Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
the river to Hartford. navigation .is [out of the lot or the average mod- |didates ar cut off at Hartford by the present ern pitcher lacks skill compared “;‘"‘"h.' D 1'1; “'J:wlv- J o 1 Jo! > , James low bridge to East Hartford. What with the old-timer: jona, ConEIiDSiamg who certainly |37 ion Hartford frequently had the batters| The High school baseball team ting out of their hands'—as the defeated the Stanley Rule & Level it—than the |NiNC Yesterday atternoon by 26 to 14 1 G. Platt was a visitor at the [nigh school today. | The Globe Clothing house adver- tises men's patent leather Blucher shoes for $3, children's spring hecl hovs for cents. women's low hoes for $1.25, and men's unfinish- |ed worsted suits for $10. New Britain Herald AERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY O'Brien, elly and PLEASANT JOBS AN AID TO BOTS Teacher Thinks They Save Youth From Grime New York, April 21. (P—Peter had made faces during a singing | clase. His hand was smacked, but he was told there was a Rood reason for it. It wasn't for the greatest good of the greatest number that he made faces during a singing | class, Such is the work thdf Miss Olive Jones, principal of New York's larg- est probationary school, conducts in her human laboratory. “The hoys who come to school,” explained Miss Jones delinquents, _truants, bors criminal tendencies, und sters of other behavior |types, so naturally they must be s Coy —THE OBSERVER— Makes Random Observations On the City ana Its People | navi remains above more Teswed Dally (Sunday Ezcepted) [i of a kind that can pass under the At Herald Bidg., 67 Cburch Street 1\;:’[-1 SUBSCRIPTION RATES | | and as structure of stone lics | sport writers phrased pretty low above the water this not be much. Yet in Sprineficld and |no|v ) talking about { “maintaining the Conneecticut, and strongly oppose the Windsor s by the Northern Connecticut | ran- modern tribe. Nowadays when an ex: 35.00 & Year. $2.00 Three Monthe 15c. & Month. ceptional pitcher hurls so effectively are as to shut out or whitewash an op- has hurled much more skillfully than it was navigation” Always having had a warm apot| Wars end, odious people die, corrup- in our heart for stage folk we're | tion is exposed, but weather mever glad to learn that the two members | ceases (at least from all accounts of a vaudeville team exemplified the | of historians and meteorologists, it = . | best tragitions of their calling |never has ceased). And it always =l Thursday night at the Strand thea- ! persists in being exactly the kind of F t d F | Tips From the Past! ter when the audience, affrighted by | weather which is not wanted. acls an ancies | lonics, turning carpets, | the possibility of a panic, was €alm- | perhaps, in spite of all this, or 4 of Springtides passed | ed partly by the courage of the en- | cven because of it, the weather Is a tertainers in continuing their act.|pgon to humanity. For, what with Chief trouble with Chicago is "The actors were Cook and Roscvere, { 411 the great improvements now be- | the number of people who like that who showed great presence of mind |ing made, it is rapidly becoming the | = < - kind oi Chicago. as they read disturbance on the|on)y thing about which we cai Kick. PONAT CLEANVINDSS A faces of the spectators and sang|ynd how would mankind exist IN HANDLI 00DS Counsel J. H. Kirk- under advis 5 up posing team he Eutered. at the Post Office at New Brit- ain ss Becond Class Mail Matter. cessary Britaln Herald, and your letter will be forwarded to New York. | construction of & dam 1o achive this end decades azo. Let the ‘accumulate; the excitement is much greater when the | ball whizzes into anether county than some hard-working ‘‘m out too frequently three TELEPHONB CALLS Business Office .... $28 Editorial Rooms .... 926 The only profitable advertising medlum in the City. Circulation books and prese room slwaye open to advertisers | 1.0¢ homers | Power company which will “ohstruct navigation.” Taking sports away, Though we've outgrown thank goodness, Fun Folks, Why not we say Take some funics, for our spirits, swullow humor by the cup, Turn our dispositions over, lay our cheer-pets gay side up! So far as our ohscrvation gocs, th | Hartford brids i o | tioroughly ohstruct Member of the Amocl | @ Ihe Associated Press 18 exclusively en- | if likelihood of t | titled (o the use for re-publication of |\ i all news credited to it or Dot otherwie y credited in this paper and also local when pitcher has already pretty strikes navigatien— in a row. hoth, there is Shop any i SPRING FIGHTING IN CHINA 3 ived carly in Pr s: The expansion and d velopment of a town as the unde tuker removes stumbling blocks. news published thereln. J— i | | just as blithely as if they were out yjthout some subject for complaint? in a field of daisies. | But we have always noticed one In an emergency people who helb | thing about weather. The particular us to drive away dull care alw: brand which exists on any given seem to respond. The late Eddie| gay is just the wrong variety. All axton: “How is that college son | Foy's conduct during the Ir6quois one has to do to make it rain is of yours getting along. Has he been | theater fire in Chicago was not an | pjan a trip. And so on. So we sug- hitting the ball?” isolateq instance. Nearly every week | gect that weather control might be Crandall: “Nothing else; baseballs, | the newspaper headlines blazon | prought about by planning™ various | dealt with rather more severel Prom balls, and high-balls* forth the fact that an actor has | ,ctivities and leaving the rest to the [ than the boys in the regular publ —Mrs. Paul E. Lenhart, |helped still the tumult in a theater | perversity of the elements, We give | schools. when an audience has been on the | some samples belo: “But none of them point of losing its self control. Chil- » cold snap: Zonget to ipder | deflolent. dren of optimism, they are never il them, Instead of merely rebuking licked. The nawes of Cook and| the boys when they do wrong wo Rosevere herchy go on the honor | try to show them where their littlo roll of unsung heroes who find| sins don't make for a happy life their courage all part of the day's! for themselves or for the peopl: sraric I ! they live with Appreciation is due also to A\mn.‘l For Yor 20 years Miss Jones has becu ages the teacher of the old brick school Dan Finn, Hons Wagner, the | f ; I joke on y th. leader of the orchestra, and Deputy | 10K¢ On your friends by going south. |8 HaPRer OF JI6 G0 Boot for 20 vears she has conducted her experi- Fire Chiet Souney, whose coolness | ]P‘Dr ral{;; b‘;Y a new S!“':W ‘““- revented a situation fraught with Tor a thundexstorm, take & long ‘ {sn't the ecasiest task in the world| If only eome poor vietim can be | &% Other teachers and parents had to keep the orchestra going along on | found to sacrifice him in this man- P- g its regular tempo when ygon oxiort l‘m‘r- perhaps the rest of humanity Crf‘:,ef r,:f :;,"ce °vf 'gh':, .".rT! RUEROIS any moment that the ceiling will fall | can_have decent weather. arly ncatio ?lr’ 2 fe il R in. We don't know whether Wagner| NOW Wwe understand efforts are [ 40 OHR Dj.oFRNCen). BTN Ne . boys who were soclal problems. Sh.: was aware just what notes he was | actually being made to control the | - 00 000 Ta b ave Dlaying. but tio noint we want lo|Weattier. Large cloudbanks can be | 1ad discovered that many boys with make i that h ¢ men kept on | dispersed by sand even now, and it | TN fenduboies - bocome so be- providing the note | seems but a short time before this | {259 of Vocational maladjustment. It docsn't matfer whether it's a line of gientitic rescarch will g, el heewalthod beneflt, performance for an' unfor. Anuch fufther and permit. complete | U1eA0 tendeticles caretully, and saw tunate member of the profpssion or | confrol of the clements. eyl ,'h".-m”. s s s an orphans ome or whither jts | Here again we run into difticul- | S ey s el stopping a panic before it gets | ts. Who is going to decide on the ; oy SEbIA i doh cantalwaia: be by |Joattiex? 12 Cvou dwant pleasank | EC8Y SRS Db e¥idenne of o el handled by iheater folk. We like | Weather for/a journey and we desire | [1¢A¢y Of her methods. Of the 185 ek : {rain to make our gasping radishes | oY® Who were enrolled in thu prosper, which is to have the say? f“;:m;:n ::5‘;:1 years ago 75 per cent On April 4. A, D, 19 group |~ Terhaps the best way is to put it | ;¢ i p:r" e of citizens interested in organizing | 10 @ vote. Let the parties include | ypemployed and less than seven per a rew industrial bank appeared be. | Weather in their platforms. For in- | cent are in corrective institutions, reformatories, prisons or asyiuma. fore the honorable state banking |Stance, the republicans might advo- commission at Hartford and spoke | ¢Ate a drought to prevent future R T i in hehalt of their petition .for a | {lo0ds and the democrats could re- chatter, They were within | their | $pond by coming out for a wet year Industrial Plants Said o Be on Normal Schedules TiEhtS, Opposd 16 them were repre. | 10 Dermit ihe rapid growth of farm sentatives of two banks/ alrcady es- | Produce. Or one might announce it- tablished, who spoke against grant- | Self in favor of mild winters and | ing the eharton Thev. also, - were | N0t-to0-hot summers and the other i hseihe it hecome a champion of the old-fash- Since that date, more than twe |ioned year with really distinctive weeks have passcd. The petitioners | 5asons. Or, again, one party might and the opposition have waited | NSt a plank saying that a hot with more or less patience for a de- | SUMMCT Was the people’s choice and cision, which was not annownced ' other sotailate Ly sapouncing, until yesterday. Newspapermen wete | (hat it would allow the cool sum- mer to stand on its record. By GEQRGE M. MANNING (Washington Bureauof the N. B. Herald) Washington, D. C., April 21- ‘While most industrial plants in New Britain were operating at normal schedules last month, there was con- siderable unemployment in th ranks of unskilled labor. Very littl. building had been started by the end” of March to take up the surplus la- bor. There was also a surplus of un- told that the delay was due to the impossibility of getting a quorum of | skilled labor in Hartford, Bristol and other scctions of the state,-but the commission present at one time | May Day for child health in tht same room to pass judgment | icated to childhood and on the application. T after day | every community in the country was announcement was made that there | asked to make of this day a festi- was no announcement to be made | val in which the child was the cen- but that one would be forthcoming. | tral figure. From that year on, this hortage of skilled metal mechanics in Hartford, a small shortage of skilled labor in Bristol, and an even balance of demand and supply of labor in Glastonbury. Conditions were very irregulur : e ne, like a slow freight through | has become a national custom. transfer of money germs to food, so . . that she hears a funny noise in nsas, far behind the time when | o 92. v e i {who dream in terms of empire. If|. . . that he ought to hold out his| ™ ypic iiole b thi Ao asuE i o 1e should hold zood in New Brit- | 210 1 HEH 4 o onics, sou'll N : e has nothing 1o 4o, with the other states in celcbrating ain. (e aame caiiicne: e . that he doesn't think this is a| > ul the merits or demerits of the | this event, During these years that | 4 2 et {::;:'k‘l:)?i\u"z!r":hl-* i:]l":‘lls i‘;:lhllxslu:hl'{;sinu.lo theme which so fired the AL : : A e a ¥ e com . imagination of parents and leaders ml":.hl‘,} .\‘n!mc L.lm !'“".g‘",l 1‘1 )u ?p‘.\ 5 H\‘ '”‘::h. has to do with this ponderous ma- Ln\mgu.;houg the l::oun‘u'y 1.:3 lgaincd {of The Americ® Mercury and didn't SRR chine which we call government, [ ynomentum and set into ‘motion na- ‘j"-‘““l’] ’I‘ "“";’«"""“ in the car seej. - 'N"‘do\l” ive s Ay this lethargic, going, dilatory, | tion-wide machinery for the promo o Ut b el N . Uhat Mell thake her to pieces| Procrastinating organization by | tion of child health not on May Day ledger | - o " t e 5n't carful which we free Americans are rul alone, but every day in the year. “1-:1:)‘: o ‘(Ihhl :(t»'“:- m‘:‘m‘vnnll ,oolr:‘r:: e sl get out|The state banking commission i | oo livatg there will be but only as house,” said she, “and it’s just as for a minute . . . only a cog in the machine. Tt is MOt | 54 \arg expressions of achievement, Shraienoun the Mt IR(ANIG By 1 ooked ¢ pictur . that he needs a hair-cut . particularly to blame for its €OMa- | o wommunity efforts to raise the | o1 FéPORINg shortages of labor. {fine as it looked in the picture. e e i hmks we have & flat | 108 atate. It has the great American | g, o AT R DGO (UL eng [and others "reporting considerably i <o e bt she thinks we Bave @ T sovernment habit of putting off un- | i childven may be safcly brought | UNémPloyment. Tho same uneven sit- . fliat Harold hos Awallowea his Ul tomorrow everything that does | 4y voueh the exacting period of uation occurred in building in th. chowing gum not require immediate action or | growth 1o a full enjoyment of adult | 2r9uS gities, in some places build- o which has no political impetus be- 5 ing havifig been stimulated, and others, continuing dull. Seasonal work in the tobacco ficki has furnished work for many farm hands, and the supply wi state has been sufficient for the de- mand, Detailed reports of the situation in New Britain, Hartford, Bristol, and Glastonbu made public by the United tSates Department of La- bor today, follow: New Britain — A surplus of un- skilled labor was apparent at the that this car is 1 | health. As outgrowths of the origi- hind it I % S up . nal plan have come important ac- close of March. Most plants opcrated on close to normal schedules. Very that we may as well stop here M',;?j'f‘ul"r"""' n‘o“":'d‘r:i"‘ ""'v""l'v’l"_:"‘:", | tivitics for the promotion of child and go back because it looks | 5 o a8 health one of the most important of B et time iq | e British army into the sea ot |wiich 45 the Stmmer Roundoup m R bl the bells of frecdom banged all 0ver | gampaigns inaugurated by the Na- AND the land. America, it was &aid, was | gonal Congress of Parents and B ALA sits {hers and taken it fike | free st last But Amoricans; ic $hey {tpeachers. the purpose of which 18 Jamb UNTIL . . . had but known. ff, had slmply @ Lo start ularen di thalr schogl A1te MAMA tells PAPA thaf she has for- | SHansed one form of servitude for| pygically fit, froe of defects, im- Zotten 1o put in the thermos | AROther which was to follow—a ser- | punized against certain diseases—as Vottle full of nice, cold cqck- vitude to a government bound round | ¢qycational assets fnstcad of labili- tails that was to have been his| Vith red tape. True, it was Amer- | jes, Junch . . . and then . . ican red tape and that perhabs, | Not the least important aspect of y AT i PrNTy | Petter than the ribbons which King | the nation-wide May Day program is of Thomas J. R | George had around our neck. But | tne unifying of purnoss by state and for a place on {h it was servitude Jjust the same, 2| loeal orsanizations il with . ane |!ittle bullding reported. Bristol — A slight improvement in industrial eni .vyment conditions was reported during March, While part-time operations continued in some of the plants, the forces w increased. With the starting of out- door work the surplus of unskilled labor will be absorbed. A small shortage of skilled labor was report- d. Departmental overtime obtained in a few of the plants. Work was started n a number of dwelling: which, with other projects under ay, keeps resident building crafts- Corporation ring must have a Member Audit Burcaa of Circulation e yhe A B. C is patloual crgauization Which turnishes Dewspapers aud adver tlsers with 8 strictly honest analysie ef | ¢rculation. Our circulation etatistics are | ... ased upon this audit This tneures pro- | I Lection mgaipst traud in mewspaper dis- fall. 1 “bution figures to both natlonal al advertisers. ham our arc with yonn- problem Ch givin various war 10rds ot a plan to force take not he permitted to handle food food handlers Don't expect to have a good time He Had in a righteous Heaven if you can't lave a good time by being righteous now. to continue their busines opportunity to physical examinations and from where ng Y s stopped 1y, arstwhile the last Hsian nnless th e in sound health. The neral, now one of a6 eamE weasonable: —_— Nationalist it should | i basic clement in all business of | that aged in it be in good health so as e jJa 1 on sale daily o New | "k a: Hotaling's Newssand, Tmce | ihre: Schultz'e Newsstands, Eatrance | cordin and Ceutral. 42nd Stieet. e _ jarmy crgh don't like long-term ¢t might at any tim. loans. need | of the Ban Wwall 8 1he money to gamble with. e | . —— THE FUN SHOP NEWS WEEK < is| The chief disadvantage of Sum- mer is that you haven't any way to dispose of the Sunday papers. Hes 1 big victery, which a food manufacture the persons is mentally to the 50 We can reason Wwith communiques led to the uetion of 20,000 of the not to spread disease germs. T B Sun-Chuan-Fang, governor Foreign symphony orchestra, consisting entirely of medical men, has been founded in Germany. Many doctors, it is generally real- ized, are skillful players on the Eronchia arrh! ... Theatrical on theatrical matters the majority of not funny in private a thaw, plan a sleigh ride. heavy snow, plan a skating ho handle food as ture it. The laws s true of those 1go Colonel 1 that For trip. Somie e ssed the publicity attending Lin The colonel probably is t hank- | ng ship ha in the itung. Several important those who manuf wish ptured and the gop years have required periodical wh food- tuffs are made and handled; to see A s ean pr bad w satisfied. ul physician is one who - over the telephone in and keep his patients his flying an early spring, leave on your e ard consic inspection of premises tour ul that another 1 bly. The ghtin a hot spell, plan to have the s gain- LB present Chine 1t those en a4 in the business ! country | . “Acts of Providenee Inck; if any good luck that's a result of your | lianee, ) some prominence “We' —Wi never mind the ob- are as free of germs as the premises v are, had happens | A writer own bril- | complains that | comedians are ¥ jlife. Trempsey is through, ¥at as he is| Then where are they funny? now, Tunney could back-pedal him P out of breath in five rounds. fentific — aac Newton, when at school, this for the G. O. |y notorious dunce, and nearly P. It takes a mighty rightcous man | always found himself at the bottom to keep his reputation in spite of | of the class.” tough associatc —New York (N. Y.) Times. e | - And that's how he discovered the | A\mericanisi: Saying a man caw't | theory of Gravitation! a food dispenser take 'y yicy honestly; wishing you could v e such a bill—especially one that gives think of some way to get rich. Social rance of having seen a long — A member of the House of Lords | e e course the Presidency kills [ was dining a ‘cheap restaurant. RS T sar had the same job, plus | He ordered a bottle of ginger ale. HangleHEIbEOts and it got him in only a| A label on it caught his ey cash re 10 years s Supplied to the House of Lords. The nobleman’s face lighted up. “Thank Heaven's” he cried, “we still have a little prestige left.” f he front | has pushed otftne toon t. 1t has been going on for so long Chinese don’t know what Uit is all about, and the remainder of world only thinks it knows, All sems a logical step. i | that mo But there is on point in the pro- T that is ra the in the city same people who handle food also handle the money paid for it. 1t is a | matter of common knowledge that there are more germs on the average dollar bill alinost anywh: vlse, und a good way to los tection of the public Governor Al Smith while in |y o amused himself by nulmu«:: 1 considered. In many of public ow for certain is that the Peking, 1{00d dispensaries the cow and dr ome of the pro- direct from he Bt e ass o tha pass Slasten . this probably will tend 10 €ON- | it wow't take them long to get there. cnator Heflin that Al drinks g ) Lesides water, tionalists are out 1o captury “uet adguarters. ‘ 5 Yon can it crop of foreign complications too mucl doubtless awaits them at that ter- than | minal, condition of a majority of city | I, \id to be due to the | | . what The strects NOW s tite is to se PROSPER Politicians for 7 the rigors of the past winter. T ions have the appe: aused them to be in such bad con- | o ot me a general putting 1t in a little over then the next moment handle food. | e 2 “What does it indicate when Southern colleges form Hoover Tl Well, for one thing, it in- dicates that some of the students : from the North. Alas for romance! If anybody Wl life is yeprning for a black public 160 per elected. The d conneeted with en promisi pr ~evident service as a ition last fall? cont el such promises is that no party can sperity md nonchalantly SEWERS FOR EVERYBODY been comi- tran ster, and For years there have any such goods. Jlaints in the various portions of the | e ommodutions Were | o oc in the past he us Thaese complaints | the fited serious depressions in 1913 and 1921, and o fa litical affiliation with the sions both deliver This is a neat way to transfer the When a pelitician of hard ally leaves rms from the paper moncy to the food; they are very small and no- with the naked cannot help ¥ there, Looked at from any v able hngle, this trade method is downright filthy. T r Realisy “Talking about pictures, 1 you could city that sewe unsatistactory. usnally were made that sometime tning would be done chief reason nothing Jdone 4t the time was because of the here 18593 Abbic: | painted a dog so matu almost hear him ba Francine: “That's - nothing. T mammy, it’s because the washing | painted a hen so natural that when hasn't been done yet. |1 put it on the table, it laid there!” { —Al Hines A out some of dates. re body can see them and promises | ey Ing . T Qfhn sorRE- as the po- on- ol about it. The | Qenres particular was ‘\ is concerned, major | partics break even on the ost, a8 if waiting to provide a muni- 1 3 50 ty would help in uvoid- but there sill s !iope; you never see one crying on is wite's shoulder. record. arants and most d to he the cus hands to handle | food | Men are slipping, opinion of most observers, cstablishments it us When We Go Ant ! According to Austin F. MAMMA sits on the bac that | tells PAPA he . that there the ing ... ... that the changed . . . that a pass . that he is on the of 1l roud obiling . . Andrea seat and ipal nec ing the outlay. Now we are to hive depressions are duc to a surplus of lack cient consumption, The depressions w in cycles, though we for- tunately arc no longer as hard it » were, due to the | 1ederal Rescerve act and its control | over credit. But slumps still exist to nothing in common with politics and politics nothin tom for separate manufactures and a of suffi- | the money; that is to s s padd to a zed in handling food. This sys- to the study of y, the money nMmping ax cashier who was not ry town has one family thinks Billy isn't a thief because would have paid it it market hadn't gone wrong When the weather bureau speaks the “mean rainf it doubtless ! rs to the kind that falls the laws protecting the public fram the irfor vou wash the caf proaching quick action. Mayor is a car com- Paonessa cvidently believes in com- of employment | come ulong eng R L smal light has just 1 Lining the giving with the construction of needed pub- lic enterprises, and in this ticory he by them as we on cconomics by various proprictors, | has been eliminated to a large extent. | car is trying to of In some states and cities there arc il day . .. wrong i< upheld by a long list of ecor who hold it is the proper tiis rtain extent, and have it enables men to earn a livi have to do with the depres. cas creases the buying community, and at pow the sions. « We periodic slumps considerably by new iethods of distribution, and perhaps | the installment selling plan has been i have been able to case up the public rovides necessary road . . . nees. is sure he £ t MASSED FIGURE! orgot to MASSED PRODUC One must look to Massachusetts to \ bond issue to provide necessary s that is nothing ower work 1o fear, 85|y i yather than a hindrance; even | goes to provide the needs . The cost will not be add- the I and in- he issf hand-to-mouth buying been an | 1o chtain an examination of | | aid, rding some eminent i of the Ford automobile business, the irst | 4 to taxation this year, conomists, whereas at ded as di One L AL Was | guly state in the Union requiring the prine 1l next year, P ARt on ! trous closcd corporation to make a detail- crest not coming due included in taxation. hundred - pee cent prosperity | (g yreport. From Boston it was learn- the 1ord 000,000 last year, Imagine right 1928, Publishers j Syndicate Lusiness experiencing e Yord plan thoroughly | bl ht to light last he idea | e sscetl t9e Ford plast oe \Endorses Local Man for Nation- .| &1 Convention Delegate : In the interest idic for months, the cost of which IS gumith's candid hen it can by | will veturn wien consuniption—or «d that production. | ¢ surplus shrunk but any such entitled the the re- Citizens in all sections arc binE Shald the politics will mean nothing more than that. power is still and it is racilitics, 10 © proper of the city 1t growing This is not far in future and | 354,000,000 othor ahout used uty mect o 3 a vast uiren we take pride in &, qemporary influence, it | ahiri G onsistent cit J 2l ¥ ) Lorde of as: 150 be willing to shoulder JUST ANOTHE Home implies. isngues ate HOMER municipal equipment e sed run records in big | on alreudy looked upon 48 ! jpoy the individual accom- uch growti o U the sewe constructe of e ving inportant as feam was sucees many them as are needs standings, Thus plishment ste ins preceden UPSHAW'S VIS over fo W toward the dily changes in style or public demand. | | am i accomplishment, except the Finally, when a change was necy stk end o season Whel gupy, (he huge plants had to remain | haw Gie riod of spelibinding of battios for the pennants become more intercsting, at least Home irtly. in theory. Ly 1o means entirely repre; Connecticut dele umulating g, 11 new machinery and the wde, it is believed, brought the of the i g Lo hesdeme, genuflection toward pompous pub- | 4im—ihe promotion of child health cratic national convention, the fol- lic officials who are 100 busy 10| tate health departments . schools e _|teachers, parent teacher aseocla~ The sloth of, the state banking | tions, churches, visiting nurse asso- commission is an example of what | cjations, social workers, labor organ- American business is up against. | jzations and local lay organizations This particular petition might not | are meeting on commeon ground to have been considered of great im- | gevelop in their separate communi- portance in the eyes of the commis- | tics local activities whose alm is the sion but it was of importance to the | perfection of child health. Incorporators of the new bank.l" iy Day js now but an expression whose funds were tied np while the ohomid Teadih. aatitition in commission was twiddling its e, e eve ate the N 27 [ Hiueme, And. there 1s ' o' way. of e o1y rate dndhe umon, I 19 in the shrinkage of surpluss The loss | oW letter s being sent to those | * who will attend the state convention “Dear Sir: up to] “I presumic the newspape acquiinted yofi with ti | vietory democracy VY e voters in this eit Qur chiet purpos the fall election is to keep the peopl satistied. and to show our apprecii- ion for their combined inte in our party. | “To attain intend to modern | cost of discharge their public dutic esent in eon- 1 nothing sl e b in 1 auantitic “p-lentire cost change s have | splendid | achicved on April 10th. | from now until! ne of the effort somc balls les wround 87 M pitchers | yicee 5,000,000, o make t 2y iction requires of machinery in a plant to he red mto one huge machine for article, and the ction of sing icle produced lous. It still remains to This end. we there were fifty chairmen for May how ether the Bt it Jost Ford colossis promote summer of activity, and | with this thought in mind, wo are Sponsoring a movement 1o send one { our favorite sons to the nationl convention at Houston, Texas, | knowing many friends of the tion on loans pending the decision on the charter, The Wanking commission consists the incorporafors were withholding ac- Day, all of whom were well recog zd leaders in child health work and thirty-six of whom were offi- | cials of State Health Departments. !The chairman for Connecticut is the men well employed. Farm labor con- ditions are described as satisfactory. Glastonbury — The labor supply and demand were well balances throughout March. All plants were running, the majority on full time. of the banking commissioner, state comptrolicr and treasurer, all of whom are presum- ably on the job every day at the state capitol just as the factory worker is on the job during his regular working hours. It shouldn’t | have been difficult to get a quorum | present. And once it was present, it rade « The & | should not have required more than | . ; i Observations cntor A, J. ¥10- | Voturs, Thomas 3. Smith, Veaturing into the dark African |half dn hour of solid thought to ke on “Why We Lost.” “Thomas Jefferson,” we have ro- }or against the petitioners, Any ex- sl city meeting was hetd d him to his office for countless| nough! cuse advanced for a delay of more 1l last cvening and aly without oppesition. e Buddy, whatcha becn doing€ | than two weeks is official nonsense. mills was laid Ccoss of our party an a great measure | 1ately? . affney has been an the recent election was atiribut- ) In spite of all modern mechanical committee | ed by the mayor-clect, to the untir- iinventions, congressional legislation, tion brought citoris on hehalf of Friend Tom. — “|and reform crusades, we still have tion coun- lis acts of courtesy, and a fight-| WHAT REALLY HAPPENED one evil left with us—the weather. when necessary, known far and| “What mad: you go to slecp sing of for his hontsty and integrity, | the graveyard in the, first place, city. - agaih solocit your v for | Rufus?” the judge asked. tion has Thor J. Smith, as national dele-) “Two bLad things, jedge. Two Houston convention. bad things. Bad gin an’ bad to discuss the state delegation, to you Britain hig not asked % honor the Baltimor vention in and we believe this year, we arc entitled or or veccived || | con- director of the Bureau of Child Hy- giene of the State Department of Health., Plans are well under _way for making this May Day an import- ant ome in Conmnecticut health history. : Although the textile mills operated on curtained schedules the released employes have been absorbed in oth- er active industries. Building s quiet. All available farm help is em- {ployed in the tobacco warehouses, Hartford — The shortage of high- ly skilled metal mechanics reported in February continued during March. ‘While there is still a surplus of un- skilled labor, most of these workers will be absorbed with the starting of : |outdoor occupations, All plants oper- oo 3 % iated, the majority at capac Na Washington, Aprl 21.—Forecast |, o0 pujlding projects under way at | for Southern New England: 1In-|the present timp. A slight increase creasing cloudiness Saturday, fol-|in the demand for farm help was re- lowed by showers Saturday night ported. and Sunday, sicwly rising tempera- ture. Walter Johnson Will Leave Hospital Soon Forecast for Eastern New York: | Increasing cloudiness and warmer, folloWed by showers in extreme| Washington, April 21 UP—Walter south portion Saturday; Sunday |Johnson, recuperating from an at- | showers. tack of influenza at emergency hos- pital here, will be discharged from the institution within a week, pro- Conditions: Pressure continues low over Newfoundland. An area of vided no setbacks occur in the mean- time. *high pressure is moving eastward over- | His doctors ‘say, however, that h over the upper lakes. |should not try to pitch for three or The outlook is for partly t weather on Seturday in New four weeks. He was permitted ‘o ake an automobile ride vesterday since the * state 25 Years Ago Today there heen banguet than thai | st night, when the | md Bristol Royul Ar- colebrated the ond- whist s the ottie Doers™ | egate time has 10 recog- | nition. “Famed tirouglhout 1he e for 40 years for i principles of democracy, we for conside fon for del-| the name of our Registrar of o councils the 5 being “The Done v ister 1o the past num HARTEORD'S BRIDGE PLANS s, two vo Smith s The He in the southern purt irtisht inficld: sccond span ing the ould i r top- | in suchi a contingeney is to duc in the rain on 1 sportunitics for the of the lordly Mg e “Now then, Rufus, what were the sts doing when you woke up.” alkin’, jedge, talkin'. About what?" “Jedge, near as I could figure out, dey wus holdin’ a union meetin’.” “How do you make that out?” Dey was argifying ip favoh ob a three-hour night ting a fi the ter Ippropr tory two extr mahty nic “And you say when you woke up and 1he ghosts sifting around on Hartford. and)you were ralyzed with fear Lost €. Lyo warm weleome. | vou could not move?” Alfred K. Atw = “No, sah! Ah was peralyzificd by M. Johnson, A 4 e . : t dat gin. Fear don't have no puralyz- Georer M. Schultz a 1 in’ effeet on me! Fear makes me policenmen structure, how: candidacy with o iloek. ; 1 comuis<ions e ple the 15 saw rter you S0 p 2. ¢*. Thompson 925, Reproduction idden) ngland. Temperatures will rise in the North Atlantic states.