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New Britain Herald 3 _COMPANY Excepted), Btreet, HERALD PURLISHI (Tssued Dally, Sunday At Herald Ridg, 67 Church SURSCRIPTION RATES: $8.00 & Year, | 2,00 Threo Monthe. | 75 & Month, | ®ntered at the Post Ofca at New Britaln | as Second Class Mall Mattor, i TELEPHONE CALLS: ( Rusiness Ofce avi 225 Bditorial Rooms . : O 1] The only profitahl rt'sing medfum In| the City, Clroulation books and pross room always open to sdvertisers, Member of The Associnted Preas | The Aswociated Pross iy exclualvely entitled to the use for re-publication of all news | eredited to 1t or not otherwise cradited | In th's paper and also loral news pub- | Iished bereln. Member Audit Ru of Clrenlation The A, B. C. is a nntlonal organization | which furnishes newspapers and adver: | tisers wifh a strictly honest analvsin of cireulation, Our elroulation statisties are based upon this audit, This Inaunos pro- | tectlon wguinst fraud in newepaper df tritation fAigures to both national and lo- onl advertisers, B THE ELECTION, | There is just as much to say about | the clection today as there was yes- | terday, ‘There is much en- | thusiasm in the popular heart the post mortem as there was in the anticipation. A contemplation of the returns is just as full clevating thought as the empty pail is full of | water. Republican | expressed it yesterday, just after fol- lowing years of habit and pulling the “top “It ill—not because of the personality of the men just about of As one life-long lever," makes me I have voted for, but hecause of what | regularity, ' How| and | many of them represent, oneness with the machine! long said life-long Republican others like him will keep on pulling | that ¥top lever” if “party regularity"” continues to be ‘the sole requisite for | political success in New Britain, is a | question that concerns the machine. | The common council will keep on | at work with the colors unchanged. | There will be one democratic alder-| man against five republicans, and | six democratic councilmen against 18! republicans. In that big majority there will be enough ‘regulars” carry measures which the machine | thinks are important enough for it to favor. The independent thinkers | of the majority looking over recent | political events, are said to be in| business communication with the pro- prietor of an industry new to the‘ city—an industry which is engaged in | manufacturing tombstones for the | politically dead. Passing to the next | exhibit we have, ete. to SPRING CLEAN-UP, The obvious thing to do is to em-| phasize the necessity of attending at| onee to cleaning up our premises, It is an annual matter and warnings and advice concerning it are abont thrilling as is a lecture on the prone- | ness of man to err. Seldom are any | new made about this| spring clean-up. “Go to it,” scems to | be about all there is to say. And yet there is something this spring as there has been every spring and as there will be every | year as long as we live. The spring | work this year should be in harmony | with the progress that has been made | in other lines; it should be more thorough than before; things should be done this year that wére not done last. A certain unattractive feature of one’s back yard should not | be allowed to remain merely because it has always been that way. Auto- mobile dealers, would not get very far if they never brought out new and improved models, Mer- chants would starve to death if they | did not take advantage of the things | that have been learned in their lines | of business and if they did not dis- | play the latest lines of goods, 8o with property owners and les- | sees. Their and their front yards should be new models of neatness and beauty—and they should “put in their lines” as carly sible—get busy at once, not only be- cause warnings been sent to some, giving them flve days to clean up, but because should take | pride in keeping abreast of the times | in their private matters which are always on display and in which the | public has a right to be interested, | affecting the public as they do. CAMPS FOR MOTORISTS, | That is what they are in theory at least—camps for touring automo- | billsts, and at first blush would appear that any city or town would be benefited by establishing one. It would seem that would be brought into town and much business would come to merchants that would | otherwise pass by, . It would that a well-conducted touring motorists might stop for the night or a day or so, would adver- tise the town or city and display its beauties and ~attractiveness from a | Dbusiness or industrial point of and would, perhaps, attract desirable new residents. But there is another side matter. The advisability of Iishing one of these camps in the vielnity is open to question. In de- ciding this matter weight should be| given to the information obtained from the authorities of other cities and towns where the experiment has . ' been tried. This information should . be gonsidercd with due regard to the | _ be attracted to New Britain, or who meuld plan their irips with New as suggestions new ever for instance, back yards s pos. have they it money seem place where view the | estab- to | of such a camp would not plan | over-supplied with eut-of-door places | der the rule should | objections that might be made to the | 1aw, | women and children | wage; ;rh:\n |A !other children | undoubtedly, to have | out NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, to wear such a brand when the par- ents are to blame, but it may be as In the first place there s the ex-|wise a precaution as the posting of pense to be considered, Such.a camp | a house under wise, would have to be policed, or, if mll-i'l‘ho point to be emphusized is that side the elity” Nmits, would have to be employed; others| wise it might become the magnet for | tramps, hoboes and a rendezvous for | It is likely, also, that| THE LIP.STICK LAW, would make use The learncd Supreme Court to| Arkansas has decided that when & spend a great deal of monecy along |school board ruled that girls in New Britain, not Il"ll!R:m‘llunln must not use paint and pow- be enforced. A girl been expelled hecause she and used lipstick, ing as cheaply as possible, | brought suit and wus beaten, These aré only some of the possible | 1t goes without saying that if there |18 anything connected with school | Kirls that offends one's sense of pro- priety it is the use of paint and pow- der and lip-sticks by them, Thelr charm, of course, lies in their fresh- | ness and youth, both of which char- acteristics are tainted as their faces are tinted when paint and powder and lip-sticks are applied. But one wonders just where the ;lcnrnml Supreme Court draws the line, Would a girl be expelled prop- erly if she originated a new style and used the lip-stick just undernecath her little, turn-up nose, or placed a bit | of her mother's flour on the end of that nose? Must the erudite judges of sald Supreme Court take lessons in beauty specialization to find out just where the lip-stick line should not be drawn in order to keep within These problems are vexing in Britain as one of thelr stopping- | points, | quarantine s [ while suffering from this distressing trouble, undesirables, the motoris of s who the route, who had powdered of entertainment, might prove attrac- tive only to those wh® were travels a establishment of such a camp, They are not mentioned for the purpose of discouraging such movement if, after | investigation, it decided to make experiment, They are clited wisdom of is to emphasize the obtaining all the infermation possi- ble from the authoritics of other cities and towns which have had ex- perience with sueh camps, before de- ciding it would be a good move for us to make, MINIMUM WAGE DECISION The United States Supreme Court, by a divided court, has held that the of Columbii. minimum wage wage below which may not work, The test case re- | | the' taw? and breeders of terrible anxiety the minds of thinking people. merely District providing a is unconstitutional. volved about a girl who was paid $35 a month two meals a day for operating an elevator. She wanted to keep the job at those wages and her employers wanted to keep her on | the job at those wages. The mini- L e o e e wor F@cts and Fancies work for such low wages and now | BY ROBERT QUILLEN. the Supreme Court has decided that the law has no right to forbid her doing that woMk at that pay as both she and her employers wanted her to. This newspaper is strong for fair-; ness to women and children "and men, for that matter. Ten years ago might have said at once that and | War is just a more complicated and expensive method of making maps, A normal ‘man is one who spends | his life wishing he hadn’'t spent so much last month. one " o 1t isn't prohibition that encourages should be some law to prevent | the drug habit, but the profit made by paying a girl such low | peddiers. wag even if she did want to work | —_— for them. Such a one might| A stomach that can handle any- o 44 ¥ % A | thing is just an ordinary stomach with have said, would tend to raise "“’gmllitm_\ training. wages of children, even | f it was not proper in-this case and Even wishes of the | before ladies, | they light up. there employers s, law, women and now it isn't polite to smoke worked against the At any rate, not before worker. But one does not feel Hkn_suyinci It's a hick town if it still enjoys that today when the plain legislative | bragging about the congestion of traf. | trend is to limit what people may do, | fic on Main street, | ana tell them what they may not do. There is some suspicion of failacy in| | the amgument that if it is constitu-| tional to fix a minimum wage it is| constitutional fix maximum if the worker be pro- tected, the employer should be pro-| tected. Such an argument might be | applied to a man making $10 a day passed declarihg his wage should be more $6. ortainly there would not be general approval of such law, especially from the:$10 man. This argument is unsound because there does not enter into discussion of the to a to NS Unktalr to et the novie » dope and do nothing to ecase the pain,of movies patrons, “Home, Sweet Home" is with us yet | even after.an even hundred years, It wasn't built by contract. Piutes who yearn to become gun- maximum wage law the question of "l"’"];*"}“hfl"l naying !hhf' penalty i | should have sense enough to go east. health of the worker, He is not pre- | it sumed to suffer hecause of too high wage, as the worker is presumed to when a law w highest not, a Another good sanity test is the pos- | session of a car that is capable of making eighty miles an hour. suffer becanse of a too-low wage. Lear . entators on this de- | Learned .comm & e The reagon some meg tell Satan to differ, it as|get hehind them is because they wish some unjust. I'rom our point|to set a faster pace. ¢ law which tells a worker | the sort of | ¢ of tendl © lart of pretending her that | con should unsound | tyred, cision some stamping of view that 10t make regard she ¢ 1 v to Jike the things contract in to pay she wants to make, is an law and is another step in the direc- | G tion of limitation of liberty. | In the old days they put citizens in | jail for debt but an Arkansas town is | putting its citizens in debt for a jail, FIGHTING WHOOPING COUGH. | We are in full sympathy with the | health board in all its efforts to keep New a healthful city—and the iperintendent has -been in this attempt however, N TR Cauy ) Iritain health § efficient question active and delicate rises, board's decls about the on to place an who A i | You may a children | 3 fwhen the wife the boss calls on the wife of the employe and takes her sewing ailong. children have | arm-band on whooping cough when those arc allowed to go away from The health hoard instructs parents to keep their children at home if the cail of home, Seientists can magnify the voice 12,000 times, but seem unable to Ido a darned thing for the voice of | conseience, children have whooping cough. That ake of ia belong for the the the city. The health board is anxious, is where they all children | When American efficiency s ex- g ; tended to good manners, the hostess Would it be an : Woum N Y[ will serve a sheet of instructions with put | each course. or to make | arm ‘bands | ¢ from home such sick chil- dren kept at home. to bands on their children, the children on their arms when a than it to keep those children at casier make parents arm Correct this sehtence: “You are so much wiser than 1" sai hoy of eighteen to his dad, “and 1 hope you PArents | iy advise me," home? ! | keep those would be to compel Tt is not u joking matter, as whoop- | It is suggested that we ull shonid ing cough is not a joking matter, but | WOrk for thdgovernment and receive it would seem that children who have |® Euaranteed lving. The .only new 4 | part would be the guarantes. ooping cough and who stray away | w PRSI AL from their homes or who are taken | compara- | | Observations on them to stray away or who take them children with (hv‘ The Weather menace to | other children. matter| IFor Connecticut: Showers tonigh in this lght it “Thursday partly cloudy and colder; ; w gl | fresh south shifting to west winds. and just, if any parent takes a child | "oy, gitions: A disturbance central the out or lover Ontario is causing unsettled allows such child to home, to |weather with local showers or fiurries put a band on.the arm of the parent, |Of snow in the lLake region and north. " " ern portion of New England, Pleas- also, reading, "My child has thel,.; woather prevails in other sections whooping cough.” east of the Missippi river.. The tem- More zeal should be given to keep- [perature is rising slowly in the cen- tral and eastern sections. | Conditions favor for 1paru,v cloudy weath out by their parents, are tively free of blame, heing children, compared with the parents who allow knowing that are a Viewing the might be whooping cough more fair with whooping cough ing ¢ick children away from others, certainly. It is not agreeable to thiok of an innocent child being compelled this vicinity and not much change in temperature, watehman | the children should he kept at home | democracy | human | (Taken from Herald of that date) O s a2 The Deal Mute association of Con- necticut presented Rev, WHllam J, | McGurk of Hartford, formedy of this city, with a gold headed cane yes- terday as a testimony of the interest he has shown in the assoclation, The city election will take place to. morrow and all voters of the city are asked to vote early. John ¥, Storey, Thomas Shanley, | Patrick Murnane, Thomas Crowe and 1%, G, Russell were appointed a com- mittee of the Y. M, T, Ay & B. sociepy to arrange for the annual excursion this summer, The reports of the of- fleers show that the soclety has a membership of 227 and a cash bal- ance in the treasury of $636 The policemen at the various wards tomorrow will be —~First, M, J, Cos- krove; second, G. W, Hellberg; third, ‘Thomas Shelton; fourth, S8amuel Bam- forth; fifth, 'rank English; (larence Ianpher, “Sowing the Wind", one of the fin- |est and most celebrated dramas ever |ypresented in this country, will % be |shown by a strong company’of actors {and actresses at the Lyceum tomor- |row night, On next Friday evening, | Mustrated pictures of the Maine dis- laster will be shown, also the funeral {of the many victims of the explosion whose bodies were recovered. The 26th aonjversary of Company ¥ was pleasantly observed at the Colonial House last evening. The ban- quet was followed by mandolin and |hanjo selections by Messrs, Attwood, Seeley and Keoith, A ‘horse belonging to John Boyle got loose Sunday and wandered onto the third rail tracks®of the Berlin |branch and was instantly killed. GILL OUT OF FIGHT FOR MAYOR PRO TEM. | (Continued from First Page) i | declared that Connecticut as a manu- | facturing state would lose at least | four hours a day in ‘“non-co-opera- | tion"- as long as the railroads oper- ating between Boston and New York ran in conformity with daylight sav- | ing time. Senator Wilder, who is a member of the judiciary committee, said that since the hill had passed in the house it had been examined by school heads who declared that it would cause’ endless confusion. They feared, he said, hours of opening and closing and im- pose burdens on the school heads which wowld be unfortunate. He supported the amendment as did Sen- ators I2lls and Bakewell. Senator | Bakewell declared that section one would entail endless hardship. “The condition is entirely tied up with the New Haven road, as®ong as it runs in conformity with daylight saving, we have got to face the conditions | and not consider our theories.” Senator Suisman then introduced an amendment to section two which would strike out the provision pro- ding for a fine of $100 or ten days in jail for those who wilfully dis- played any but standard time. This will “take the teeth out of it,” he said. Senators Plerson, Ells and Trum- bull then said that while they fa- vored the spirft of the amendment they preferred to havegthe bill con- sidered in a different fashion. The amendment was defeated. Senator Rudd, speaking on the hill| | as amended, traced the history of |'standard time in the state and point- ed out tue reasons why it had been adopted, He favored the Dbill as | amended, contending that the state about the elect’on of the first warder |and they look for the election of the | | representative from the fifth district. t week it was reported that Pa- | jewski would be a candidate. He de- | nied at that time to commit upon the 25 Years Ago Today}! sixth, | that it would change the| i WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11, 1928, NOT NECESSARY T0 PUT = . MARK ON EGG PARCELS Unfavorable Report Made on Measure Which Would Provide for Mark- ing All Packages. Hartford, April 11.—An unfavor- able rtport was received in the senate on a bill providing for the marking of packages of eggs describing wheth- er they are strictly fresh or not. As a result of disagreeing action in the house the senate reconsidered its action in recommitting a bill provid- ing for the payment 8f $1,866 to the town of Old Saybrook. The senate then passed the bili. The senate reconsidered its action | in rejecting a bill concerning the ap- | pointment of a state forester. The ! possibility of entering the race, al- | the matter some consideration, When | a candidate, Pajewski immediately hr\.‘; |gan to lay plans for an energetic| (drive to secure the support necessary |to eloction, o On Both Tickets Yesterday. | The fifth warder has the distinction | of being the only man on the two| tickets at yesterday's eclections that| was endorsed by both parties, He has just completed his first term in the council. He was one of the most ac-| five members of that body and among other committees served a mem- | her of the group of the council mem- | bers that lifted the municipal garage | from an unsuccessful eoterprise, fi- | nancially, to a s | of the city government. | | Opposed 10 “Dirty Polities.” | | Alderman Pajewski told the “Her-| ald” this morning that in entering the v pro tem. he was, | 4 any personal motives We fear at times that culture is the |y ouen admitting that he had given | senate passad the bill in concurrence. Ravorable reports were received on like in order to be cul-|jneormed by Gill that he would not be | the following. bills: Providing for the equipment of a national guard air service squadron | with an appropriation of $10,000 for | barracks and hangars. Authorizing the First Methodist Episcopal church to sell and convey property in New Haven. Authorizing Fairfield certain trust funds. HUGHES GETS OPINIONS ON WORLD COURT PLAN to transfer Republican Senators Opposed to Joining. Washington, Aprl 11.—Views of re- | publican senators who look with dis- " A X ", A AR R R s TR v, Mty |2 A for Ninety-Seven Years Neltly a century of experience in artistic design and painstaking workmanship has proven the excellence of Heywood-Wakefield Furniture to the nation’s home-makers. Today, master crafts- men combine in Heywood-Wakefield Reed and Fibre Furniture a distinction of design with unusual durability asid comfort, @ Your dealer, in recommending suites and attractive separate pieces, will tell you of its unusual service to three generations of users, 4 lity Seal on%::'y Wheel REG .U.S.PAT. OFF. morning session today. The section room chairmen reported progress in their collection of the class dues, and the officers who are chairmen of the promenade committee reported on the work of their committees during the |past week. To date Miss Catherine Callahan, chairman of room 30, leads the others in the collection of dues. The Senior High school faculty held regular monthly meeting at 3:10 o'clock today.. A special time sched- |ale was in effect at the school this |afternoon. The tennis squad will meet for prac- tice in the gymnasium at the close of school tomorrow afternoon® All Senior young women who intend |to enter the State Normal school next fall, have heen requested to leave their names at the clerk’s office as |soon as possible. All students in the school who in- tend to purchase the 1923 “Beehive,” have been requested to give their names to any member of the board of publication. | The young women of the school basketball teams met at tht close of the second period in the gymnasium EVERETT TRUE i How Do You UKE TH | (ooKS OF OLR NEw HOME, CVERETT £ 1 | | i if-supporting branch | Senator Watson Files List of Views 0[} { but is interested in seeing that the|favor on some features of the admin- | city government is handled ih a busi- | jstration proposal for American mem- | nesslike manner and without *dirty | hership in the permanent court of in-| politics” He feels that he has won the right to that office by virtue of his wor an alderman and finds [that his candidacy is meeting with | approval on the part of many of his| republiean fellow council members, he | i”” 5. TING, | 11.—A NEBELS CONC | Buenos Aires, April [uay s that the Brazilian revolu-| tionaries in Rio Grande Do Sul are |concentrating on Catty, eight leagnes | from the Uruguayan frontier. Urn-| |guyan troops are protecting the boun- v, the correspondent says, Advices | Montevideo say the rebels are| phant in the southern part of irande ‘Do Sul, | m T Rio ( LAND ON TRIAL TODAY. Middletown, April 11—Julius Land, negro, w placed on trial in the Mid dlesex ¢ ity superior court befo Judge C. L. harged with mupder in the ond“ degree in the Walter .+ Thorel and Ar- | thur Swanson at Cromwell recently. | "rom the panel of talesmen there | had been selected four jurors up till the noon recess, must hurry if they sufficiently for the Missionaries would geét to Africa eivilized to furnish troops Christian nations. ternational justice were presented to Secretary Hughes today by Senator Watson of Indiana, one of the repub- lican leaders in the senate. The conference developed a discus- sion lasting nearly two hours, in which the proposal was viewed in every detail, including its poljtical fu- tiires. department saying he was impressed matter was unchanged. MISS DUGUID HONORED | “Beehive” For 1923 Will Be Dedicated To Popular Teacher of Blnlmu'.‘ Who Is On Leave of Absence. The 1923 “Beehive” to Miss Sadie Duguid, teacher of bi- logy at the Senlor High school, it was announced today. The choice could not have been a | more popular one for Miss Duguid has been one of the most popular teachers with the student body since she came to the school in 1918. She is now out of school on a leave of absence whicl will extend until Sep- tember. The officers and section room ohair- men of the junior class met in the Academic building at the close of the of the New Britain High school will be dedicated | (eTS @ RIGHT IN THE (IVING ROOM HERE AND CHAT TiLL DINNER Snator Watson left the, state | dis-| by the logic of Mr. Hughes' argu-| {pateh to La Nacion from Rivera Uru.|ment, but that his position on the | /M‘l lakeficld- illllll“ll“l“lllI\lllIill“lllIlllllllllllllllllll\lllllllllI|' i!llIlllll||l||lllllll“||’|IIII\Illllllllll"\IIlllllll\llllllll “Quality Seal on Every Wheel”. Look for this quality mark. 000 4 == 3 d to have the class pictures taken for the “Beehive.” Dunlay Becomes Partner In Barry & Bamforth Wilfred Dunlay, who (has been in the employ of Barry & Bamforth for several years, has purchased an in- terest in the business. Harry Bam- forth recently retired, The business will be conducted under the namdot Barry & Bamforth for the present, Mr. Dunlay will have charge of the management of the store on Main | street, Gen. Pelle to Represent France at Lausanne Paris, April 11. — (By Aseoclated Press)—Gen. Pelle, F'rench represen- | tative on the allied high cominission at Constantinople will represent I'rance at Lausanne when the Near Fast conference is resumed on April 23. It is thought in French circles that the Russians will be invited only: to come to lLausanne to sign the treaty, when it is prepared but not to participate in the conference. By Condo = (eoKS ALe RIGHT FRoMm ‘THG OUTSIDE. IS ReAaDY. NO, LET'S QO INTO YOUR DINING RooM, I'T'S NOT _SO FuLL OF FUSSY JUNK CIVING ROOM =——=-=WELL, IF IT'S EGvER DUS UP IN THAT 6000 YCARD FrRoOM NOW THEY'LL SAY Yeu weRs n.n EQYPTIAN