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6 ™ [ e S New Bfitain‘ Herald HERALD PUBLIEHING COMPANY (Issued Daily, Bunday Excepted) At Hera)d Bidg, 67 Church Btreet, BUBBCRIPTION RATER: 85,00 a Tenr $3.00 Three Months, 780 & Month, Cntered at the Post OMce at Naw Britain ad Becund Clase Mall Matter, TELEPHON Business OM e .., Editorial Fuoma . B CALLS " . 928 The only profitable advertising =™ *lum in the Clty, Clreulatiou bo nd press Toom alwaye open (¢ advertisers, Member of The Assoclated Press The Associated Press 1» exclusively antitled to tha use for ra-publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise credited in this yaper #n¢ also local news pub- lisusd hareln, Member Audit Burean of Circvlation The A. R, C. (a a natlanal organization which furnisher newsnap. and edver- tisers with A strictly honest analcsis o circalatlon. Our ereulation based vpon thir acdit, Thi fraud In v » to both natiinal and lo- cal advertisars, THE OTHER SIDE, Imagine the situation which would | result got gether and their troubles in regard to the for them of the number of employes who had no consideration for them, the em- ployers. Suppose each should cite in- stances where a worker was trying only to “get ', without attempting to consider employer's where it conflicted his own. | Then suppose these employers were | to agree to have absolutely no consid- | Suppose it employers should talk over people who worked tell Suppose each should by the interest with eration for their employes. they agreed not to consider past faith- ful service at all, or the circumstances Tmagine that the agree among them- not to of their employes. employers shou selves to discharge all most efficient, loyal eager serve the interests of those who paid them their wages, and agreed fur- ther not to employ any of the per- sons so discharged. The employeaz would find themselves in a dificult position. Their places would be filled at once and, in lime‘l the new workers would become Fm-l cient as the old and, it is possible, far | .more loyal to their empioyers’ in- | terests. The New Haven road is cmp:oy)nfl new men to take the places of those who have gone on strike. The new | workers are not ‘“scabs’. The gov- ernment says the positions were va- cant. Tt is quite possible that the | road will get better work from the | new man. The railroad has a right to feel that it has been relieved of | any responsibility regarding the old | employes and it is quite possible that no one will suffer except the old em- ployes who have walked out. Con- templation of such a situation is not . pleasing to those who believe that workers are always right and em-| ployers always wrong. who were and LOOKING AHEAD. It has been suggested on other oc- | .casions that the time to consider mat- | ters in connection with an event is safe onts permitted to be used when the Fourth of July comes again around There should be no accidents direct Iy due to the celebration of this great day THI. ORPAANAGE 1IDEALS, An event such as the laying of the cornerstone for Polish phanage In this Tuesday be passed which the new Or city over marks the real may not as might ilar affair be- ginning of the construction of an edi- fice to be devoted to the matter housing of material things, of how great value In that new building will grow and develop human Those have the duty happiness directing and aiding develop no souls, who and of in the ment of the orphans who will aprml:‘ from childhood to youth and matur- there, will duties more im- more sacred than other Those charge highest ity have portant any in the from atmosphere be absorbed labor. inspired by the end that there come an nobility will stinctively by the children over whom keep watch and for whom care, concefvable be ideals to should may of which they will they will The address of the Right Reverend John J. Nilan, Bishop of Hartford, impresses one with the fact that every community, large or small, needs a forceful reminder of the for preserving the ideals and life which Christianity The address brings necessity stand- ards of em- phasizes emphas of obligation which all that there are men and whose interest is, above all else, vital'ze these standards’®hese ideals— to keep them ever before the people To such men and to such institutions and what they represent we owe the inspiration for such splendid work as the erection of the new Orphanage The debt should not be forgotten, nor should the work thus begun be al- lowed to lose any of the interest for us wnich will keep it always a strong power in the community, New Britain is proud that it holds people so work as to make possible this new place where Polish children, left in the world, may find love and understand- ing and the chance to live and de- velop in happiness—the birthright of little children. should feel institutions to devoted to good alone SYSTEMATIZING PLAY The supervisor of playgrounds has sent out, ‘“general orders” systematizing the activities of the playgrounds of the ' city, which are worthy of note. Quite aside from the emphasis laid the value of definite plan being followed, reports made and so forth, there are two or three suggestions contained in the on a general orders that are especially in- | teresting and which disclose an in | sight into the theory of play that commendable. “Emphasize that the sport of the game is playing: winning secondary.” Certainly the satisfaction in its is a sim- them | in- | such | s together with a deeper sense | regarding | NEW BRITA But where the only purpose of the | man who risks his life 18%o gain fame or money by thrilling ihrongs ot peo- ple, no good can come from his action and to who thrive on Buch exhibitions ped femoralization comes those thrills should sueh | | be stops LABOR IS THINKING The new element which permeates | the atmosphere of this raliroad strike is having its effect. Union members thinking. It is one thing for leaders to order men walk out because their employers are not treating fairly, according to their It ie another thing for leaders to order the men to they, the leaders, declare a governmental body has not treated them fairly and, therefors, the men should not recog nize the rules of such governmental thing to tell an em- | are union to them viewpoint quite lahor walk out because body It is one ployer what an employe it is another thing to tell the government that the rules it has lald be are independent; properly that as" an employer. | pendence will not carry them to the point where they will say to the gov- ernment, as they might “We very well without vou," The old shrewdness on the part of labor leaders was in evidence in call- ing the strike. the time of a holiday; it was a good time to pers to “lay off." Natural inclination to add to the hol- iday helped make the beginning of the strike a success. But the greater importance the new element, en- | tering this strike--the thought that {‘hsnlrerhsnce to the government was | involved—has had its effect. It is believed it touched even B. M. Jewell, who flouted the Railroad La- Board. He reported be lwnlm: to discuss matters, even with | the Board. Certainly it has affected the men, some of whom are returning The reasoning of President Grable, of the Maintenance of Way union, who advised postponement and discussion and final appeal to the Board in case adjustment could not | be reached, has had its influence, | Members of labor unions, hecause | the majority of them are good citi- { zens of this country, hesitate, | are hesitating, about flouting the gov- ernment of this country, thinks of his rules; obeyed Workers they they down will not feel, and quite 50, are “as good But workers' inde- be willing to say to employers: can get on The date set was at ade men of bor is to | to work. will iFacts and Fancies (BY ®OBEKT QUILLEN) Prayer isa wonderful force if mixed { with equal parts of sweat, | Strange how many people you meet | whose favorite time of year is| | winter. | now | | Some grocers collect their bills promptly, and some sell to prominent | families. Motives are usually mixed, and we | note that numerous congregations are | preparing to send their preachers away for a rest | In a small town the gossips always| feel cheated of their rights If a widower doesn't give them something to talk about in horrified whispers, At first the bride thinks her hus- band's tough friends may degrade him, but after a few years she knows they can't teach him anything, \ N e 25 Years Ago Today | (Taken from Herald of that date) § | Judge Andrew had a busy session In court yesterday morning when five cases were heard by him The local post office department has renewed its allowance of $250 for horse hire, The Traut and Hine and P. and F, (Corbin teams are now tied for first place in the Manufacturers league as the result of yesterday's games at Electric fleld, Traut and Hine de. feated the New Rritain team and the New Britain team defeated Cor- bin's in the afternoon Henry Trumbull of Plainville came in second at the one-mile heat of the Nutmeg Club Wheel meet held “fin Berlin yesterday The Forepaugh and Sells Brothers' great big circus will play in this town tomorrow, COMMUNICATED Dear Editor:— Would some kind reader please publish the swedding anniversaries such as tin, wooden, gold and silver. A READER. | The wedding anniversaries are as follows: First, cotton; second, paper;“ third, leather: fifth, wooden; seventh, woolen; tenth, tin; twelfth, silk and| fine linen; 15th, crystal; 20th, china; | 25th, silvers 30th, pearl; 40th, ruby 50th, golden, and 75th, diamond-—Ed, MALARIA EPIDEMIC FOUND AT PANAM Labor Officials Declare Conditions Are Due to Unsanitary Parts And Neglect, Washington, July 6.—Charges that recent economies in the administra- tion of the Panama Canal zone order- ed by the secretary of war as the re- sult of an investigation by a special commission have resulted in an epi- demic of malaria and fever among canal zone employes were made at the headquarters of the American Federation of Labor by William C. Hushing, representative of the canal workers in Washington. In connection with his charges, the Federation of Labor gave out ex- tracts from The Panama Star and Herald to the effect that breeding places of mosquitoes which had been | sprayed with oil the year round are| row neglected and “there are now| more mosquitoes on the isthmus than | ever before since sanitation days. The Star and Herald says that the Ancon hospital is crowded with mala- ria patients. It is time that the American public| awake to the fact that the wonderful | sanitation program which General Gorgas installed in the canal zone has| been destroyed,” said Dr. Hushing. | “The ecial Panama Canal commis- | Pri STRIKERS CONTROL Clear Town of Workers in Railroad aw IN' DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JULY 6, 1922. Studebaker Bodies Don't Rattle or Squeak The Special-Six chassis frameis . [t tapers from a width of 29" in the front to 41” in the rear, so that the sides of the body fit perfectly without overhang. Five cross- membersprevent the dis- tortion that eventually causes bodies to squeak. Studebaker bodies rest squarely on the ghassis frame—not on the body sills. The body and the frame form a rigid unit that successfully resists the rack of the road. Studebaker bodies are built in Studebaker shops by men, many of whom have been build- ing vehicle bodies for Studebaker for upwards of 30 years —and their fathers before them. Studebaker has been building fine bodies for seventy years. Studebaker Special-Six bodies, because of their quality and soundness, weigh more than those of other cars around the Special-Six price. You cannot skimp in material and build a body that will not rattle. Freedom from rattle or squeak is just another of the fine-car refinements that emphasize the extra value of the Studebaker Special-Six. MODELS AND PRICES~/. o. b. factories LIGHT SIX BIGSIX J-PIM‘6 12'W. B. 8! Touring . . 1788 Speedster, 4-Pase. 1985 Coupe, 4-Pass. ... 2500 Sedan . 2 Cord Tires Standard Equipment Hhdebok T HALSie e Sieid A SLATER SITUATION Plants and Stop Trains To Search For More. (By Associated today Slater, Mo., July 6. ess)——Railroad officials aited word from Gove M. IRVING JESTER 193 ARCH STREET STUDEBAKER YEAR called today by Chairman Norris to consider recommendatiens to bé sub- mitted with reference te offers for de- MUSCLE SHOALS AGAIN. Washington, July 6.—A meeting of |the senate agriculture committee was { velopment of Muscle Shoals. Walk-Over “Copley” One of those distinctive and stylish patterns that well-dressed men appreciate. Style with quality at a remarkably of doing a thing well and as nearly | A man is old when he can quit a perfectly as possible, is great. What | moonlit porch and retire to a hot bed | if luck is against a player; what if he | without a sigh of regret. sion which reported to the secretary | of war in October, 1921, said that the | canal zone was too.healthy and that sanitation should be reduced until the | death rate was increased to that of certain cities in the United States. | They ignored the statement of the | employes that the death rate was low largely hecause sick people were re- before making further plans opening the Chicago and Alton shops here from which a crowd of more than 500 strikers drove 18 strike- breakers yesterday. After strikers had cleared the town of strikebreakers, had drawn a dead line around the shops and had es- immediately following its occurrence. The time to discuss the wisdom or folly of certain things pertaining to the annual Fourth of July tion, is immediately after that cele- bration. The event is fresh in the happens to be pitted against a more | | s¥ful antagonist? If only the player |, "y 80 FORE S SRS S o improves his own game and gets | quired to make its tongues wag. something out of the playing of it, You can estimate the a re- celebra- Was | Tt isn't difficult to believe man the ] mind, the facts are available. " there anything about the obsarvance of the day that was wrong? Was there anything about it that was wor- thy of emphasizing to the end that more may be made of it another year? The bad weather on this Independ- | ence day had its effect, of course. The wet prevented the public fire- works display, and, no doubt, kept many people from 'shooting off fire- crackers” who would otherwise have done so. There was less automobhil- ing than there would have been had the weather been fine | There is one matter that stands out in considering the happenings of the day. There were comparatively few accidents and yet, in this city alone, there were more than a dozen acci- | dents which were publicly and there were probably others which did not gain publicity. Among those injured were people of mature years There were few accidents attribut- | able to the celebration of the da But why should there be any acci dents? Full sympathy is felt for the spirit which calls for noise on this day. It | is almost impossible to conceive a Fourth of July without noise. But must the noise be accompanied by danger? One hesitates to recommend the abolition of the sale of firecrack- ers, toy pistols and other noise-pro- ducing implements to children, Lit- | tle sympathy is felt for the person who frowns and deprecates all Fourth of July youthful fun simply because of the disturbance it makes, But one may advocate most em- phatically the need of restrictions on the manufacture of fireworks and the sale of such as will injure | users or others. Certain noise-pro- ducers proved perfectly harmles These should be ascertained, and their use permitted. Accidents re- sulted from the use of other explo- sives. The sale and use of them | .should be prohibited. 8o comparatively few were the ac- eldents on this last day of celebra- #ion that it would seem a good chance is offered for the investigation of the itive safety of the various brands noise-producers used. The dan- ones should be denounced; the reported the | character. the game has been worth while. ““Aim to have the boys and girls get more than out of the game. Strive for the deeper lesson—lessons in truthfulness, courage, unselfishness, co-operation, fairness, quick decision.” What good does it do a piayer, child or adult, to win or to have apparent ‘fun’ success at a game if it is gained at the | expense of these things? The good, the satisfactory thing and thing that counts, comes development of these qualities which, developed, will bring the greatest of great the from the successes—the achievement of moral all strength, and physical—of Certainly, if “general orders” as these are observed the playgrounds should prove to be fertile fields the nourishing of the finest of ideals and habits. for STOP IT! Limiting personal liberty beyond the point which has been aiready reached, s to be denounced. Still, it is time to stop allowing such exhibitions as that which resuited in the horrible death of an aviator in a Chicago suburb re- cently, when he to pieces by the propeller of an airship in try- ing to leap from one plane to a ladder suspended from a second The had confidence in himself, in the men who drove the the chines themselves. But there are men in was cut man must have ahsolute machines and in ma- the world who have unjustified confi- | dence in themselves and who believe themselves capable of accomplishing what would be impossible for othefs. It someone that would leap from the top of the spire of Center church at noon of a certain and that he had advertised day, perfectéd an | invention which he could carry in his pocket which would keep him from being injured, a great crowd would gather to see the performance—but the police would prevent the from making the attempt. themselves person Men may sacrifice science, where there escaping danger. Scientists have done this often. Only recently a physician died from a disease which he knew wag killing him because he continued to study the X-ray. is a chance of he | | to work of God when you see| lone steal home in the ninth. | wity 'o“‘f,,\ et turned to the ['nited States. “In my opinion those responsihle for present sanitary conditions in the zone should he held directly respon- | sible for any deaths that occur there | do A\ *“Tq When 4 man grows weary of this sad world, he can walk down a dark street, satchel in hand, and pretend to be a paymaster. | lin corpor | The modern girl is full of a glori- such |0us independence, but she hasn't for- the tropic | gotten “Charge it to "Dad." how to say: And some day when we are civilized |movie houses will change the air as oiten as they change the program. Another explanation of everything is that it is much easier to hold up | @ pedestrian than to hold down a | job. ! Courtesy is the quality that keeps |a woman smiling when a departing |guest stands at the open screen and |lets flies. in. ! As the coal strike continues, hotel keepers in California and Florida be- gin to rub their palms in gleeful an- ticipation. Man gets thirty days for stealing 180 cents’ worth of groceries. We Americans have our faults, but we do hate a piker. Let's see; what was that queer thing the women used to wear? Yeah, that's it; a petticoat. Greater love hath no man than this, that he takes his wife to a restau- rant when the weather makes cook- ing an ordeal During the freckle season, Eve doubtless examined herself at in- tervals and wondered {f she was re- lated to the leopard. ahove the average for former years. |it” “American skilled workmen are | leaving the canal zone as fast as they not even waiting for employment in the | ates. This condition is the | 8 the commission’s work. Wages of workmen were decreased, while salaries of executive officers were increased. Charges for rent, \eat, light, hospital care and sanita- tion, formerly given free as induce- mente to keep workmen on the job, accordance with the policy of all tions employing Americans in were ordered restored by ny of the fford to| go by co ed can get away, assurance of United th on er of war. M possibly the workmen secretary cannot in pay these charges, of which sanita- | — 'ADAMSON’S ADVENTURES Thanks to a Careless Horcarrier, tion is a pa FACES ANOTHER CHARGE Much Married Ex-Minister Is Accused By Another Alleged Victim | | l.os Angeles, July 6.—A new fugi- tive complaint charging Donald. Stew- rt former clergyman and his allnze'q amous wife, Ethel Turner Osban- ston-Stewart, with conspiracy to | ‘the propert~, the money and of Norma l. Ehrenseller of Boston,” was on fille in the district attorney's office here today. | M hrenseller is one of the sev- eral women with whom Stewart is al- leged to have gone through marriage | ceremonies. a ste goods tired eyes affect your health. Our Glasses relieve the strain correctly. A. Pinkus Eyesight Specialist 300 MAIN ST. TEL. 570 Strained, tablished guard posts from the shops in automobiles to the | edge of the town placed on a Chicago where the strike-breakers were quar- tered was threatened with hanging by | Three men were forced to leave Slat- ments antagonistic to the strikers. The calendar was invented in Egypt they settled wn. Eighteen strikehrealkers were taken and told to ‘'beat Ten more were | train. Trains | ing through Slater were watched | a crowd of 150 strikers who took | mmand of the station and search- | trains. A negro porter on a sleeping car and keep going. e crowd, a railroad official said, and his knees pleaded for his life. senti- had expressed after they 4241 B. C. S David Manning’s Uinth-Cuer Shoe Store 211 Main St. —— BY 0. JACOBSON Adamson Scores a Come Back