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Two LABOR (Connecticut) NEWS BY THE WAY OE n o loaoi HOW TO OPEN AN INTEREST ACCOUNT Starting an Interest Account with this bank is a simple procedure. " No introduction or formality of any kind is required. Simply call at the teller's window, re gister your signature arid make your first deposit. You can start an account by depositing one dollar or more. . ROADWAfAl(KAflDjRUST Qo. .. -i . .' NEW HAVEN, CONN. B. Thrifty Says "Speaking of Saving - $ 1 per month SAVED is a bunt $5 per month SAVED is a single $ 1 0 per month SAVED is a two-bagger $15 per month SAVED is a triple $25 per month SAVED is a home run." What's your batting average this month? Let us help you improve it. 57 CHURCH STREET NEW HAVEN, CONN. HIGH SCHOOL PUPILS WIN PRIZES FOR BEST ESSAYS ON IMMIGRATION PROBLEM juj xi-f r ff fff rfff rrrff """""rn THE CITY BANK & TRUST CO. 124 Asylum St HARTFORD, CONN. (Incorporated 1851 Sayings Department Deposits over $11,200,000. Over 38,000 Depositors. Pay Interest beginning the first of each month and compounding ; quarterly. Total Resources over $18,000,000. OPEN SATURDAY NIGHTS. By International Labor News Service. Indianapolis, Ind., July 4. America's widespread interest in the question of immigration, to which organized labor has devoted much attention, was indi cated by the great number of essays submitted in the American Legion's national essay contest n "Why Amer-i ica Should Prohibit Immigration for' Five Years." More , than 350,000 high school pu-t pils, representing every section of the" country, submitted essays in the con test. Three prizes, first, $750; second; $500, 'and 'third, $250, were offered by, the American Legion for the three best, essays. The judges Were Raymond F. Crist, United States commissioner of immigration ; W. T. Bowden, assistant commissioner of education, and Wil liam Tyler Page, , clerk of the House of Representatives. The prize winners were as follows : First prize, Sara R. Heysham, 17 years old, Norristown, Pa. ; second prize, Florence Sweetman, 16 years old, Rochester, N. Y.; third prize, By ron Hill, 17 years old, Jackson, Tenn. The first prize essay follows : , . Why America Should Prohibit' Immi gration for Five Year. America has done nobly by the stranger. From tie beginning she has been a home for the oppressed. Class distinction, social prejudices, differ ences by birth, religion or ideas have not been erected as barriers. A man was recognized as a man "for a' that." Nobly has our generosity been re warded. In the conquest of the west they have borne the burden. In the crisis of the Civil War they stood by the Union. In the development of great public enterprises they have done the rough work. Those who came were our kinsmen. Men from the British Isles and northern Europe. Their ideals ' were readily adjusted to our own. But a change has taken place. The character of the immigrant is dif ferent. Now more come from south ern Europe. Instead of joining in the conquest of the west they congest our already over-congested cities. They come without money, without educa tion and without standards of living. Their ideals of government are alien to our own. The problem of our cities, always serious, has become acute since the World War. We are without suffi cient houses for homes, which tends to lower moral standards. Our schools are inadequate to meet the growing numbers, which breeds ignorance, vice and crime. Huddled in districts they live in America as though not 'in America. Our laws are ignored and strife is all too common. Therefore for the sake of the strangers who come to our shores as well as for the best interests of those who are already here and for the well being of our homes and institutions we ought to lock the gates against all strangers for the next five years. We owe it to the founders of this Republic to guard the institutions and alws we have inherited. We have . a trust to preserve the Ship of State. To load a boat beyond the law of safe ty means the destruction of all. We owe it to our homes to see that the moral standards of society are not lowered. To create abnormal conditions that breed immorality is to jeopardize the family. We owe it to the future America to guarantee an intelligent and con tented citizenship. Every American child must have an opportunity for education in our public schools. Neith er child labor nor ignorance can be tolerated within our borders. We owe it to all that is sacred in life to preserve the religious ideal. Sunday has a meaning in our history. "Religion and morality" George Wash ington declared to be "Indispensible to prosperity. To secure these blessings to our selves, to the strangers within our gates and civilization will require a just measure of time. Five years of self-discipline in the life of the nation may mean the salvation of America as well as the salvation of the world. Comment and Criticism About Things Doing in the World. NATIONAL SAVINGS BANK 145 Orange Street Near Chapel New Haven A MUTUAL SAVINGS BANK Interest starts first of each month. Strengtk Service Integrity "HIGH GRADE" BREAD It's Fresh Every Day Your Grocer Milk Bread Vienna Crimp Loaf Mothers Br. Whole Wheat French Bread Home Made Sandwich Br. German Rye Raisin Bread White Mt. Swedish Rye THE HIGH GRADE BAKING CO., INC. 181 SHELTON AVENUE New Haven, Conn. Tel.: Liberty 1449 TRY OUR CAKES AND PASTRY FOR DESERT. WORKERS' HEALTH BUREAU HAS BIG SUCCESSIN YEAR Campaign Against . Poisonous Acids and Leads Makes Dent in Connecticut. Complete Home Furnishers VOLUME LOW PRICES THE P. J. KELLY FURNITURE CO. 200 CROWN ST. Tel. L. 165 Patronize Our Advertisers The report of the Workers' Health T . r T uureau ior ine year lyj was pre sented before the 50 delegates from seven states gathered together at the second annual convention of the Workers' Health Bureau. The report received the endorsement of the dele gates,' who 'drew up a set of resolu tions based on it and pledged them selves to carry on the 'fight to protect workers against health exploitation. The activities of the Workers' Health Bureau for the year 1923 showed these delnite services rendered to the trade union movement : 1. The painters of New York and Connecticut were insured the forty- hour week through evidence prepared by the Workers' Health Bureau in its report, "Health Facts in Support of the Five-Day Week for Painters." 2. The bureau initiated and actively participated in the campaign to amend tne JNew York state compensation J law, and make compensable diseases resulting from exposure to: 1. Benzol poisoning. 2. Gasoline, benzine, naphtha pois oning. 3. Infection or inflammation due to cutting compounds, dusts or liquids, fumes or gases. ' 4. Fumes by chlorine, bromide or iodine derivatives of petroleum pro ducts, such as T. N. T. 5. Silicosis or lung injury due to breathing in dangerous silica quartz dust. In the usual political shuffle the benefits to the workers were ignored and the bills were lost in the rules committee, but as a direct result of the bureau's efforts the state industrial commission appointed a committee to investigate the extent of benzol pois oning and silicosis in New York. 3. The Danbury, Connecticut hat ters, with the scientific information furnished by the Workers' Health Bureau, were able for the first time to assist the members of their locals in handling compensation claims, and securing official consideration and at tention. One of the most important results of bringing these cases into the open will be the pressure brought to bear on the labor department for care ful factory inspection in Danbury. 4. An active campaign was con ducted in Wisconsin and Massachu setts to combat the spray painting evil. The Workers Health Bureau was called upon to supply the necessary health facts to prove the increased danger of poisoning from forcing out poisonous paint materials under air pressure. . The spray gun throws poisonous paint spray and fumes in all directions, and where the machine is employed the air has been found to contain from 27 to 83 times as much lead as would poison a man. The spray painting machine may be a time saver, but the cost is paid by the painter, whose health and life are at stake. 5. The Workers' Health Bureau drew up a set ,of minimum health standards as a basis for negotiations with employers and as a first step in controlling working conditions. Substantial gains have been made by the painters of New York, after none months' negotiations. The health clause in their trade agreement now provides for ventilation and rest per iods, prohibition and regulation of ben zol - and wood alcohol, and the regula tion or elimination of other paint ma terials injurious to health. This is the first time in this industry in the United States that health safeguards have been secured by, direct negotiations I with the employers. 6. The Workers' Health Bureau has been instrumental in revising and in troducing new state regualtions gov- erning tne neaitn ana saieiy oi me painters. In Massachusetts, at the re quest of the state conference of paint ers, the Workers' Health Bureau pre pared a set of regulations to be adopt ed in the state code. These regula tions contained a special section de voted to defining protective methods for painters engaged in painting pub lic works and buildings. Dry rubbing- down has already been definitely pro hibited. Safeguards won in Massa rhn;ptt5 are bound to react to the benefit of the trade in all sections of the country. Uniform health regula tions are now being prepared so that they can be adopted in any state of the Union. Comprehensive studies of the health problems of the hatting industry have been made, showing the effect of mer cury poisoning, chemical analyses of dyes used in the hatting trade, sani tary conditions in the shops, and methods for improving these condi tions. Similar studies have been made for the painters. A comprehensive study of the haz ards of the glaziers and glass bevelers trade is now being completed, based on the medical records of 200 men exam ined in the journeymen painters and allied crafts health clinic. New York. This is the first study of this industry ever made in this country. These are the concrete services ren dered by the Workers' Health Bureau to labor. To carry the work forward labor should give the bureau its finan cial and moral support. Industrial Commissioner Shientag of New York made a sound decision when appealed to by organized labor to disapprove an emergency certificate applied for by the State Department of Public Works to permit two 10 hour shifts of work daily on the .ter minal elevator contract at Oswego. Commissioner Shientag refused to approve the certificate, pointings out that the contractor could, if necessary employ workers 24 hours a day on the Jpb by establishing three shifts of eight hours each and thus employ more workers now unemployed. The commissioner's decision was strictly- in accord with the. best inter ests of public policy. Authorities in other states might well be guided by it in' passing on requests similar to the one on which Commissioner Shientag made his decision. Zinovieff, chairman of the fifth congress of the Third of "Red" Inter nationale, has madea discovery. He announced at the congress that with the exception of Russia, mem bership in the Communist party in the various countries of the world is dropping. He admitted that the party membership in the United States had dropped from 20,000 to 5,000, while in England it decreased from 10,000 to 3,000 and in Germany, from 300,000 to 250,000.. He quoted figures from South American countries equally disappoint ing to Communist hopes. Zinovieff is finding rout that the Reds can't fool all the workers all of the time, a job that they apparently thought was easy. When the toilers realize what Communist means, none but an infinitesimal number will have anything to do with it. They have seen what Russia has endured under Red" rule and they do not want to have the Russian experiment tried upon them. Hence the dwindling Communist parties. Bricklayers and hoisting engineers who are refusing to work with incom pete'nt non-union iron workers in New York City are taking a wise pre caution against death or serious in jury. The bricklayers and engineers know that as long as no-unionists are work ing over them, there is an excellent chance of being hit by falling iron and being taken to the hospital ro the morgue. So they have declined to continue at work on jobs where their lives are endangered. Presumably they will not return to work until the non-unionists are replaced by union men, who have proved their skill and competency on many a difficult and dangerous job. The course taken by the bricklayers and engineers was the only one open to men whose sole wealth is their la bor power and whose families face misery and starvation when they are deprived of the use of their labor power by accident or death. It is a course that should be emulated by workers in every 4 trade wnose lives are menaced by in competent non-unionists. The far-reaching effects of the work of the International Labor Office, in which, unfortunately, the United States is not taking a part, is shown by its suc cess in helping child workers of Persia. Some time ago the International La bor Office made friendly representations to the Persian Government regarding conditions under which women and chil dren were employed in the carpet indus try in Kerman and adjacent villages. Children began work at the age of four or five at the carpet weaving looms, working long hours in very unsanitary surroundings. In many instances chil dren became cripples for life from sitting many hours each day. crouched over the loom. . Following the representations of the Labor Office, steps were taken to temporarily remedy the conditions pend ing more definite measures. The Labor Office now learns that in accordance with the decision of the Per sian Government, the Governor of the Province of Kerman has issued a decree which confirms and in some respects ex tends the measures previously applied. The decree provides a maximum work ing day of eight hours, holidays with pay on Fridays and festival days, a minimum age for boys of eight ears and for girls age for boys of eight ears and for girls of ten years, separate working places for boys and girls with proper supervision, prohibition of the employment of per sons suffering from contagious diseases prohibition of unsanitary workshops and unhealthy conditions in the shops, and monthly sanitary inspection of shops. The police authorities are instructed to en force these requirements, any infring ment of which is punishable with fine and imprisonment. o a o U o D o o a o o a o 8, Safety and Service Continued conservative manage ment, rigid adherence to banking: laws, and ample capital and surplus have made this institution deserved ly known as a safe bank. Unfailing courtesy arid the constant endeavor of officers and employes to anticipate the customers' wants have won for it also an enviable 1 reputation for helpful service. Merchants National Bank o K o D e Chapel at State New H&.f en, Conn. o a o D o OE 301 O n illllllll!llllllllllllllll!lllllll!l!lllllllllllllllllllillllil!llllill!lllllll!IIIIIIIIin 1 New Haven's Money E must finance New Haven's growth 55 ESS and this money becomes most readily EEs EE available for the service of industry E and the building of homes only when EEs EES it is banked. The money you deposit in an ac- sss 5 count with this Bank not only furthers ' 55 55 the progress and prosperity of this 55 community; it also works most effec lively for YOU, earning liberal divi- 5 dends. 5 (S (WDDDVGSGBtfiCISlJntf H Established 1857 H 47 Church St. Neffi Haven, Conn. S5 Member New Haven Trades Council Co-Op Campaign S iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiUiiiiiiiuiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiniiiiii OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT AT The Mechanics Bank CHURCH STREET AT CENTER NEW HAVEN. Open Saturday Evenings From Six Until Eight. HHMMM ! fr l- fr -fr -fr -fr -fr -fr -fr -fr .fr -fr 5 , The Old Family Bank The New Haven Savings Bank Security I ty tl ify tt H tfr ifr 11 ift tfr f 11 11 ifr Cor. Orange and Court Streets New Haven, Connecticut Chartered 1838 , Offers Protection Safety .frfrfrlfr lfrlfr.fr ft ft.ftl ,fr , ,fr ft ATTENTION ! ARE YOU A UNION MAN? Then why not look for the UNION LABEL in a STRAW HAT? PAGER'S Sell 'Em 6-8 CONGRESS AVE. STEVENS & MILLER Headquarters for 'Young's'' Hats "None Better Made" We Guarantee to Fit Any Shape Head. Ladies' and Gents' Hats Cleaned ant Blocked. TeL Liberty 8633. 216 MEADOW ST. ' New Haven, Conn, This is THE Union Label OF THE United Cloth Hat and Cap Makers of North America Cloth Hats and Caps bearing this Label are made under Sanitary and Union Conditions 271 BLATCHLEY AVENUE FOR INDEPENDENCE AND ECONOMY OWN YOUR OWN HOME FOR ADVICE AND HELP TO DO THIS CONSULT THE THOMAS F. CLARK CO. 152 TEMPLE ST. Telephone Lib. 6345. ALL FORMS OF INSURANCE FIRST MORTGAGE LOANS 1