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Constance Talmadge Stars
In a Rollicking Comedy
At Criterion This Week
Constance Talmadge comes to the
Criterion Theater this week as the
star of “Good Night, Paul!™ which was
adapted for the sereen from the mu
#cal comedy success of the sathe
mame by Roland Oliver apd Charles
Dickson. This is the laugh-provok-
Ing vehicle m which Ralph Herz re
cently appeared In the larger cities
The photoplay has, of course, been
considerably modified for Miss Tal
madge's usg, but the screen version
is even funnier than the stage pres
entation and may well be called a
bonanza of laughter, with a hearty
giggle in every foot of film. r
In the supporting company are Nor
man Kerry, Harrison Ford, John
Steppling, Beatrice Van and Rosita
Marstini, all of whom have appeared
in other Talmadge pictures. Step
BEST FEATURES SAvov YOU FIND FILM
FOR A NICKEL BARGAINS HERE
MONDAY
BERT LYTELL,
R S
““Hitting the High Spots.™
WEDNESDAY
TOM MIX
el B
“THE MAN WITHIN.™
FRIDAY
OLGA PETROVA,
—N——
““The Panther Woman.™
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MONDAY AND TUESDAY
MAURICE URNEUR’
Masterful Picture :I: Qm Melodrama S
”
“SPORTING LIFE
Artcraft Special, Together With
“HER FIRST MISTAKE”
A Mack Sennett Comedy
T . WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY
ELSIE FERGUSON
Beautiful Young Dramatic Star, In
“Under the Greenwood Tree”
A Story Rich in Romance n(rfdném)cmom—% Full Hour of Rich
!-n—t:ll'::tmont.
Christie Comedy
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AGAIN SOMETHING NEW FROM THE GREAT CREATIVE GENIUS OF THE SCREEN v 'y 8 & N
A brilliant study of Homespun Humanity. The eoming of True Drama to the Filins g RN
Acting by Artists whom eritics proclaim have nothing further to learn. N A M
The cast with Lillian Gish, Robert Harron, George Fawcett, Kate Bruce and others ‘of Gris- P x.‘&* g
fith’s brilliant players. . » o.- §
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TAE AOME OF SCREEN SUCCESSES 27/ (8%
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pling, by the way, is well known in
Atlanta, hawing played in stoek at
the Grapd several years ago.
The story of “Good Night, Paul!®
is that of a yowng married woman
who pretends to be the wife of a con
firmed ‘“woman-hater” in order that
he may receive s§o,ooo frem an eocon-‘
tric uncle who wishes him married. Of
course, complications ensue and ne
end of pomieal situaitons develop, At
the last, however, the unele learns the
truth, but, as he has found a -m;
and is perfectly happy, he fails to
find fault with his nephew and per
mits him to keep his fortune.
A feature of the bill this week will
be the special musical program which
will be offered by the Criterion or
chestra under the direction of Miss
Elliot B. Johnsen.
T —————————————————
TUESDAY
GLADYS BROCKWELL
il
“The Strange Woman."
THURSDAY
MARY MILES MINTER,
A N— .
“ROSEMARY CLIMBS
THE HEIGHTS.”
SATURDAY
CHARLIE CHAPLIN,
SwsinliPmtre
“WHO GOT STUNGT'
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN — A Newspaper 10T reopie wno rmng — SUNDAY, JANUARY 26, 1919.
‘After the War’ Is Sensational
Constance in Charming Comedy
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.. Top, a scene from “After the War,” the terrific problem play of home
life, :Q the Tudor. Bottom, left, Constance Talmadge, in “Good-Night,
Paul” at the Criterion. Right, William Farnum, at the Strand.
ALAMO NO. 2
Home of Selected Photoplays
MONDAY and TUESDAY
EARLE WILLIAMS
Supported by Beautiful
GRACE DARMOND
In a First-Run Vitagraph
“THE HIGHEST TRUMP”’
Also, MON. and TUES. A Comedy .
“BUMS AND BOARDERS”
WED. and THURS.
Constance Talmadge
——
“MRS. LEFFINGWELL'S
BOOTS"
FRI. and SAT.
Frank Keenan
—
“THE MIDNIGHT STAGE"
DeMille Says, ‘Don’t
Change Your Husband”
At Forsyth This Week
It's a Cecil B. DeMille produgtion at
the Forsyth all this week.
“Don't Chgnge Your Husband” ls
the picture. Jeanie Macpherson is
nt‘. author and Glorig Swanson is the
star,
All of which means that the For
syth is going to have a picture that
will be welcomed as one of the best
and most extraordinary ever present
ed in Atlanta,
In the last preceding DeMille Ko—
duction, “Old Wives for New." r
syth patrons saw the wife who grew
“carelegs.” Now comes the untidy,
:fxlecttul husband. And he gets
S,
There arises the question, “*Whieh
is the worse, a wife's unccmbed hair
or a husband's unshaven face?’
“Which would you rather see, a fad
ed kimono or a coatless’ bedraggled
man?"
Once again, DeMille strips the four
walls from married life. The man
who trimmed the market wouldn't
trim his beard—and it cost him his
wife,
The picture is one you don't want
to miss. It's at the Forsyth all this
week.
The story is that of James Denby
Porter, the '‘glue king,” despite his
wealth and social f:uuion is becom
ing lukewarm in h lnnilon- to his
romantic wife, Leila Porter, and what
annoys her mmt,hha has become neg
ligent as far as his gcrnoul ap -
ance is concerned. ut, waorst of :‘l.
he eats green onions' While Porter
puts his feet upon the cushions ;‘:d
scatters his cigar ashes ahout on the
rugs, the disgusted Leila is receiving
the attentions of Schuyler van Sut
phen, a globe trotter and dilettante
of shallow morals. He is different
i Hal?
Sgorting Life" Is
One of the most exciting ring battles
ever shown in any motion picture is
that in which Lord Woodstock fights
a victorious battle himself after _&
man he had wagered upon had
drugged by kis enemies. This is one of
numerous thrilling scemes in Maurice
Tourneur's fine picturisation of "w
--ing u&t"’ 'tko li?mmu Dnl?h elo
%ram;, vl’ugl will_be show 55‘_ the
audette Theater Monday and Tues
“.féb , Barl of Woodstock, is a youn
amug ahmu who is hwued !
Wheh Jge Laa, & EYDey poise Bghier, e
en )
:utchu‘l'.' Lord Mrunck 5.5 every
dollar he can raise on him. But Waopd.
stock has a powerful onoml‘ who causes
Lee to be eopd by the father of the
ll:’l lu“t,\u rou‘\"ol and Wood:tnck.‘ }'."
order ve his wagers, enters the
:‘tnl M-uow and fights 'a‘vmoflo\n bat-
Tt alse dove that Lord Woods
stock s‘:;- Mekn’:u mare, Lady Love,
to win the rmhu. ;‘r(xd to i..‘n him, ‘m
enem § into n again and has
fla"xfi. ltolon.” 'lgun,‘to clfneah his
villainy, he kidnaps Woodstock and
circulates the 'r;l’ofl that he is dnf.
Both master a horse are rescued in
time and when ud‘ Love wins the
Derby, Wondstock cashes in to the tune
of many thousands of rmu\d-.
The pieture is one of unusual theill
and cxrcuncy. The love element is
E{ovide by Lord Woodstock, who loves
Norah Cavanagh, a daughter of his
ohief trainer, u‘b when Be gets into
trouble, with ruin st}flnl ;Llhm n the
h}:-. Nouhod-v:‘- h‘n. - .d‘ph:lm
w roduc er the directio
5! ‘rv .‘;ogmeur IN‘- the results nv:
boan hvi"hly effective,
n ednesday and Thursday, Rlsie
Ferguson will he offered in “Under the
Greenwood Tree. ™
Takes Patent Medicine;
Dies; Ingquest Follows
ST, LOUIS, Jan, 26.-—A O uest
has been oxf-r:d' inte the 71'.'.1%'1:"%
McMahon, 60, whe died following the \of:
ing of a dese of patent cough medicine. |
from her husband, and, knowing
women well, he works apon her sym
pathies and imagination until he has
her on the goim of breaking away
from her husband. At a dinner given
on the seventh anniversary of hig
marriage, Porter comes late and he
has forgotten to feteh with him any
wedding present. But when a bishop,
who has been meore thoughtful, is
about to offer her a necklace of am
ber and jade beads, Porter appropri
ates it and presents it to his wife as
hig own gift. When Leila learng of
this deception she is resentful and
when her husband seeks to kiss her
and she detects the odor of unions on
his breath, she repulses him with
loathing. She obtains a divoree and
weds Van Sutphen, who soon begins
to neglect her for the society of cho
rus girls. Porter feels his loss keenly
and when he realizes the cause, his
nature undergoes a complete change.
Van Sutphen obtains his wife's dia
mond ring and gives it to A& woman
who is about to sell it in a gambling
house, when Porter offers to buy it.
He meets Leila, who now is shabby
and her love for him returns. Van
Sutphen becomes Jealous and at
tempts to shoot Porter, but misses
him. When Van Sutphen returns to
his ehorus girl, Leila divorces :lm
and she and Porter are reunited, Her
ideas as well as his own have changed
uld‘ "’x‘féu‘:’fi. g ’pwuod practical
r.
ly the same cast that QTM
“Old Wives for New” for his uu'.’z'
production, Elllott Dexter has the
leading role, with Gloria Swanson
playing opposite to him, while the
other parts are in the capable hands
of Theodore Roberts, Sylvia Ashton,
NL“.m Cody, Julia Faye and James
.
Evelyn Nesbit and
.
Russell Thaw in
Big Grand Drama
The beautiful actress who has been
made the queen of tragedy by the
tragic incidents of her own life, Hv
elyn Nesbitt, will be seen at the
Grand this week in her latest photo
play, "Her Mistake.” Assisting her
will be the little son whe remains to
her as the one reward of her sorrow
ful career, Russell Thaw.
Apart from the persenal interest
that attaches to the prineipal char
actters, “Her Mistake"” is a great play.
Williasn Fox has takem a d;?ml of
the street, and the events every
day, and has wowven a marvelously
moving produection about it, The
story of a girl's false iter and where
it leads is always umusually mvmf.
and in the present Instance it is
fuutlln with the greatest pathos and
appeal,
D&ut “Her Mistake” is semething
more than the narrative of a girl's
degradation. It alse bm- out the
happy ending from the id picture,
for it treats of the girl's redemptions,
demption™ Tn- hie respactthe story
emption. In ry
is finely adapted to M N-“ It. for
she has salvaged her own life in like
manner.
~ The lesson of the picture—for no
giotun of this nature can be really
ne or worth while without showing
very clearly a great moral lesson—
lies in the idea that the fires of sao
rifice can burn away all the impuri
ties of a sinful past. The woman who
really wants to remew her hope is
never beyond hepe, but through seif
abnigation and service for her fellow
hemv she is able te achieve that
happiness which once seemed =0 very '
far away ‘
The memmmm-w
production, The settings are all clev.
erly wrought, and evog detall of tlu‘
many scenes is worked out with the'
faithfulness of a Belasce, The cast
contains many gelebraties and the di.
rection is under the skillful mdlau‘
of Julius Steger, the master of this
type of drama,
Star of “After the War”
Was War Work Star
Miss Grace Cunard, the charming
star of “After the War," the five-reel
Argosy feature in which she will appear
at the Tudor Theater next week, creat
ed a sensation, afd incidentally raised
a lot of money, during the recant united
vumdflvou}hmcwt_
A team of workers, of which Miss
Cun?’nd was the captaln, was havh
z dlb"lcuumtlng‘tf whl-: ’t'u goal .01
ou e " uo se
for I“l:elf. B\I%CM; Miss %d-‘ra
npnn{ to tb’u plaform from which
appeals for nds were being made
and exclaimed
“I'm & good sport, and Il make a
proposition to you. 11l sell kisses at
one dollar each for the drive.”
The quota was doubled before noom.
“It was the ‘kipisest’ day of my
life,” Miss Cunard sald ater.
o Y (0] 4 P
v iR 49, el ‘
oA, WAR TAIED INGLUOED W PRICED ", .
Py, S T s ! ) lfi_
l\w LINFCTION WITH 1L WO VALLR “fl
o 4 Geason’s Screen Sensation '-"-
. , -
i Evelyn Neshit n
-, |
|
( (e y b
i o i~ ‘
i 4é 7 Ny
4T " y
seedl ‘“‘Her Mistake'’ ]
A Poignant, Pulsing Narrative of ‘
e Lowe Along the Purple Path of Bright \
R Lights. )
A ».14 A Magdalen’s Redemption, a Love N
£ Cleansed in the Flames of Sacrifice. }
LR Tl The Mother Star Assisted by Her Son [
B e
RUSSELL THAW |
# <
i The Famous Broadway Beamty's Most I
. Masterful Achievement Ey
}' CAST OF CELEBRITIES DIRECTED BY sTEGER. [
] [ocemparable Phetography. A DRAMATIC TRIUMPM. RS
.. _-__\....,.\..._._\...- pre— -Na\ NMARY, (W (g, WA B
The star of “The Rainbow Trail”
which 8 a special Strand feature this
week, could be nobody else but WHliam
Farnum. More than any other actor
playing before the camera, William Far.
num has the ability for interpreting the
roles of big, powerful men, who fight
the long, hard fight against the power
ful forces of nature. Farnum has a
positive genius for this type of acting,
and his work in "“The Rainbow Trail"
is better than anything he has ever
done,
A lequ’Fl to “Riders of the Purple
Sage,” "The Rainbow Trail'' takes up
the fortunes of Lassiter, Jane Wither
steen and the girl, I“a" Larkin, years
after they have been locked up in a
lost eanyon. Not enly does Mr ,Far
num again portray the role of Lassiter,
the two-gun manr and terror of the
Utah border, but he also takes the part
of Shefford, a two-fisted fighting man
who goes to the rescue of these impris
oned people. This dual role gives Mr.
Farnum some of the most splendid op
gort\mmu of his wscreen care¢er, and
@ rises to his opportunities like the
sterling actor that he is,
A feature of ‘‘The Rainbow Trail"
zn its mainmcem scenic effects: in
act in “The Rainbow Trail” is shown
the gramdest scenery In the world
Two hundred miles of wind-worn roek,
all uni‘oolh and bare, without a single
straight line—canamna. caves, bridges.
This s the Grand Canyon of Arizona
where Willilam Farnum and his compa.
ny lgont a 4 week. Other scenes show
n:; eird, mysterious Painted Desert;
others take the spectator into the for
sotton civilization of the Aztec cliff
wellers. Af;ln the picture shifts to
that eolorful, ;‘otumsqua home of a
dmmd race-—~the Navajo Reservation,
¥ uonr{ of this production is a lib
era education in itself.
Pa ‘2"".*'; T AVhat the Beigians
L, (by o
t n} the late Gcncr&‘m Bis
sing, for near four ynr' -
ernr-oc?: of t.hei: tmubr‘ tle
p% n in an'editorial printed
in bre luc. the famous "a't
fo”" whose publishers baffled all ef
rts of the Ggmn Secret Service fir
lnmo Oer“u oaeupation by r-
K ucing the naper and dl-tuhufin‘ it
_t{:l‘mce of German orders.
on Bissing,” wrote tiie editor, “was
t‘ most u{rmnuuu of the ideas
which hfouf t about the v:r. of the
idiocy, cN ?r'.:nd foolish ride of that
taste whic! med of domlnaflnfi the
world and which for four years fright
‘cm(e' the world by its heinous crimes.
~"Von ?umnf- rule in m‘y‘u& has
llm'n us wha tgo rule rm
militarism would have been m
stroke planned been successful. Ger
man iunkor spirit was not changed in
ing by his residence in Be’rlnm
Ho came to !rclzhlm not to rule g-ovt--
lonally over occupied tepritory, but te
rule as & couqueror over naw zrovinou
of the G-rmo: Empire. He kept this
conception of : Q?E until the last mlo
fiu;t even in death and In his will
ot lnfi that he saw oghmmry had
any influence on him. en he -
rived Lon he knew what he was lJ:,
to do, what he ou;ttolm. or a
W‘h":lfi he ought to affirm he saw,
and he 0.
“He .m:m that we were “low Ger
mans’ who becomne outcasts in con
&uonu r our separation the
-u'm tates; that we were Incapa
ble o ’ovcrm ourselves; that we
were an nlg:or ople to the Germana,
that it was any's ml’tu to render
‘o kultured. To do this it was neces
:3 that Germany should use every co-
Ve measure ur?lut us. These means
were terror, Imprisonment, execution of
patriots, L‘pr&“d tions. 'fl'vnry v’ol'c.:?
, every crime pract o |
!";« iimo:'.‘ terture and murder were
8 WO "
“The worst was the hycsa-uy of Von
w himself, whe, while he was aet.
ing this odious manner, never ceased
to declare that he was doing so in our
interest, that his was a mission of eciv
{lization. Worse than un’“ho proclaimed
that eur elite were grateful to him, and
that as proof of his beneflcent rule the
"3& in the street r‘owbd to hlm.d
Was surroun y crow
would-be intellect al. who\ul for g
years bee cnm«l“u Germany to T\..
l&t 'flg the mg‘“snd hinova to show
o ples that roro was Germanie,
and tE't, German genius mlz regen
erate the world.”
Filipino Arrested as
Smuggler of Opium
BT. LOUIS, Jan 35.-—~Marcelo Mada
Crus, 71, & Mlipino, s held bty the peolice
here a 8 a smuggler, swindler of Chineso
and dealer In gum oplum. He 18 said to
have confessed to Clovernment agents and
h"‘m“ t-dnol being an agent for a
. a -
".o'. h'n "a arvested four sultcases
and & small bag belonging to him
wore eonflrsn‘. Iu these were found
one oan o ‘::lun and other cans
filled with p‘t’ soap over which was
n tM‘LIA“r of gum oplum, In order to
Btve ff the appearance of opium,
Medicine Farm Planned
By the State of Illinois
OHICAGO, Jan, 15.-Mlinols ts going to
grow its own medicine. Plans are already
under way for the establishment of &
“medicine farm” on which will be
herbs and roets, impertation of vlnofl han
been curtalled by the war.
The board of forest presérves of TiHnols
has the matter in nhuu and as soon as
& suitable looution ean found the farm
will be put under curtmnn
5E
By FLOYD MACGRIFF,
Correspondent |, N, 8.
LONDON, (by mail,)~Two of the b
gest jobs of the Peace Conference will
be the undoing of the lifework of Bise
marck, together with reducing Pruasia
to her proper level with the other Ger
man States, and establishing a Poland
‘which will be sturdy enough to resist
being Prussianized commercially, while
At the same time serving as a buffer
safe-guard against Germanic domination
of Russia.
% was by pouncing upon Poland thad
Pruesia rose to power. The instigation
of the partitioning of Poland by Frede
erick 11. sowed the seed of aggrandizee
ment which ex-Kaiser Wilhelm IL at.
tempter to harvest,
And the problem of Poland and Prus
sia is a tangle, Poland’'s only possible
seaport is Danzig. It formerly was Pol
ish, but Prussia porumted it with Ger
mans, so that now less than 10 per ceng
of the seaport Is Polish. Could Gere
many retain Danzig she conld dominate
Poland. The district about Danzig is
overwhelmingily Polish, but if this city
is given back to Poland, them WKast
Prussia will be cut off from the rest of
Germany. There are about 83,500,000
Poles who have to ba liberated from
Prussian misrule. In this part of Poe
land there are 1,000,000 Germans placed
there through colonization. Internation
alization of the port of D-nz{f mlg.ht
solve that phase of the question, t
how Kast Prussia is to be m«l up
with the rest of Germany by withe
out chasing out thousands of Poles is
the hard part of the nut. For full, free,
economic development there cz&bo no
%uutlon but that Poland sho have
ANTiE.
Togqll.tmclt!ottoub Bis«
marck's work thcg.'ul be rectifica.
tion of Germany's tiers. As already
provided, Alsace and Lorraine will bs
restored to France, uumm likely
will revert to Belgium and Da part
of Schleswig-Holstein will be Murlwi
to Dengark. If Germanie Austria de
sires to unite gth the other 00th
states—a thin smarck gnmted -
cause it m‘% reduce 'l‘. in~
fluence—the allies will not interfere,
Thus there th be rectifications of prac«
tically all aa‘;- l‘mntha
In connection with hlnvi’- ohtd:’
the auutlou o‘l the future of the Ki
Canal arises, It is most important that
Germany be prevented from centinuing
to m:t this eanal as an inland waters
na.. ourtnl other nation's al use,
i rmany s wed to con o this
domination of the Kiel Canal, she will
2“0—&“ 'u Plaulan inte; will
ave—an ue tage er Eea.
. mfgo from Pmnd, H:Lud and
u into the North Sea and Atlantic,
Kiel Canal is the l\m route,
The Kiel Canal, experts say, be
free to all nations alike, as are the
Panama and Buez Canals.
Germany th is expected to
surrender outright or ha# over the out
put of the l#:.r coal fields, which were
taken from nee a century ago.
Commercial, as well as ’hrfm domi
nation over Hropean eountries by Pruse
sla is to be terminated. Germany will
find that her reiations hereafter with
Holhn"fll L far different than tn the
past; likewise with Bolfmm. Germany’s
attempt to go!son relations between Bel
pum and Holland ower which of those
wo shall control the Scheldt is doomed
to hllure.
The unification of the German peo
ples, a thing which Bismarck groventod
will be one of the fruits of the recon
structed world, and this, in itself, will
be a check against vehement Prussian
methods, mm and Germanic Aus
tria are e ted to form a balance
which Blood and Tron Rismarcks cannot
disturb. The Bismarckian policy of
preventing democratic development and
egxpression of the people is to be curbed
The Prussian game of playing one race
or one section against another to bene
fit Prussian aims is to be ruled out
There will be a bulwark against any
German castom union which seeks to tie
&#mut neutrals to the Prussian money
GGI'.ILII‘{ is going to have a big
enough job m eimply attending to the
needs of Germans in Germany, recon
structing her State and meeting the
Allied peace terms. FHer colonial ad
ventures from 1884-99, will be flwd off
the slate. Her establishment in the Far
ast, daiing from 1897, will pass away.
ut these are only offshoots of the
8 ssian, m?a :r.!:llohmal:aa.rok 80 skill
perpetual Kalser-con
tro“’od Germanic State.
A ,un watch will be kept here on
negot al.l:‘n relative to Poland, for It
is reali that unless this question is
settled properly and so as to ml? out
all Prussian influence, the peace Eu=
rope will not endure long,
Big Stars and Great
Plays on the Savoy Sereen
The Savoy's schedule for the week i
Includes some of the best known stars
and plays in the film calendar, There
is Bert Lytell, for instance, the fel«
low who has succeeded to Harold
Lockwood's place in public esteem.
‘He will be seen Monday in “Hitting
the High T-." together with an
‘El.n:;. Flelds comedy, “No Man's
’ On Tuesday comes Gladys Broclke
‘well, in “The Strange Wouman,” ase
sisted by Bobl:{ Vernon, the firres
pressible Christie comedian, in *ln
and Out™ On Wednesday comes Tom
Mix, in “The Man Within,” a two
reel Western, mixed in with the
eighth eplloda of “The Iron Test*
and a Blg V comedy, “Farms and
Fumbles,®
Thursday brings out Mary Miles
Minter, one of the most populas
young actresses of the screen, In
“Rosemary Climbs the Heights*
“Many a Slip” is the comedy, Olga
Petrova will be presented in one of
her biggest productions, “The Panth.
er Womu.n&';' on Friday. “They Did
and They Didn't,” a Strand comedy,
is also offered.
The week is brought to a closs on
!nlvrdu&‘wnh “Wolves of Kultur,
Charlle Chaplin, in “Who Got Stung™
and Futty Arbuckle, in “Fatty, the
Bounoer,”
Company Made 26
Steel Ships in 1918
SRATTLE, WASH., Jan 26 —Smashing
all records for shipbuilding, the Skinner
& KEady Corporation’s ptant No. 1, of tins
city, launched 28 stoel stearnships in the
year 1915, The vessels had an aggregate
of 232 400 dendweight tons
As the plant has five schipways the avees
:r- tonnage for each way was 46,4580 tons.
othing spprosnching this average has been
wecomplished before In the history of the
world's shipbuilding.
No other five shipways at one plant have
averuged more than 40,000 deadweight tots
In & yeur, according to marine experta
There have been records of a single way
of more than 40,000, tons in & year, but
thut was where one large ship was built
m'rumy-l:'n of the wessels constrooted st
this plant for the year was the steamship
Kdgelfeld, that was delivered on the last
duly of the year, Bhe wis o 9 000-ton s
e
Gompers Hears Labor
Troubles in Framee
»n
lfl‘Nf\fl‘N ’J:'n.-‘mnmm(m'.
rived in London late last night. Oume of
the (irst bits of news he heard todey wes
of labor conditions in Franoe
of those disturbances has been
particularty of a demonstration st E
within the last month which
resem bled Rolsheviem,
Hritish leaders who ealled en
today ey the American loader "
astonished by the true story of
situation in Franos, o
the French A
ot wosk, X