the admiration of the world, direct the forces of civilization, not with arms, but with reason and moral pressure against the excesses of a belligerent world. With preter- natural poise and clearness of vision, he is piloting America through the rushing storm. Who can deny the ex- istence of a moral design in the uni- verse? Who now can question its fulfillment? Who now can close his eyes to the destiny of democracy to make the principles of civilization dominant, to bring the warring nations of the earth together in lasting peace? The passions of men die. The truth lives. America has called to Europe; Europe is responding in terms of a revitalized civilization. picture in civil history is that of a plain American citizen manoeuvring with the weapons of reason and hu- manity against the navies and armies of the contending nations, and bring- The sublimest | ing them in accord with the principles of international law. The standard of peace and justice now floats on the sea. It is unfurling over the trenches of the struggling nations. From the vantage ground of imper- the matchless craft of a real pacifist has not only avoided all war, but is leading the world into the ways of peace. What is peace but the assertion of moral prog- ress? What is the assertion of moral progress but the indestructible civili- zation of Europe and America? From the smouldering ruins of a thousand cities, over the graves of millions of brave men, out of the blackness of the battle smoke, arising from the obscuri- ties of national passions, already the peoples of the earth recognize,the dim outlines, growing ever more distinct, of the composite soul of America in the patient and humane wisdom of the world’s real pacificator. Of what avail all the wealth of our beloved land if it had been consumed in the destruc- tiveness of war? What avail the tra- vajl of human progress for ten thou- sand yvears had not the schoolmaster and statesman been pacificator? Tiis achievement is so vast that ambitious men are blind to its reality plain millions, of all creeds tionalities, recognize in it the imp. ishable glories of a Christian civiliza- tion. It glorifies the peasant and king alike. - The schoolmaster is statesman, the statesman is financier, the finan- cier is emancipator, the emancipator is the pacificator of the world. American Intelligence vs. Ignorance, “Thus is the nation accomplish- ing the destiny of democracy. The commanding fact of the modern age is the spread of intelligence. The school- house has conquered ignorance. The printing press has transformed the purposes and capacities of man. Edu- cation has qualified him for a better cxistence. The Bible has made him a moralist. Men know that the world support the human family in peace ani comfort. Men know that the great problem of peace and comfort is not vet solved. They know that it connot be solved by the savagery of war. They know that its solution is obtainable only in condi- tions of peace, reason and a practical morality. This state of knowledge is the crowning achievement of progress. “The American experiment of self- government has stood the test. The achievements of the American sys- tem are known of all men and felt throughcut the worl The United States is the world’s asylum. Here all race 11 o¢nditions, all creeds assiroilated, helped, elevated, a men urc le into self-governing men. In America justice has made it | greatest progress, because it is prog- | ress in which all men have a part. That form of government which affords the fullest opportunity for happiness and | comfort is destined to be the universal form. Such is the resistless syllogism of progress. War cannot stop its ine itable march. The opinion of all men is more potential than the opinion of one man. The best opinion of ihe best men, by the force of example and mutuality of interest, becomes the opinion of all men. American opinion Is ebodicd in a man of peace. Ameri- are | MAKING CHILDREN EAT Nothing is ever gained b{ forcing & child to eat when it refuses food. Make surethat nothing is being eaten between meals to destroy the natural appetite and if your growing child does nothave a healthful craving for good, honest food at mealtimes there 13 something the matter. Threats of punishment if the child does not eat will not correct the difficulty. A fitful appetite in a growing child, especially if the patient is pale, languid, nervous, irritable, and without ambi- tion, usually means that the blood is thin. A non-alcoholic tonic such as Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills is demanded. During her ’teens a girl lays the foun- dation for her future health. Lack of blood at this time may rob her of robust, healthy womanhood. It is of the greatest importance to administer to girls who grow pale and weak a safe tonic and Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills meet every requirement of the most careful mother. They make the hlood rich and red and it carries renewed health and strength to every part of the body. Your own druggist sells Dr. Wil- liams’ Pink Pills. Send today to the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenec- tady, N. Y., for the book, ‘‘Building Up the Blood.”” It is free, “When the cast the iron dic threw the moral dice of destiny. Aia- erica staked the principles of her jus- tice. There they stand m untarnished integrity in the gaze of world. The intelligence of men grasp the meaning of America. Her ample will readjust the relations of men everywhere. The aspirations of men are for freedom. Men men can and should rule themselves. The day when they rule themselves war will disappear. The hand of Di- imperiali m of Europe | of destiny, America | ESTABLISHED 1880 Globe Clothing House a s ken ! ex- | and wo- | vinity has so written it in the needs | and necessities of humanity made in Its image. America the Blessed. America, ~ Prosperous, blessed, is so because the inscrutable purposes of God intended it. peaceful, | The ! contrast between Europe in flames an:l suffering and the United States peace- ful and prosperous is the divine con- trast. By saving the American sys- tem civilization is saved. The of America demonstrates the folly of war. The principles of furnish the means of avoiding and pre- venting war. The universal intelli- gence of men decrees that the war now devastating Europe shall be the last war. . “Sons of America, keep unsullied the sacred shrine of peace, through whose portals will yet pass arm in arm the crowned head and the humble peas- ant in silent worship of God. “Out of the ruins and sufferings of the present conflict will arise a tem- ple of justice whose dome will be the blue vault of hea its illuminants the eternal stars; its pillars the ever- lasting hills; its ornaments the woods and bountiful flelds; its music peace | democracy | You can get more real style andfiner quality for your money in Hart Schafiner & Marx clothes than any other make $18 up. White flannel Trousers fine grade $3.50 and $4.00. From 25¢ up is our Under- wear. Union Suits 50c up. Copyright Hart Schaffner & Mars | | the rippling rills, the song of hirds,‘ | the laughter of happy childhood; its diapason the roar of mills and the hum of industry; its votaries the peo- ples of the earth; its creed, on which | hangs all the law and the prophets. “Loye thy neighbor as thyself.” Above its altars in ineffaceable cblor will live eternally the vision of its artificer. “Therefore, my fellow countrymen, not I, but his deeds and achieve- ments; not I, but the spirit and pur- poses of America; not I, but the pray- ers of just men; not I, but civilization itself, nominates to succeed himself to the presidency of the United States, to the presidency of a hundred million free people, bound in impregnable union, the scholar, the statesman, the financier, the emancipator, the pacifi- cator, the moral leader of democracy, Woodrow Wil This handsome 50- piece set of fine Saxon China has an attract- ive, exclusive design and is decorated in the soft shades of gray, green, pink, yellow and blue with a gold line around the rim. Wouldr’t You Like to Own These Beautiful Dishes? You can—easily. Simply save the coupons packed'with Wedgwood Creamery Butter until you have twenty-five. Send them to us with $2.75 in cash, and we ship the dishes to you, express prepaid. We are making this unusual offer to introduce to your table our pure, wholesome Wedgwood Creamery Butter Crystal springs of pure water—fertile fields of grass and clover—clean dairies—psz steurized cream—dust- tight, odor-proof packages—these are just a few of the reasons why Wedgwood Creamery Butter is t he favorite wherever it is known. Order a pound today. Parksdale Farm guaranteed Fancy E also have ccupons. P. Berry & Sons, Incorporaled, Hartford Conn. Not Sole Distributers for New England States. As we now offer a 50-piece instead of a 42-piece set, we have been obliged to increase the required number of coupons from 15 to 25. can opinion js arching through the world, 5 = pi) s T R T R e o AL 0, T o A, - iy S