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Bntam Herald ’%Vl"l"fl COMPANT, Aetors by (Wun erald Dunds . Yoar Three Months Month the Post OfMce at New Briy cond Class Mall Matter 'l'll.:rllle CALLS bmce eepted) At 4118 &1 Church street. profitable advertising medium y. Clreulation hooks and pr Iways open to advertissrs ¢ of The Assecinted Preoe. atod Press ‘In sxclusively entitied use for rey abl 4 to It or not otherwi or and also local news pub- Audit Bureau of Circalation. B. C. s & national organisation furnishes newspapors and adver with & strictly hooest * .alysis of tlon, Our olrculation statistl wd upo. t™te audit. This insur fon Against fraud in newspaper ution Agures to both natloml and dvertivers. — . 8. WANTS LIGHT, iflcant he rk the n headline uppeared in newspapers published in today Nothing could situation ‘more plainly that will continue to exist s the United States remains 1y s, vitally Interested in Euro- theoretically completely with them Wants Light referred to ouch ington reads Aline nik Later on headline Refusal Yet have of the rends on France's riin | btedly between there Ty representatives governments and those of States. Undoubtedly the ed tughes knows situation in perfect detail. But noth- been sald done or at this could be rogard considered an wet in to the latest Germany. that possible there has heen h transmission ithoer we of communica here officially the Fhat t that in n nor there ar “out at moment, Is point pzed it should be the emphasized edly Allles of 1t?"" They Ited States ¥ the T that might sy might assert that not having of Versailles and of Nu to com- col aty the lttle rnment things pnging to League I hi it gov ofMcially n. Allles will i injure ve cause were not in- of that are not say this not say anything that our feelings, ant They want of They yet us this sit- official uncertainty to real that they iled in thre authority. we hav to e need to “sit ly ay en game and with administration that at Pty suggestions made least Tr eutitled a por Versallles Scarce a the of be by us. msen without there ign ition long will appearing of placed. ad- physi- take uffairs the uncertainty which It industrial in we ar be before we t peace and Il not come until we our place the others na- f the pur among it the ility, world, bene- a v and the power re- in exchange the hdgment of his leadership. Washington will Ing Light bus leader derives from ac- Until always niLy: YEA! V Aftor wting the Republican of Wednesday, when the head it he sup- Morniy contemporary, ctly its “Good iter bury “It hit rd it dia." ook might be this ypears that the than now Newton on more—or less written on th = pregnant paragraph rudne the Allowing resent practically everything the posscsses that of » material or intangible of today certainly t differing from time. allowing Newton thinker has a to r iscoverer or the t/ the apple ect upon him of old the apple Newton, the of differ- it had very than upon ewtc of patriotism thinking was does the [day man roused by of pa- or tem- Patriotism nr Was that stirring m real and permanent, Y and forced? he apple - lem to the the apple stay, hinker, numerable ked by the paragraph How il thewe things strike the Newton ¥? How they strike Queries muy seem of mod freedom in temporary rn permanent or Newton of toda profiteering with the Newton- of according to will other ull above questions or pass? might queries roused quoted. do you academic | apple tion of all news | credited | The bendfits a | | ernment con- apple | of de their plans for today—thelr plans for tomor Have tion W the Weigh it of and do the h each proper the apple strikes Just sense propor- not wait until you on ad to determine how much welighs, “TALKING Reference MOVIES." is not made here to mov which tell that they *'f made ing plctures their stories peak. to the New dramatically Refe ture ly nee s be the rather pic- York will to presented in wherein characters actually speak and, it is said, will be throughout the auditorium Jeflers have a . of *““Rip His reply was that acting was ph 1 was once he not do nyder," Wikl the in Van his production but and b holding of the ture itself mirror up to na not nature The dog would out of place The fiction same idea has been felt in books of One th than hero or heroine in the imagination to have a photograph or print of some real person presented as that hero heroine AL would or first that this moving would rule the one feei upply to picture One's inclination of the will cling But tods is to believe lack always limitation of the hum volce to the screen. when the air has been,con- quered and when xo many other shake dict, inven- tions one’'s confi it human have ability possible that added come to dence in to p the the seems voice of quite might be to wonder the moving pictures The not the next question arising is whether or addition of the human voice would add to or detract from the given that not by the really wonderful pictures Wouid imagine are being produced today. the prefer to the villain, spectator the which heroine of S Just Jected the mured love the the or mur- than to which, quite her to hero, hes voice ight be the r the words spoken in matter discordant no how sweet, to the of ears different members of the audience When the ent the When person 4 man or woman appears a diffe speak age rson it Were in j is quite matter they not to whole would seem unnatural. there appears w photogruph of a would it not m equally un- natural if that photograph were to utter audible sound: Naturally the “‘speaking attraction ot pictures” wili be a first. great Curiosity will call many to see But, the e hear. without doubting the of the that possibility « ¢ perfection plan, one is in- clined to believe the movie will re- main the silent drama to the end and. as such, will continue to bring pleasure to millions who b had little chance to see and hear and plays sented in the manner now shown by the stories pre- cinem GOOD BUSINESS \l—,\ll \ thai A. C. Bedford, Standard Oil thy internation- United States Cham voiced the nti- tha Report has it of the speaking the chalrman coni. pany before al section’ of Commerc the annual ber of ments ot 3,000 delegate ninth convention, whe yesterday: period are nearly « of days pretty our er the extreme depression.” Some “go an opinion to this columns. that effect was expressed in these The tells binet ¢ government be news of yesterday us Mcials and perts leve that the whole combi- of credit dificulties will max by When must vation of transportation, wage and reach their cli- June 1. reaches anything it Ir business climax, it alter its course. the that that certainly gov- believes trou- will touch date, about that troubles-— bles point it by that means troubles will cease to be will become modified least or troubles, at arcely one thinking man believes the in the business all the that optimists world are deceived agree differ- matters They that times will be better, nces in their opinions being only. Publi industrial lite lay men, in political and in and business life much stress the situation When Justed, this country on the they in Europe. reparations matter is ad- conditions in feel tha times will think, the will immediately better matter of the will are the Ruhr reaction and The rep liev come. of be- settlement ations end it d. Th tions, either or Germany, will soon is situa district will be that counten- proposals that allies. two possik occupled, sceing delay not be will further anced will be pre acceptable to the will never allow the occupled. Sii it the rmany to Ruhr district be realizes that she cannot prevent by it in at she fore will possible things de prevent only other way by last agreeing to do the in better belleved, than appe tion of the district would paralyze her industrially. This she cannot allow. anded. Germany it is a financial condition, it is T'he occup heard | wsked why | often prefers to picture | ton effect | jafter { but “EW 3RITAIN DAILY HERAL: SST RUMINATIN'.”" (Robert Russell.) co may least: who smokes beast: but don’t that give holi not you Aroma o' toba please you in the may consider him a sort o human that o o' mine to ple the sense it never plans to friends a perfumed The wreathes that float rise an' drift, which from its bowl = are headed for headquarters o your being— that's your heart. Aromas may be all forgot if you may onl feel the thought that per- meates those d ms is based on somethin’ r An' when that smoke goes driftin’ out it doesn’t allus rise to things that's 'way beyond-our reach a-livin’ in the skies; it's full o' dreams inspired | the things the ol' pipe knows from all experience life as ‘round the world, it goes. The matters /undvln h our feet; the daily tasks we do contains sugges- tions that would aid the lives o' me an’ you. Ideals that are lofty are like smoke that fades ¢ unless they leave a creed deeds that come to us to w ¢ prophecie; firm so this believe that the on optimist hand have =a as the belief a settlement heavd ever, foundation, if, much on is, Sts of question. BRITAIN AT will local EART. am- M. health board to position with the State sanitarium in Newing- that he would do make the free suc- NEW When left pt a Doctor Stock- well the ac Tuberculosis he promised all tuberculosis He Tuesday in his pow to clinic in this city a started the idea here, and he gives his own time this city and give free and examinations to the people cess. every o come to lvice who go to the clinic. Dr. Stockwell is the =on of Deputy Sherifft M. D. Stockwell of this city and he lived here when a boy, which in part his inter- Britain. has for He his is countable New booster for est in always been a home town. he was commissioned al corps and he of the Am- erican Legion post in this city. When the he acted as pacifier, During the war a major in the medi was the first commander hoys were home, a troubled his ef- pouring oils on the was through New Britain for the waters, and it that turned forts the service men out welcome home celebration. Very little at large of the good is by the publ work the doctor lines, but it Britain free tuberculosis Connecticut. is known doing along medical due to his efforts that New ot in has one best Bl the the clinics ate of 1t after it is may may be wise to lock the Larn door horses is stolen, but the thief who of your to one catch the no way come after oth in and fond well If a of cats is v do it woman she would to examine herself to see she is not one of them. the power of and environment until he sees -al and A man cannot r “Time mental of not irreverent present ¢ long years, physi spiritual pictures his youth. It some people of the toil not neither do they omon in all rayed like one of th is apply to “They spin, yet Sol- Ay his glory was not ar- se. non-productive, spires thought. Often thoughts are produc 25 YEARS AGO (From The Herald of That Date.) Stanley Relief Corps will entertainment. at the Odd hall tomorrow night. The German Rifle club will open its season Saturday afternoon at its range near Andrews' crossing. The collections taken up in S Mary's church Sunday for the hene fit of St. Joseph's parish amounted to $71 “Trilby" be give an Fellows' , the greatest play in ye: presented at the Russ- Lyceum theat Monday May 4. he wedish Lutheran church members are planning for holding the annual bazaar. Mrs. M aret Kehoe a two story building on ALLIES WILL MEET of will w is to er Norih stre ct Application Penalties on Ger- many and New Boundary Lincs to Be Discussed On Saturday. Associated of further and the tr lines between Paris, April 28 (By ress).—Application to Germany ing of new boundary Poland and German Upper Silesi will 1 scussed liy the supreme Allied council at London on Saturday, it was learned here today. The coun- cil will limit its delberations to these subjects, it was said, having decided to ta up only questions of | urgency ates, it is under- vited to have a rep- the London meeting. The United stood, will be resentative at Bl THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 192t. FACTS AND FANCIES BY ROBERT QUILLEN Hell is paved with good xmcnnons.' Even armament well. And when the immigrant begins to speak our language he fondly thlnks | that he is learning to speak English. We” won the | didn’t reduce sore spots. The wastage of war Europe's visible supply ink rolls won't hear while they remain a a National 1 to arms little deficit. yiviani desires nothing, and each | day makes it more apparent that] he will get it, i to fear that| policy will be | Europe is beginning America’s new foreign non-participating. much when the | dpve builds her nest in the cannon’s mouth. The great need is something to stop the diplomat’s mouth. It doesn’t help Happy thought! Why not persuade all the Irish to move to England, an:d people Ireland with Britains? Still, Lenine is the only stateman of this era who has been able to raise revenues by taxing credulity. Unrest: A versal, to shift some mythical yvearning, almost uni- the fiddler's bill to third person. There is some fear that cutting the cotton acreage in the South will reduce the wool clip this year. After establishing trade relations i racial | Liberty Turs GUY ISU'T C:o%\(lb; HE'S Every man in America has a chance | to be successful except the one who ! thinks all the big guys are crooked. | | fram our framing up is | things the ‘Senate And so the senate will foreign poicy. Well, one of the best does. | | Building material hasn't returned | 1o a normal price, but you no longer have to buy brick and lath by the dozen. | Twice the world has hatred young fello out of the been free ori when Adam was a and when Noah camo | Ark. He was an Irishman who cried for or death, and the people of his race seemed destined to get one or the other. | If the universe is finite, as Einstein asserts, why don’t they always find those balls Babe Ruth knocks out of the park? — Raising the tariff in order to lower taxes is like drawing cider out of the east end of the barrel to save that in the west end. ~ with Russia, it appears that the first thing Britain imported was an in- dustrial situation. R. R. MEN FIGHTING WAGE REDUCTIONS Cuts Would Impair Living Stan- dard, They Say Chicago, railroad standard April 28— wages would impair American living and would have no justification in ethics, cconomic reason’ or the cold, concrete facts of present day industrial life, it wat declared by B. M. Jewell, head 0! the rallway unions, who opened the employes' fight to retain present wage scales before the railroad labor board today. Contentions of the railroads that the cost of living had declined since the wage award of July, 1920, were met with the reply that that award was based on the prices of December, 1919, and not on those of July, 192%, the peak of high prices. Mr. Jewell declared that it would require three vears for railway employes at their present wages to recoup the losses sustained during the war period “by the failure of their earnings to keep pace with the increased cost of liv- ing.” The railroads rush in and say * us our pound of flesh,”” he “even before it can be determined whether the cost of living has actual- ly declined since the award of this board or whether it will be higher or lower in the future.” Mr. Jewell named prevailing wage rates in similar industries and changes in the cost of living as the two main considerations which should direct the board's decision. “Coal mining and are only basic be compared to the railroad in- tries may dustry,” he continued, “and it is well known that there have been no wage cuts for the miners or for the steel vorkers. “In addition to the two main prin- iuction of the steel indus- industries that ciples set up as g guide for the board in wage determinations, there are also other and more fundamen con- ditions which must receive judicial otice. These are: ‘1. - Economy transportation act railroads operate with and efliciency. We shall show that this has not been done; that because of the financial control and policy of the railroads, resources have been dis- sipated or improperly distributed, im- provements and maintenance deferred and operating costs greatly advanced despite the ‘increased wor and pro- ductive efficicney of railway employe: Our conclusion shall be therefore that the board cannot entertain a plea for reduction in wages under any cir cumstances until the inadequacies of management and the high operating costs resulting therefrom have heen eliminated. -2 Tha general policy of the in- dustry. The main items of operating expenses are. of course, fuel, supplies of all kinds, and labor. We shall show that the me financial interesta which control the railroads also con- trol the production of fuel, timber, iipment, oi! and other suppliea and that they have determincd upon a pol- icy of decreasing railroad exper s by ‘ducing wages and at the same time charging unwarranted and unrgason- able prices for supplies which the railroads must purchase. We shall contend that this board should not consider any complaints relative to and efficiency. The requires that the due economy the | ! So strangze Lights and Shadows By John J. Daly e PEACOCK ALLEY 'Tis quite an institution now, And sanctioned by tradition; A lane where ladies loll and bow ! their i difficulty. | more than $14.00. | it And smile, in recognition; While men from mountain and from plain, And maids from dale and valley Do meet and mingle in the vain Parade of Peacock Alley. In afternoon, or early night, The proud procession forming, twos or fours, at left or right, Goes on its endless storming; And folk unknown, and those of fame, Find time to dilly-dally | And throw their hearts into the game | That's played in Peacock Alley. In The flirt is ever lurking there, In hope some heart will soften— And though his is a vacant stare, It’'s occupied quite often; For there are those who come from farms, Like Abergail and Sally, Who do not know the false alarms That sound in Peacock Alley. And there are W ola teaches!) Who know each say, Who've memorized their speeche: For ev'ry move some player makes The Scorer keeps a tally— And he who wins is he who takes The prize in Peacock Alley. those (How great the | Wigdom warks and | word the tricksters the flock you sometimes see A-rubbing elbows, solely To prove, it seems, Democracy Will never die—not wholly For you may note, in close array, And all the time quite pally, The high, the low, the sad, the gay, Mixed up in Peacock alley. Yet, strangg to say, and it is true, (It seems to me a sorrow) The ones today who speak to you won't know you on the morrow; But that's the way it goes in there ‘Where all the clans may rally— They “freeze’” you with an icy stare Outside of Peacock Alley. WORK ON NURSES’ HOME T0 START NEXT MONTH, (Continued from First Page.) the nurses’ home early this spring but delays of a technical nature have aris- en, Explaining the situation; Dr. Reeky said: ““There has been a delay because of the intensive study given by the arch- itect. Furthermore, it is the desire of the hospital authorities to give the people of New Britain the best kind of a nurses’ home and hospital addi- tion, so we have been proceeding slowly but surely Dr. Reeks added that during the st two weeks the architect, E. F. tevens of Boston, has made much progress, and some finished sketches have recsulted. Dr. 8. Goldwater, superintendent of Mount Sinai hospi- tal, New York, who is the critic of | the hospital plans, will go over .the sketches with Mr. Stevens next week, and then evc::thing will be ready the breaking of ground on the nurses’ home, which will be three high. It is estimated that $90,000 for | stories | the railroad labor board and every oth agency, shall reduce railroad wages an bring costs down to a living point. Merchant Marine. *‘The same situation conl‘runlfl merchant marine. In operating, il ing and repairing ships, labor costs a | hopelessly high. That this is true shown by the millions of tons of shiy { ping now lying idle, the great numb | of shipyards with no work to de, i the hundreds of thousands of idle shij | ping and ship building workmen. | { | 1 GERMANY OUTSTRIPS, U. 5. AND ALLIES IN FIGHT TO NORMALGY (Continued from First Page.) Germany was ahead of all-of them in production. May Lose Peace. ““It is possible that after having won the war, we of the allied nations, with everything in our hands will allow Germany to win the peace through the efforts of her labor. Labor on the whole can be paid only what labor as a whole earns, and if some sections of labor exact more than share of the current produce of the world, other sections are going to suffer. I understand that our railroads today pay to labor over 60 cents out of every dollar received. The labor cost of making a ton of steel today is 85 cents out of each dollar of total cost. “‘Labor costs underlie our railroad They are the cause of the - ive railroad rates. We formerly “‘In so far as our people in Amerid are prepared to go to work at reasof ble wages, in so far as we are pi pared quickly to abandon the artifici extravagances of the war, will we 14 the foundations for a new prosperi such as we have never enjoyed befol *‘This is the route through which &y merely America but the peoples of o allies can find their way out, ai triumph in peace as they did in, wa Darwin P. Kingsley, president of t] chamber delivered an addre: culog ing Mr. Schwah for his service duri the war - . The chamber presented to M Schwab a bronze tablet, at the top which was inscribed words uttered Iachimo, a character in Shakespear play, Cymbeline. The quotation read ‘‘Here’s a voucher, stronger th exc ever law could make."’ | sold pig iron at a profit at about $14.00 a ton. Today the total freight rates in- G volved in making a ton of pig iron are . STEAMSHIP NEWS. New York, April. 28.—ATrivg “But the railroads cannot give America, Marsellies. - ervice at present rates with their ex- | Bremen, April 24.—Arrived: Sugj isting costs. {hanna, New York; 23rd *‘Railroad costs must come down, and Rochelle, New York. in the interests of national prosper- Christiania, Apriy ity that our government acting through Bergensfjord, New York. 23.—Saild Are You Air Cooled It Will Pay You to Investigate the FRANKLIN if you Thinking of Buying an Automobile. Let Us Tell You Why. OFFICE AND SAI/IESROOM, CENTRAL AUTO STATION, REAR 236 MAIN STREET. Frankiin-Marshall Motor Ca L. 1544, F. M. 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