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DAILY HERALN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1916. WILSON HURLS DOWN GAUNTLET ATG. 0.P. Says Nation Should Not Trust Those Who Talk Sectionalism i T \ Oct. NEW, BRITAIN | There’s Charming Simplicity With Flegance | ‘ 0f Style In These New Fall AND | charge that the democratic party is a g sectional party, with the statement that “any man who revives the issue | cf sectionallsm In this country is un- worthy the confidence of the nation.” | Indianapolis, Ind., 13.—Presi- You'’re Sure To Please “Hubby” With These Eggs Parksdale Farm Fancy Eggs sure do please the men folks. There’s something about these eggs which makes Mr. Man say to himself, “Fresh from the farm.” Whether served poached on toast, fried in Wedgwood Creamery Butter, boiled, scrambled or in an ‘omelet, you can tell at the very first taste that Parksdale Farm are fancy eggs. Then, too, they are guaranteed. With each dozen o U VD T ey e Al L L]~ Note: As we now offer & 50-plece instead of a 42-plece set, we bave been obliged to increase the required number of coupans from 15 to 25. The president went to Indianapolis to 0ddress meetings of good roads advo- cates and farmers, review an automo- . bile parade celebrating goods roads or a Ies an lsses day of the Indiana centennial, and at- tend a non-partisan luncheon of lead- | - Shae h I T Alaalon s il was seen by oo an You will find a combination of every desirable which packed the streets for blocks. f et et S e S s feature in our new fall apparel—style, fit, and fab- good done by highways in preventing | ric. Add to this our service and there is nothing sectionalism. | a “My fellow-citizens,” he continued, | left to be desired. “I need not tell you that I did not | come here to talk politics, but there | e - : is one thing hat is pertinent in this | > connection which T cannat deny myself | [ 3 a5 the privilege of saying. Ay man who | revives the issue of sectionalism in | X this country is unworthy of the con- | i fidence of the nation. He shows him- | : self a provincial; he $hows that he| ar a e arm s Pimself does not know the various | A sections of his own country; he shows | that he has shut his own heart up in | . i i comes a coupon. For 25 coupons and only $2.75 in ca%h we ship you, express : llmtts pm;:“;hC SO Wi (R G | prepaid, the magnificent,50-piece Saxon Dinner Set illustrated and described = nlfm‘:iio o f‘;“;m‘“‘:e’ggfnf,’j RR— — bfi!ow.“ Outr large puglchase fl;om th; rrtlapufatctu;"er se‘&eral monthss befo}rl'e \;-m:: h(; alo?o if _na:gxor;al.rn‘his is the | Don’t wait—styles are now new and you’ll en- china ““went up enables us to make this startling offer now. ave the deptiifor lantipatriotic feeling s ! g 3 i . 4 4 5 5 ings i e n, n 13 near! . coupons. You'll be surprised how soon you’ll have this pretty set on your d,:;s:f":vzf‘,et],:f:ricit‘;;em;.?;;:nfiv Joy Weatt g.before Gegeamn o ty go‘?e L table. Coupons, also, with Wedgwood Creamery Butter. o rrpbms Ceel oot select the suit or coat you want and say: “Charge marked progress through the | it” N P. BERRY & SONS, Incorporated, Hartford, Conn. e L S e LR s Sole Distributers for New England States srounds where he delivered hia- first . address had many vacant seats in the rear but the hall in which he spoke ew l s later was filled. He also spoke briefly [ at a luncheon given him by Gov. and s Mrs. Samuel M. Ralson of Indiana. ecl: ue The second set speech was devoted to | Sp al Val a discussion of the work of the demo- s a cratic administration for the farmers Including Velour-Checks, Gabardines, Pop- of the natlon. g o : The president left Indianapotis at| | 1ins and Broadeloth, in all colors, plain and fur 5:45 yesterday afternoon for Long | immed i Branch, N. J., where he will arrive trimmed in the latest styles. this afternoon at 2 o’clack. Akt i RIsYsoen s OTHER SUITS PRICED UP TO $35.00. speech said in part: “My fellow-citizens T need not tell you that I did not come here to talk pelitics, but there is one thing that | is pertinent in this connccion which | I cannot deny myself the privilege of | eaying. Any man who revives the is- sue of sectionalism in this country is uvnworthy of the confidence of the nation, He shows himself a provin- | cial; he shows-that he himself does not kow the various sections of his own country; he shows that he has | shut his own heart up in a UYUO} Fall Millinery $3.00 to $7.50 Variety to select from—ready to put on hats, creations from leading New York milliners. JUST SAY “CHARGE IT.” This handsome 50-piece set of fine Saxon China has an attractive, exclu- sive design and is deco- rated in the soft shades of gray, green, pink, yellow and blue with a gold line around the rim. New Stylish Waists $1.50 to $5.00 - Including all the latest styles and colors—dainty models in all materials, JUST SAY “CHARGE IT.” province, and that those who do not | seek the special literests of that | province are to him sectional, while he alone is national. That is the depth of antipatriotic feeling. Nationalization of America. “And that is my interest in good roads, for, my fellow-citizens, my present interest is chiefly in the na- tionalization of America. We have created a great people. At least, if I may put it so, we h brought to- : = gether all the elements, all the com- A HN B N . . ponent parts, all the necessary char- W”/y/// ] acters and industries, and material re- / /4 \ e a0 sources of a \ e B g E a great nation. And we / ) i 2\ ; bl \w N The suddenly find that we are face to face | with the probl £ asse | Crawford Oven problem of assembling these has no ““secret”” quick or N e OATELY & BRENNAI YOU WEAR. ! % ACCOUNT. elements in the sense in which the | slow comers, because mechanie assembies me varis ot o | 47 Main St., New Britain 47 Main St.; New Britai heat is distributed even- 3 o TR machine. And having assembled those elements, to put them together | EEEIEEESERS - S BRI g ly—better cooking as- ] j 3 3 sured—no waste. The Single Damper One single motion of an always cool knob reg- ulates fre and heat. Bakes, checks and kin- dles—one motion, three results. Dress Up The Boy Suits $4.50 up A varied selection of reliable makes, in materials that will appeal to the youngster’'s eye—and defy wear. Women’s and Misses’ Coats $7.50 to $30.00 Including a varied selection of Plaids, Plushes and Wool Velours, in the latest style effects. Kb OPEN AN for the creation of one unconquer- B @ — == able force to which the world shall fHiends of justice, of fairness o erty, of peace and of those acco: bearing upon its boughs the fruits you mnot noticed how almost every of the savor of life. We have got to Madam,there’s no range like this in the world See that Damper. and the fire. class by itself. It automatically regulates the oven It places the Crawford Range in a ‘Those scientifically arranged heat flues distribute the heat evenly in a Crawford Range. You can't have anything but perfect cooking in a Crawford. The Damper and the Flues make rawlord Rangses perfect from a constructional point of view. They give you more oven heat per pound of coal than any other stove on the market. Then there are those interchangeable ash hods! One full of coal, the other receiving the ashes. As one empties the other fills up. One trip to empty the ashes and bring back the coal. The damper which “bakes,” “checks” and “kindles” with one miotion | The flues that distribute the heat evenly —no waste! ere are at least seventeen And other Crawford advantages demon- strating why this Range is superior to all others. I have been selling Crawford Ranges for years, Madam, and | am certain there is no other like it as a life investment for your home. I'm quite sure no other Range can equal Crawford satisfaction. Owens if desired : Gas end (single) or elebated (double). SOLD BY The Convenient Ash Hods are interchangeable. As 271: BmpfiE the ol:er up. Empty ashes il e Lol e one trip. The Outside Cogwheels make it casy to tend a Crawford. No ashes— no coal dust—no dan- ger from live coals. The Removable EndShelves are another of the 20 exclusive Crawford fea- tures. Investigate these the many other unique and distinctive superiorities. J- O. MILLS & CO. 80 WEST MAIN STREET 1c a word each day pays for a classified adv. in the That’s what you want. Herald. hereafter look for most of its forward impulse, for most of its ideal princi- ples, for most of its example in the practice of liberty. And therefore the thing that I am more interested in than anything else in these days is the forces that make for drawing America together into a great spirit- ual unit. “Now, my fellow-citizens, we have had time and opportunity until the present to do pretty much what we wanted in America and to do differ- ent things in different parts of Amer- fca. But just as soon as this great European war is over, America has got to stand for one thing and only one thing in the world, and she must be ready with united force. We can’t You get results. play with the elements of our life any more. America came into ex- isténce, my fellow-citizens, not in or- der to show the world the most no- table example it had ever had of the accumulation and use of material wealth, but in order to show the way to mankind in every part of the world to justice and freedom and lib- erty. So that the words I want you to carry in your mind in connection with this good roads cause are these. First, nationalization, getting all the fibers of this great vital people united in a single organism; second, mo- bilization, getting them so related to each other, so co-ordinated, so or- ganized, so united, that when they move, they move as a single great ir- resistible conquering force. And the third word that I want you to con- sider is the word that I suppose af- fords the key to doing these things. That word is the word of co-opera- tion. I wish that each one of us could fix in his mind the difference between the way we have been trying to do things. We have been trying to do things by combination, by set- ting off one powerful group against another, by setting up groups in par- ticular industries or spheres of our life which try to exclude all other groups by the power or by the method of thelr destroying competition. That is not the way to build a nation to- | gether. That is the way to build it | up into warring elements. “Instead of exclusive combinations, | I want to see universal co-operat¥on. There are good signs in the alr. Have great industry, every great profession, every year holds a congress of some sort. Why, even the advertising men, who we thought were the sharpest competitors in America, have a na- tional association in which they co- operate. For what purpose? For the purpose of getting ahead of other? No. For the purpose of guid- ing one another and setting up stand- ards, and the chief standard they have adopted is the word ‘Truth.’ And so in profession after profession men are getting together by way of co-operation instead of by way of mutual destruction. T hold this to be a happy omen. I see the growth in America of this conception of solidar- ity of the interest of each being the interest of all, and the interest of cach growing out of the interest of all. Relations Between Capital and Labor. “There is one field in which we are particularly sluggard in respect of this. I mean the relations between capital and labor. Nothing can be for the interest of capital that is not in the interest of labor; and nothing can be in the interest of labor which is not in the interest of capital. If men wvant to get rich, they must have human relationships with those who help them to get rich. That is a lesson that men have been exceed- ingly slow to learn, slower than any other lesson of co-operation in Amei- ica. I pray God that their eves may be opened, and that they may see that the future of this country lies in their co-operation, open, candid, cor- dial, and not in their antagonism, and that if they will once get together and plan in the same spirit the same things, the industry of America will go forward by leaps and bounds such as we have never vet conceived. Sometimes it is necessary in order to arrest attention to pull men up with a round turn and say, ‘Stop, look, listen, because presently if you don't, the great forces of society will correct the things that e gone wrong. Soclety is the jury. The par- {ies are not going to scttle. The na- tion is going to settle, and T am coun- sel for the nation. “And so, my fellow-citizens how this.little plant of the good roads spreads into a gremt tree each’| know each other. We have got to co- cperate with each other. We have got to stand together. That is all that politics is for. As a contest for office it is contemptible, but as a combina- tion of thoughtful men to accomplish something for the nation it is honor- able. If I could not be associated with a congress that did something I would qu If 1 didn't think that making speeches contributed a little bit to the common thought, that it had nothing to do with selfish purpase, but had everything to do with com- bined purpose I wouldn’t make any speeches. Speeches are not interest- ing because of the man who makes them or the words he us The are interesting in propcrtion as the people who hear believe what he sa “Now ‘talking through the hat’ cught to be a dead industry. It ought to be discouraged by silence and empty halls, and every man ought to have as a motto over the stage from which he speaks these simple and familiar words: ‘Put up or shut up.’ I am ready to take my own medicine. If I don’t put up I am ready to shut up. America’s Rebirth. “I waat to leave a very solemn thought in your minds. America is row about to experience her rebirth. We have been making America in pieces for the sake of the pleces. Now we have got to construct her entire, for the sake of the whole and for the eake of the world, because, ladies and gentlenien, there is a task ahead for us for which we must be very soberly prepared. I have said, and shall say again, that when the great present war is over it will be the dutyy of America to join with the other nations of the world in some king of league for the maintenance of peace. Now America was not a party to this war and the only terms upon which we will be ad- mitted to a league almost all the other powerful members of which were en- gaged in the war and made infinite sacrifice when we apparently made none,, are the only terms which we desire, namely, that America shall not stand for the just conceptions and bases of peace, for the competitions of merit alone, and for the generous ri- valry of liberty. “Are we ready alwaysy i day I | 8reetings as personal be dations which rest upon justice peace? 1In ihese two iryying that have just gone by we have horn, we have not allowed provod to disturb our judgments, we have to it that America kent her poise all the rest of the world seem bave lost its poise. Only upon terms of retaining that poise and the splendid force which al comes with poise can we hope to the beneficent part in the histon the world which I have ] no| timated. So m yfellow country build upon these new roads in thd struction of which the federal g ment is no two play so large a the spirit of nationality, the spi co-operation, the spirit of libert power which only a free people how to exercise. In his speech &t President Wilson saic “Now when the peoplc of feeling that they have giv cannot help having the that they approve the spirit have tried to express with regai notional affairs. I do not take wuse I has a impression that he is the luni no man in the distinet administering a flice an not himself constitute the presi than I have, and that the prel of this country is supposed something more ahan an adx tor. Tt is his duty to try to e the spirit of the nation. o, w see the friendly looking faces all the street, there creeps into my. the hope that T have expressec spirit of the nation.” from the it second, Pres stopped at the home of § W. Kern, who is 11 country great On his way TEN DOLLAR COUNTERFH W gton, Oct fce gave notice today of a counterfeit of t} te g federal Segret dang Minneapolis x which is so well executed as 4 sibly deceive even expert money to be the | i lers, and of a counterfeit of ¢ note of the € serve Bank